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"Edwards
closes in on Busch with win
at Michigan"
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)—Carl
Edwards looked in his mirrors
and saw the guy he had to beat.
With two laps remaining and
one final restart coming up
in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint
Cup race at Michigan International
Speedway, Kyle Busch—the
only driver that Edwards trails
in the points—was right
on his rear bumper.
Edwards said he thought about
the race last month at Chicagoland
Speedway when Busch passed two-time
reigning Cup champion Jimmie
Johnson after a late-race restart
for one of his season-high eight
victories.
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“I just didn’t want
to have to go through the pain, so
I just did everything I could to have
the best restart I could, and it worked
out great,” Edward said after
racing away to his fifth win of the
season.
And Edwards hopes that’s just
a preview of what’s coming up
in the Chase for the championship.
“We’re winning races,”
Edwards said. “We’re gearing
up for the Chase. I’m feeling
stronger than ever. We’re here
to win championships. That’s
what we’re shooting for.”
With just three races remaining until
the start of the 10-race Chase, Edwards
closed the gap on series leader Busch
with his second victory in the last
three races. Edwards also completed
a rare weekend sweep on the 2-mile
Michigan oval, adding the win in the
3M Performance 400 to a victory Saturday
in the Nationwide Series event.
While the 23-year-old Busch has had
a great season, winning eight times
and building a big lead in the regular-season
points, Edwards, who turned 29 on
Friday, has kept the youngster in
sight.
When the 12-man Chase begins next
month at New Hampshire, all of the
eligible drivers will be seeded, with
10 bonus points added to their base
total of 5,000 for each victory. Edwards
lost one 10-point bonus because of
a penalty early in the season, but
would still be just 40 points behind
Busch if the Chase began next week.
“The greatest part is we didn’t
give up more bonus points to Kyle,”
Edwards said. “He’s just
so strong. Every time I win and he
finishes second that’s really
a 20-point spread for us. That’s
what we have to keep doing, is to
try and win the next three events
and go into this Chase on even ground.”
Busch knows he has a battle on his
hands.
“Carl’s right there,”
he said. “He has been all year.
Yeah, it’s a 20-point swing.
We’ve got to live with it. Hopefully,
we can make it up someplace else.”
Busch was just ahead of Edwards when
they pitted under caution on lap 180
of the 200-lap event, but Edwards
won the race out of the pits.
David Ragan and June Michigan winner
Dale Earnhardt Jr. had stayed on track
and were running 1-2, but Edwards
easily passed them on the restart
on lap 183 to retake the lead, then
held off Busch on two more restarts,
including the final one with just
four miles remaining.
The victory gave Roush Fenway Racing
co-owner Jack Roush his 19th overall
victory and 11th Cup win—tying
the Wood Brothers for the record—at
the Michigan track, just down the
road from his headquarters in Livonia,
Mich.
Edwards became only the second driver
to win both races on the same weekend
at Michigan. Former Roush driver Mark
Martin did it in 1993.
“The key was my crew today,”
Edwards said. “My guys did an
unbelievable job getting me off pit
road.”
Carl Edwards' crew works during a
pit stop in the NASCAR 3M Performance
400 auto race at Michigan International
Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich., Sunday,
Aug. 17, 2008. Edwards won the race.
Edwards was pulling away at the end,
building a lead of nearly 1.5 seconds
before Denny Hamlin’s blown
engine brought out the seventh and
final caution flag of the day on lap
195. That moved Busch right up to
the rear bumper of Edwards’
Ford as the green flag waved for the
final time for the start of lap 199,
but it wasn’t close as Edwards
pulled out to a 15 car-length victory.
“(This was) very important,”
said Bob Osborne, Edwards’ crew
chief. “What we’re doing
here is a little bit of practicing
for the Chase and trying to get those
10 points to catch that 18 car. …
Carl Edwards did a great job. The
pit crew did a great job.”
“It just came down to when he
beat us off of pit road,” Busch
said. “That was it for us. We
just didn’t quite have the car
capable enough of being able to beat
those guys. We were good on that one
run, that one set of tires. But that
was pretty much what we had.”
Roush Fenway took four of the top
five spots with Ragan holding on to
finish third, followed by teammates
Greg Biffle and Matt Kenseth, who
bounced off the wall passing Martin,
now driving a Chevrolet for Dale Earnhardt
Inc., on the last lap.
Carl Edwards holds up the trophy after
winning the NASCAR 3M Performance
400 auto race at Michigan International
Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich., Sunday,
Aug. 17, 2008.
Earnhardt Jr., who appeared to have
one of the strongest cars in the early
going, bounced off the wall in heavy
traffic moments after being passed
by Edwards on the late restart. He
pitted and wound up finishing 23rd.
Earnhardt held onto fourth place in
the standings, but several other drivers
took a big hit in the race for the
Chase. Kasey Kahne, who finished 40th
with an engine failure, fell to 11th
and Hamlin, who wound up 39th, dropped
to 12th, the final spot in the Chase,
just 26 points ahead of both Clint
Bowyer and Ragan, tied for 13th.
Two-time reigning Cup champion Jimmie
Johnson and Hendrick Motorsports teammate
Jeff Gordon, a four-time series champion,
also had a tough day.
The two were involved in a three-wide
bumping incident with two-time Cup
champion Tony Stewart. Johnson had
to pit immediately with a cut tire,
lost a lap and wound up 17th after
spinning through the grass on the
final lap. The damage to Gordon’s
car from the bump showed up a few
laps later when he cut a tire and
hit the wall, sending him to the garage
for repairs. He finished 42nd.
Johnson remained third in the standings,
but Gordon fell from sixth to ninth,
82 points in front of Bowyer and Ragan.
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