Cup
leader Kyle Busch continues strong 2018 run
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[June 12, 2018]
BROOKLYN, Mich. -- Kyle Busch
essentially won "Best in Class" with a fourth-place showing in
Sunday's rain-shortened FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan
International Speedway -- the lone Toyota in a front-running,
race-winning group of seven Fords.
It was an amazing run for the former Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
Series champion, who had to start from the rear of the 39-car field
because his No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota had a pre-race inspection
failure.
The run to the front wasn't a victory for the season's four-time
winner and current championship points leader, but being best in
class was acceptable under the circumstances Sunday on a late-day,
rain-interrupted, cool and cloudy afternoon.
"Our car through the corners was really awesome," Busch said on pit
road after rain caused NASCAR to declare the race official 133 laps
into the scheduled 200-lapper.
"Our M&Ms Camry was really good there after yesterday's practice. I
thought we had something for them, and if it was going to be a
little hotter or sunnier today, I thought we were going to be really
good. That just wasn't the case today -- chilly, cool and lots of
grip and that was better for those guys."
Busch's chief championship challenger this season -- five-time race
winner Kevin Harvick -- finished second to his Stewart-Haas Racing
teammate Clint Bowyer, who gambled with a quicker two-tire change on
the final pit stop while most of the field opted for four.
The race was the first "SHR Sweep" for the team with Bowyer's win,
Harvick in second and Busch's older brother Kurt Busch in third.
In fact, the Busch brothers were dueling it out for position in the
final laps with Kurt taking a slight edge for third before the race
was called for rain. Both Kurt Busch and Harvick said they weren't
the least bit surprised to see Kyle Busch fighting it out up front,
no matter where he started.
In fact, Kyle Busch wasted no time making his way through the field.
He was 20th by the 22nd lap, having passed literally half the field.
"It was just a matter of time before you're going to see them pop up
because we had the competition yellow at Lap 25," Kurt Busch said.
"There's Stage 1, another yellow, then there's the two-tire sequence
that you can jump in on if you really want to gain some track
position.
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NASCAR Cup Series driver Kyle Busch(18)
before the FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International
Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mike DiNovo-USA TODAY Sports
"Kyle (Busch) and (defending race champion) Kyle (Larson), you knew
they were going to show up."
And Busch didn't disappoint, putting on perhaps the most dramatic
efforts of the afternoon driving up from the last row on the
starting grid and keeping the Fords honest up front in the closing
laps.
"We gave it a hard fight and go home with what we could there,"
Busch said. "Fourth is not too shabby. I thought we had third there
but Kurt just blew my doors off on the straightaway."
"If it would have gone green the rest of the way, I felt like we
could keep up with them. I felt like our long-run speed was better
than theirs was. If we could have had some green-flag stops and
maybe made up some ground on that I felt like we would have been all
right.
"The race was all right, we were just getting beat by all the blue
ovals. They were fast."
The fourth-place result was good enough to keep Busch's lead atop
the Cup championship standings. He holds a 75-point advantage over
five-time race winner Harvick and a 98-point edge on Joey Logano as
the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series enters an off week before the
June 24 Toyota/Save Mart 350 on the Sonoma, Calif., road course.
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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