Kyle
Busch avoids drama, keeps series lead
Send a link to a friend
[October 29, 2018]
MARTINSVILLE, Va. -- Kyle Busch
had a strong enough car to lead 100 laps Sunday in the First Data
500 at Martinsville Speedway, but not enough to race for the victory
in the closing laps of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoff
race.
Ultimately, Busch ran fourth in the opening event in the Round of 8,
but he retained a comfortable series lead. The 2015 champion has a
21-point advantage over Martin Truex Jr., Sunday's runner-up, and
Kevin Harvick, who finished 10th.
What's more, Busch is 46 points ahead of his brother Kurt, who ran
sixth on Sunday and is the first driver below the current cut line
for the Championship 4 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. That's a
comfortable margin -- unless drivers in the bottom four continue to
win races, as Joey Logano did on Sunday at the .526-mile short
track.
"We just weren't turning the center (of the corner)," said Busch,
who started from the pole. "We tried to do everything we could to
get it to rotate to the center of the corner and get the drive off,
and every time we tried to help the drive off, we just made it
tighter. And then we tried to come back on that adjustment, and then
we just made it looser on exit.
"It's like nothing we did was helping us. We went one way on our
adjustments, which took us backwards. We went another backwards on
adjustments which took us backwards, so it was just a matter of we
had what we had.
"I thought the M&M's Camry was faster than that, better than that
yesterday in practice and stuff. We made improvements to it for
qualifying, but it just didn't hold serve when the rubber was going
down, and so that's kind of where we just missed it today."
ELLIOTT ALREADY IN MUST-WIN MODE
Chase Elliott made the most of a 19th-place starting position and a
balky No. 9 Chevrolet on Sunday, but he left the First Data 500
under water in the Cup Series standings.
Thanks to excellent pit-work adjustments that improved the car's
performance during the race, Elliott managed a seventh-place result,
but he is 31 points below the current cut line for the Nov. 18
Championship 4 Race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
"It was just really bad, really poor execution on our qualifying
effort and better in the race, but not near where we needed to be,"
Elliott lamented after the race. "So, I'm sure we're in a hole and
probably going to have to win one of these next two races.
"We needed some pace. The guys did a great job on pit road and
things to get us kind of back in the ballgame, but definitely not
what we want."
Elliott doesn't expect to be able to claw his way into the top four
on points.
"No, I need to win," he said. "I mean, playing the points game is
nice, but I need another sticker."
[to top of second column] |
Simone Biles competes on floor exercise at the U.S. Gymnastics
Championships in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., August 19, 2018.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
The good news is that Elliott has picked up win stickers in two of
the past four races, and he's the only driver who has won two events
in the playoffs.
HENDRICK UNVEILS ALLY AS NEW SPONSOR FOR JOHNSON
Seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson
has a new full-season primary sponsor.
Roughly an hour before the command to fire engines at Martinsville
Speedway, team owner Rick Hendrick announced that Ally Financial has
agreed to sponsor Johnson's No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
for the 2019 and 2020 seasons.
"We are beyond thrilled to be in the fast lane with Jimmie Johnson,
one of the most successful drivers in the history of NASCAR, and
with Hendrick Motorsports, a premier organization in professional
sports," said Jeffrey Brown, Ally's CEO.
The association with Ally marks a new chapter in Johnson's career as
he tries to win a record-breaking eighth championship. Johnson's
17-year association with sponsor Lowe's will end this year, as will
the driver's partnership with crew chief Chad Knaus, who will move
to the No. 24 Chevrolet of William Byron next season.
Kevin Meendering, Elliott Sadler's NASCAR Xfinity Series crew chief
at JR Motorsports, will move up to the Cup level with Johnson next
year.
Johnson underscored the value of a single primary sponsor for the
entire season.
"To have one sponsor for all 38 races for two years ... clearly,
I've had just one sponsor, and to enter this new chapter in my
racing career and have one sponsor once again, I think says a lot
about Hendrick Motorsports and the value of this No. 48 car and also
in our sport," Johnson said.
"As today unfolds, with the media buys they've done and the way
they're going to advertise in our sport, and as you see them engage
next year, they're really using NASCAR as a marketing tool for their
company. You will all be very impressed with their vision and the
importance they see in NASCAR racing. (That's) the main reason why
they are here and involved."
--By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level
Media.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |