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The winning move against Johnson made the victory more meaningful for Busch. Two of the sport's top drivers have developed a long-simmering rivalry -- trading paint and barbs -- over the years. It reached a boiling part at Richmond when Busch called Johnson a "five-time chump."
"To beat your arch nemesis, that's just icing on the cake. That's pretty sweet," Busch said.
Johnson, who led 157 laps, was second and Edwards was third. Edwards, who won the Dover Nationwide race on Saturday, dominated most of the race until a pit road speeding penalty cost him a lap. Without that infraction, Edwards just might have won the race and made it a weekend sweep.
"I definitely took myself out of position to fight for the win by doing that,' Edwards said. "It's something that's painful."
Chase drivers dotted the rest of the field.
Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch were fifth and sixth. Harvick was 10th. Tony Stewart lost the points lead he built after winning the first two Chase races and finished 25th. Other Chase results were: Jeff Gordon 12th, Denny Hamlin 18th, Brad Keselowski 20th, Ryan Newman 23rd and Dale Earnhardt Jr. 24th.
Earnhardt, Newman, Hamlin are about out of contention. Gordon needs to get hot fast.
Non-Chase drivers filled four of the top-10 spots. Kasey Kahne was fourth, AJ Allmendinger was seventh, Clint Bowyer eighth, and Marcos Ambrose ninth.
Busch started the Chase ranked seventh in the standings and opened with a solid sixth at Chicagoland Speedway. He struggled at New Hampshire and finished 22nd.
He found the right combination at Dover, where he qualified second and carried the position into Victory Lane -- and up the standings.
"We've got such a long way to go in this Chase," Busch said. "That's what we're really focused on."
Busch won the first Chase by beating Johnson by eight points for his only NASCAR championship. He credited owner Roger Penske for giving him the equipment and crew needed to compete for a title.
"The car just had a good feel all weekend long," Busch said.
It's a good feel he has to keep rolling all the way through Homestead if he wants to race away with the championship.
[Associated Press;
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