Kurt Busch outduels brother, snaps winless streak at Kansas
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[May 16, 2022]
Kurt Busch dominated the second half of the race but had
to pass Kyle Larson with eight laps remaining to win the
AdventHealth 400 NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday at Kansas Speedway
in Kansas City, Kan.
The 2004 Cup champion found himself in third on the race's final
restart with 33 laps to go and was part of a three-car breakaway
with Larson and brother Kyle Busch.
The 43-year-old slid his No. 45 Toyota for 23XI Racing -- an
ownership group that includes Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin -- and
raced side-by-side with Larson with nine circuits left.
Then Busch completed the pass off Turn 2 on the next lap and outran
Larson's No. 5 Chevrolet to win by 1.413 seconds. The win was the
34th of Busch's career, his first with Jordan Brand as his sponsor
and his first since winning at Atlanta last July, ending a 27-race
winless streak.
"I had to beat the Kyles (Larson and Busch). I beat both," Busch
said. "It was like the Kyle-and-Kyle show. ... If I could get one
Kyle, I could get both. I just had to have the confidence."
The Las Vegas native has recorded a win in 19 different seasons of
his Cup career and became the 11th different driver to win in 2022.
He led five times for 116 laps.
Kyle Busch finished third, followed by Hamlin and pole-sitter
Christopher Bell.
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NASCAR Cup Series driver Kurt Busch (45) gets ready to race in the
AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Amy Kontras-USA
TODAY Sports
"We as an organization have kind of let these guys
down -- I'm talking about Bubba (Wallace) and Kurt -- with so many
mistakes made on pit road and whatnot," Hamlin said. "Just can't
thank Kurt enough. And it was Jordan Brand's first race. I've
certainly never had this kind of feeling, even for a win for me.
(Winning as an owner) is just different."
In the 13th race of the year, the halfway point of the regular
season, a major temperature change occurred when Saturday's warmth
was washed away with race-day morning rain at the 1.5-mile
superspeedway, which was hosting its 33rd Cup race.
That shift forced a change in handling on the new Next Gen cars, as
teams fought tire wear all afternoon. The event saw eight caution
periods in all.
Kyle Busch, who qualified sixth, maneuvered his No. 18 Joe Gibbs
Racing Toyota past four cars on different pit strategy to claim
Stage 1 over Ross Chastain for his first stage win.
In a wild Stage 2 filled with tire issues, Bell, William Byron,
Chastain, Kevin Harvick, Hamlin, Erik Jones and Martin Truex Jr. all
had setbacks.
The Busch brothers showed the way in the 85-lap segment, and Kurt
defeated Kyle by two seconds to secure his first stage win since
last July in Atlanta.
--Field Level Media
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