
Heading into Sunday’s Sprint Cup race at Infineon Raceway, most people weren’t talking about points leader Kyle Busch as a favorite to win, especially since he was starting all the way back from the 30th position … well, they were wrong. Busch put his no. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota out front on lap 32, and then held the position for the remainder of the race, with the exception of 2 laps that were led by Carl Edwards during green flag pit stops.
Busch gained his track position due to some good fortune when he and nine other cars made their first pit stops just prior to the first caution of the day on lap 30. Up to that point, the race had been dominated by Jimmie Johnson, who took the lead from polesitter, Kasey Kahne, back on lap 5. The caution forced all of the cars that hadn’t yet stopped into the pits, and marred the race leaders back into traffic. Greg Biffle inherited the lead at that point, but his string of misfortunes continued as he spun through the dirt going through turn 3. Busch was riding in third at that point, but the second place car of Juan Pablo Montoya had to check up during Biffle’s spin, and Kyle made the pass on both cars.
Carl Edwards, who had been in second when the first caution came out, had worked his way back up into the top-five prior to the next round of pit stops, but was again the victim of another untimely caution. He was handed the lead after Kyle Busch and several other cars had pitted, but the caution waived again on the following lap when Kurt Busch and Robby Gordon made contact on lap 70, and Gordon was unable to get his car restarted. Once the remaining cars came in for their stops, Edwards found himself outside of the top-20, and Busch was once again named the race leader.
The next bit of excitement came on lap 78 when Marcos Ambrose – making his Sprint Cup debut – got into Juan Pablo Montoya as the two raced for position inside the top-five. The contact sent Juan spinning on the track, but he was able to maintain position inside the top-15. The damage was very minor to Ambrose’s car as well, but the no. 19 of Elliott Sadler got into the back of him with just 26 to go. No caution came out for the incident, but Ambrose pulled his car onto pit road, and the no. 21 Wood Bros team called it quits for the day.
The final 10 laps in the scheduled 110-lap race saw three separate cautions brought out. The first of which came when Michael McDowell cut down a left side tire that sent him screaming into the wall on lap 101. The field lined up with Kyle Busch still out in front, followed by Jamie McMurray, Tony Stewart, and Kevin Harvick. The trio behind Busch brought out the fifth caution of the day when Harvick got into the turn a bit too hard and clipped the rear end of McMurray, who was already loose. McMurray then clipped Stewart, and all three cars went spinning.
With the field bunched up, a bunch of cars got into one another around the middle of the pack, and Tony Stewart just sort of drove through all of them. Receiving the most of the damage was the no. 41 Dodge of Scott Pruett, who drove his wrecked race car off the track as NASCAR waived the final caution of the day, and eventually red flagged the race as they cleaned up the mess. The field lined up for one final restart in NASCAR’s fifth green-white-checkered finish of the season, but it was all for naught. Kyle Busch did as he had all day long and drove away from the field yet again, and eventually landed himself in Victory Lane for the fifth time in 2008.
David Gilliland held onto the 2nd spot and earned himself the best finish of his career, and only his second top-five in his three seasons with Yates Racing. Behind him in third was Jeff Gordon, who had a miserable start to the day, but managed to fall in-line with the pit stops and the cautions and pickup a much-needed top-five for his team. In 4th was Clint Bowyer, and 5th place went to Casey Mears, who picked up his first top-five finish of the season.
Juan Pablo Montoya rebounded from his earlier incident with Marcos Ambrose, and the no. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing team salvaged a 6th place run. 7th place went to Ryan Newman, who started in 9th and went virtually unnoticed the entire afternoon as he hung around just outside of the top-ten for most of the day. Matt Kenseth probably had an even quieter day than Newman, but still managed to finish in 8th, which was also good enough to move him back inside the top-12 in points. Despite having one of the best cars all day, the pit strategies did not fall in the favor of the no. 99 Roush team, and Carl Edwards was forced to settle with a 9th place finish. And, Tony Stewart – who restarted in 19th on lap 108 – managed to fight his way back up through the field to in the last couple of laps to finish 10th.
Other Notables: Greg Biffle recovered from his earlier spin to finish 11th … Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished with a satisfactory 12th place run … Jeff Burton continued his streak of top-15 runs with a 13th place finish … Defending Series champion, Jimmie Johnson, was dumped by Greg Biffle on lap 100, but was able to rebound with to 15th … Terry LaBonte finished 17th for Petty Enterprises … After running inside of the top-five most of the day, the late race mishap relegated Jamie McMurray to 18th … Elliott Sadler also had a good run going, but had a tire go down after the final restart that sent him from 4th to 19th … Kevin Harvick wound up in 30th … Polesitter, Kasey Kahne, dropped like a rock after giving up the lead on lap 5 and wound up finishing 33rd.
The top five spots in the points standings remained unchanged, while Jeff Gordon and Greg Biffle leap-frogged Denny Hamlin and Kasey Kahne to move into 6th and 7th. Clint Bowyer went from 12th to 10th, while Tony Stewart remained 11th. And, as previously mentioned, Matt Kenseth finally made his way into the Chase field, taking over the 12th spot in the standings, while Kevin Harvick dropped from the cut for the first time this season. He sits in 13th now, just 2 points behind Kenseth.
Grades:
the Race – 72%
the Drama – 78%
Coverage – 90%
Pre-Race – 84%
Overall Grade: 78.0%
Complete Results (from nascar.com):
| ST |
CAR |
DRIVER |
MAKE |
SPONSOR |
PTS/BNS |
LAPS |
STATUS |
|
| 1 |
30 |
18 |
Kyle Busch |
Toyota |
M&M’s |
195/10 |
112 |
Running |
| 2 |
31 |
38 |
David Gilliland |
Ford |
FreeCreditRep ort.com |
170/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 3 |
5 |
24 |
Jeff Gordon |
Chevrolet |
DuPont Cromax Pro |
165/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 4 |
19 |
07 |
Clint Bowyer |
Chevrolet |
Jack Daniel’s |
160/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 5 |
23 |
5 |
Casey Mears |
Chevrolet |
CARQUEST / Kellogg’s |
155/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 6 |
21 |
42 |
Juan Montoya |
Dodge |
Texaco / Havoline |
150/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 7 |
9 |
12 |
Ryan Newman |
Dodge |
Alltel |
146/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 8 |
33 |
17 |
Matt Kenseth |
Ford |
DEWALT |
142/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 9 |
12 |
99 |
Carl Edwards |
Ford |
Office Depot |
143/5 |
112 |
Running |
| 10 |
39 |
20 |
Tony Stewart |
Toyota |
The Home Depot |
134/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 11 |
10 |
16 |
Greg Biffle |
Ford |
3M |
135/5 |
112 |
Running |
| 12 |
15 |
88 |
Dale Earnhardt Jr. |
Chevrolet |
AMP Energy / National Guard |
127/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 13 |
20 |
31 |
Jeff Burton |
Chevrolet |
AT&T Mobility |
124/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 14 |
26 |
83 |
Brian Vickers |
Toyota |
Red Bull |
121/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 15 |
2 |
48 |
Jimmie Johnson |
Chevrolet |
Lowe’s |
123/5 |
112 |
Running |
| 16 |
25 |
1 |
Martin Truex Jr. |
Chevrolet |
Bass Pro Shops / Tracker |
115/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 17 |
11 |
45 |
Terry Labonte |
Dodge |
Wells Fargo |
112/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 18 |
18 |
26 |
Jamie McMurray |
Ford |
Crown Royal |
109/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 19 |
6 |
19 |
Elliott Sadler |
Dodge |
Stanley Tools |
106/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 20 |
16 |
22 |
Dave Blaney |
Toyota |
Caterpillar |
103/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 21 |
34 |
00 |
Michael McDowell * |
Toyota |
NAPA AUTO PARTS |
100/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 22 |
41 |
28 |
Travis Kvapil |
Ford |
California Highway Patrol |
97/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 23 |
37 |
10 |
Patrick Carpentier * |
Dodge |
Valvoline |
94/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 24 |
38 |
6 |
David Ragan |
Ford |
AAA Insurance |
91/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 25 |
35 |
55 |
Michael Waltrip |
Toyota |
NAPA AUTO PARTS |
88/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 26 |
24 |
78 |
Joe Nemechek |
Chevrolet |
Furniture Row / DenverMattress.com |
85/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 27 |
13 |
11 |
Denny Hamlin |
Toyota |
FedEx Office |
82/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 28 |
40 |
8 |
Aric Almirola |
Chevrolet |
U.S. Army |
79/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 29 |
22 |
01 |
Ron Fellows |
Chevrolet |
DEI / Principal Financial Group |
76/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 30 |
32 |
29 |
Kevin Harvick |
Chevrolet |
Shell / Pennzoil |
73/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 31 |
17 |
77 |
Sam Hornish Jr. * |
Dodge |
Mobil 1 |
70/0 |
112 |
Running |
| 32 |
3 |
2 |
Kurt Busch |
Dodge |
Miller Lite |
67/0 |
111 |
Running |
| 33 |
1 |
9 |
Kasey Kahne |
Dodge |
Budweiser |
69/5 |
111 |
Running |
| 34 |
29 |
15 |
Paul Menard |
Chevrolet |
Johns Manville / Menards |
61/0 |
111 |
Running |
| 35 |
28 |
66 |
Max Papis |
Chevrolet |
Haas Automation |
58/0 |
111 |
Running |
| 36 |
8 |
7 |
Robby Gordon |
Dodge |
Camping World |
55/0 |
110 |
Running |
| 37 |
36 |
84 |
A.J. Allmendinger |
Toyota |
Red Bull |
52/0 |
109 |
Running |
| 38 |
27 |
41 |
Scott Pruett |
Dodge |
Target |
49/0 |
108 |
Running |
| 39 |
4 |
43 |
Bobby Labonte |
Dodge |
Cheerios / Betty Crocker |
46/0 |
103 |
In Pit |
| 40 |
42 |
44 |
David Reutimann |
Toyota |
UPS |
43/0 |
99 |
In Pit |
| 41 |
14 |
160 |
Boris Said |
Ford |
7-Eleven Slurpee / No Fear |
40/0 |
94 |
In Pit |
| 42 |
7 |
21 |
Marcos Ambrose |
Ford |
Little Debbie Honey Buns |
37/0 |
83 |
In Pit |
| 43 |
43 |
34 |
Brian Simo |
Ford |
No Fear |
34/0 |
20 |
In Pit |
Sprint Cup Series Standings (from nascar.com):
| RANK |
+/- |
DRIVER |
POINTS |
BEHIND |
STARTS |
POLES |
WINS |
TOP 5 |
TOP 10 |
| 1 |
– |
Kyle Busch |
2408 |
Leader |
16 |
2 |
5 |
10 |
11 |
| 2 |
– |
Jeff Burton |
2305 |
-103 |
16 |
0 |
1 |
4 |
10 |
| 3 |
– |
Dale Earnhardt Jr. |
2256 |
-152 |
16 |
1 |
1 |
7 |
11 |
| 4 |
– |
Carl Edwards |
2150 |
-258 |
16 |
0 |
3 |
6 |
12 |
| 5 |
– |
Jimmie Johnson |
2082 |
-326 |
16 |
1 |
1 |
4 |
7 |
| 6 |
+3 |
Jeff Gordon |
2041 |
-367 |
16 |
2 |
0 |
7 |
8 |
| 7 |
+1 |
Greg Biffle |
2019 |
-389 |
16 |
2 |
0 |
5 |
7 |
| 8 |
-2 |
Denny Hamlin |
2008 |
-400 |
16 |
1 |
1 |
5 |
8 |
| 9 |
-2 |
Kasey Kahne |
1958 |
-450 |
16 |
2 |
2 |
3 |
8 |
| 10 |
+2 |
Clint Bowyer |
1924 |
-484 |
16 |
0 |
1 |
4 |
8 |
| 11 |
– |
Tony Stewart |
1908 |
-500 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
5 |
8 |
| 12 |
+2 |
Matt Kenseth |
1892 |
-516 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
10 |
| 13 |
-3 |
Kevin Harvick |
1890 |
-518 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
5 |
| 14 |
-1 |
David Ragan |
1845 |
-563 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
4 |
| 15 |
+1 |
Brian Vickers |
1788 |
-620 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
4 |
| 16 |
+1 |
Ryan Newman |
1787 |
-621 |
16 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
6 |
| 17 |
-2 |
Martin Truex Jr. |
1785 |
-623 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
4 |
| 18 |
– |
Travis Kvapil |
1676 |
-732 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
| 19 |
+3 |
Juan Montoya |
1638 |
-770 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
| 20 |
+1 |
Jamie McMurray |
1616 |
-792 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
| 21 |
+2 |
David Gilliland |
1613 |
-795 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
| 22 |
-3 |
Kurt Busch |
1604 |
-804 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
| 23 |
-3 |
Bobby Labonte |
1571 |
-837 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 24 |
+3 |
Casey Mears |
1506 |
-902 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
3 |
| 25 |
+1 |
Elliott Sadler |
1466 |
-942 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
| 26 |
-1 |
Paul Menard |
1443 |
-965 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 27 |
-3 |
Mark Martin |
1437 |
-971 |
12 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
5 |
| 28 |
– |
David Reutimann |
1390 |
-1018 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
| 29 |
– |
Dave Blaney |
1299 |
-1109 |
15 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
| 30 |
+4 |
Michael Waltrip |
1251 |
-1157 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 31 |
+2 |
Sam Hornish Jr.* |
1248 |
-1160 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 32 |
-1 |
Robby Gordon |
1239 |
-1169 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
| 33 |
-3 |
Regan Smith* |
1187 |
-1221 |
15 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 34 |
-2 |
Reed Sorenson |
1179 |
-1229 |
15 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
| 35 |
– |
Scott Riggs |
1150 |
-1258 |
15 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 36 |
– |
J.J. Yeley |
882 |
-1526 |
13 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 37 |
+1 |
Patrick Carpentier* |
852 |
-1556 |
13 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 38 |
-1 |
Joe Nemechek |
844 |
-1564 |
13 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 39 |
– |
Michael McDowell* |
796 |
-1612 |
11 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| 40 |
– |
A.J. Allmendinger |
656 |
-1752 |
8 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
- Busch Wins Toyota Save/Mart 350 – (the Lead Lap)
- Kyle Busch Dominates in Sonoma – (Racing for the Win)
*Credit photo to Newscom.










Previous Post
1319 days ago
[...] eventually took a back seat to Kyle Busch in Mexico City … mechanical issues ended his day in Sonoma when he made his Sprint Cup debut … and, a pit road speeding penalty robbed him in Montreal. [...]
Yeah, good point. That was another thing that kinda bugged me about Sunday’s race. I’m okay with the best car(s) not always winning the race … because if they did, then there’s no point in running the full event. But, Carl Edwards had probably the best car on Sunday, but he couldn’t hang out up front for anything because of the pit strategies early on.
I understand. The track is a good one, but the racing isn’t all that enjoying…you have some of the main drivers struggling and racing at the back of the pack, while those that aren’t talked about much finish good.
That’s pretty much what I was saying, Newman’s #1. I enjoy the road courses because they give us a break from the norm, but at the same time, I can’t necessarily say that I completely enjoy the actual racing itself.
You need a road course, not all the tracks are expected to be the same. Ryan had a decent finish…Kurt, not so much.
Adam, I dunno … the road courses are usually pretty entertaining in the fact that they give us some different names to talk about for a weekend, but all in all, the racing there just typically doesn’t do it for me. They’re okay, but definitely not the best on the schedule.
Tom, thanks for the encouraging feedback. I’m glad the review(s) is/are to your liking.
I think race was probly a little better than you rated it but most people thought it wasnt that good bc kyle busch won.
I really did enjoy reading your post race report. I have a lot of the same views as you expressed here in your article. I will definitely be back to read more from you.