Kyle
Busch dominates on way to Coca-Cola 600 win
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[May 29, 2018]
Kyle Busch had won 15 races at
Charlotte Motor Speedway, but none of them was in NASCAR's top Cup
Series.
He emphatically crossed that off the list Sunday, dominating the
sport's longest race, the Coca-Cola 600, as few others have at any
track.
He led 377 of the 400 laps on his way to Victory Lane, and the win
at CMS accomplished the rarest achievement: a Cup victory at each of
the tracks currently NASCAR races on, making him the only driver to
do so.
And Busch got maximum points in the victory, winning all three
stages along the way to taking the checkered flag at the finish for
his 47th Cup victory.
"This one's very special," he said, adding "The Coke 600, I dreamed
of this race as a kid and winning this race. ... It's a little boys'
dream come true."
Rounding out the top five, in order, were Martin Truex Jr., Denny
Hamlin, Brad Keselowski and Jimmie Johnson.
The 600 had a unique format this year, with three stages instead of
the usual two followed by the race to the finish. At 400 laps, the
race was broken down into three 100-laps stages and the final 100
laps to the finish on the 1.5-mile track.
And winning a stage carries an additional point into each round of
NASCAR's playoffs, something Busch had only done twice this season
before Sunday.
Busch started on the pole and had little trouble holding the lead
once the race started. After the caution flag flew on Lap 36 for a
blown right-rear tire on Austin Dillon's car, the field pitted and a
fast stop by Busch's crew kept him in the lead, followed by Joe
Gibbs Racing teammate Hamlin and Team Penske's Ryan Blaney.
Busch easily maintained that lead, but Kevin Harvick -- winner of
five points races and the All-Star Race so far this season -- had
moved from his 39th-place start to sixth after 50 laps.
Harvick had moved up to fourth after 83 laps but then blew his
left-front tire and hit the wall in Turn 4, causing serious
right-side damage to his No. 4 Ford. He was unable to continue, his
first Did Not Finish of the season, and he wound up last in 40th
place.
Keselowski stayed out during the ensuing caution, and Busch lined up
in the No. 18 Toyota behind the No. 2 Ford. Keselowski dropped out
of the lead just after the restart with 13 laps to go and finished
26th after the 100 laps that constituted Stage 1. Busch cruised to
the stage victory, leading Blaney's No. 12 Ford by 1.473 seconds.
Busch led 94 of the 100 laps.
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NASCAR Cup
Series driver Kyle Busch (18) burns out in front of the fans after
his win at the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Mandatory
Credit: Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports
Busch and Blaney maintained their positions after the round of pit
stops and restarted Stage 2 up front. Fuel and pit strategies
started to come into play, and when all the green-flag pit stops had
cycled through near the end of Stage 2, Busch was comfortably back
in the lead, beating Truex in the No. 78 Toyota by more than three
seconds. Blaney faded and said he was having trouble with his car.
Busch's crew was on top of things all night, as Busch didn't lose a
spot on pit road in the race.
Busch started rolling his way through Stage 3 as well, coming off
pit road first, again, with 40 laps to go having led all but 12 of
the first 260 laps of the race. Busch took off from the field on the
restart with 35 to go in the stage and pulled away until Kyle
Larson, running near the front all evening in the No. 42 Chevrolet,
spun on Lap 272 to bring out another caution.
Another restart, same result, as Busch took off like a rocket, but
it lasted less than a lap as Blaney's car finally gave up, bursting
into flames. On the restart with 15 laps to go in the stage, it was
Busch's older brother Kurt in the No. 41 Ford who had no answer for
Kyle.
Busch beat his teammate Erik Jones in the No. 20 by 2.644 seconds to
win Stage 3 to set up a run for a perfect day.
To open the final stage, Keselowski was again the victim after a bad
pit stop had pushed Jones back to 20th.
The Cup Series heads to Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pa., next
Sunday for the Pocono 400 at 2 p.m. ET on FS1.
--Field Level Media
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