Kurt
Busch wins Daytona 500 demolition derby
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[February 27, 2017]
By Lewis Franck
DAYTONA BEACH, Florida (Reuters) - Kurt
Busch steered clear of the chaos to win a crash-filled Daytona 500
on Sunday as the Great American Race was transformed into the Great
American Demolition Derby.
Busch led for one lap but it was the most important one as he
powered his Stewart-Haas Racing Ford to the front with less than one
to go after polesitter Chase Elliott ran out of gas.
The 38-year-old American then held off Ryan Blaney by .228 of a
second to claim his first Daytona 500 in 17 tries, after previously
finishing runner-up three times.
"There is nothing predictable about this race anymore and the more
years that have gone by that I didn’t win I kept trying to go back
to patterns that I had seen in the past," an emotional Busch told
reporters.
"My mirror fell off with 30 laps to go and I couldn’t even see out
the back. And I thought that was an omen. Throw caution to the
wind."
There were also tears in pit lane as co-owner Tony Stewart, who
tried for almost two decades as a driver to find a way to Victory
Lane at Daytona, finally celebrated.
"I ran this damn race 18 times and couldn't win it so finally won it
as an owner," said Stewart. "To watch Kurt was an awesome job those
last couple of laps you really didn't know what was going to happen
because guys were trying different things.
"It is probably the most patient race I have ever seen Kurt Busch
run."
Patience was indeed a virtue on a wild afternoon at Daytona
International Speedway that saw just 25 cars still running at the
end and only five reaching the finish line without some damage.
Even Busch, the 2004 NASCAR Series champion, did not escape
unscathed.
"Our car was damaged on all sides," said Busch after collecting his
29th career win. "We went through everything today."
After an orderly start to the Monster NASCAR Cup season, the second
half of the 200-lap race turned it into a wreckfest with multi-car
pile up after pile up knocking out many of the favorites and former
champions, including twice winners Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie
Johnson and Matt Kenseth.
A new NASCAR season began with a new format, the race divided into
three stages and points awarded to the top 10 drivers at the end of
each segment.
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NASCAR Cup Series driver Kurt Busch (41) celebrates winning the 2017
Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway. Mandatory Credit:
Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports
The format produced some wild pit stop strategies as
Kurt's younger brother Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick picked up stage
wins but not the big prize.
Kyle Busch's race came to an abrupt end just halfway when he spun
and collected several cars, including Earnhardt and Kenseth,
bringing out a red flag and halting the race.
"To get back to the race track meant a lot to me and just sorry we
weren't able to deliver a better result today for all our fans,"
said Earnhardt, who missed the second half of last season after
suffering a concussion.
"I don't really know what happened ... luckily the hit wasn't that
hard."
After just one incident brought out a caution in the first 100 laps,
the back half of the race produced a series of wrecks.
Only 23 laps after Kyle Busch's crash the yellow flag was out again
when seven-times series champion Johnson was at the center of a
massive 16-car pileup that knocked out Danica Patrick, the only
woman in the race, among others.
The yellow was out again a few laps later, ending the hopes of
another former winner Trevor Bayne.
Just as action resumed the yellow flag was waved again when a
multi-car crash sent 2012 Series champion Brad Keselowski to the
garage.
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto. Editing by Andrew Both) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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