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Smith wins NNS at EcoBoost 300 Homestead; Stenhouse Jr. wins the 2012 championship

[media-credit name=”Credit: Todd Warshaw/Getty Images” align=”alignright” width=”207″][/media-credit]Regan Smith won the NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway for his first win in 2012 and the first win for JR Motorsports since 2010.

Kyle Busch finished second, Brendan Gaughan third, Sam Hornish Jr fourth and Austin Dillon rounded out the top-5.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won the 2012 Nationwide Championship for the second season in a row.  Stenhouse Jr. won by 23 points over Elliott Sadler and Dillon by 24.

“It’s been fun. I’ve got to say hi to my granddad at home. He’s not doing as well as he needs to be, so I want to say ‘hey’ to him and we’ll see him soon. But I want to say Happy Thanksgiving to everybody else as well.” Stenhouse Jr. said.

Busch started from the pole position and led the field three times for a race-high 89 laps.  This was Busch’s 26th pole in 244 NNS races. He is fourth on the all-time series poles but winless in 2012.

“Just couldn’t get to the front and couldn’t pass Regan (Smith). I don’t know that I’ve lost so many different ways in a season, but this is that year.” Busch said.

Busch led the first lap by a couple car lengths over Sadler. Sadler never gave up but was struggling with his car telling his crew chief “I’ve got no front grip.” That didn’t really effect him as he took the lead for only a corner which then Busch made the slide-job perfectly. While all of this was happening, championship leader Stenhouse Jr. was sneaking up on them to also challenge for the lead. After Busch cleared Sadler, He pulled away to a 1.517 lead on lap 18.

By lap 40,  Busch was on fire! He had over a 8 second lead over Sadler and Stenhouse Jr. He also lapped up to 23rd position.

Green flag pit stops occurred on lap 49 with Smith being the first one to make the ride to pit road. Smith, who is getting pitted by Dale Jr’s No.88 crew, said he was little tight but was getting better. He got a slight air pressure along with four tires and all the important fuel and was away. Busch, the leader, went down pit lane saying it was very good but just a tic free. He got a wedge adjustment along with four tires and fuel and was away. The two championship contenders came in together with Sadler stopping first. He said he want a little help but was getting better. He got that along with the usual and was away. Stenhouse was complaining that he was lacking grip overall. They went down on the track bar along with some fresh Goodyears and was away.

The first caution waved on lap 65 with the No.20 of Ryan Truex spinning off of turn 4 and slamming the wall. All of the leaders came in to pit. Smith said he was much better but could not get in the throttle coming in off the corner. Stenhouse Jr. said he was much more free this run so they dropped the track bar down two rounds and no tires and came out first. Busch got four tires and came out second. Sadler did not pit and will lead the field back to the green flag.

They restart on lap 70 with Busch going three wide to take the lead back from Sadler. Smith took Ryan Blaney for 4th and then took Stenhouse Jr. for 3rd.

Caution came out on lap 72 when the No.23 of Robert Richardson Jr lost it in turn 4 and almost collected Jason Bowles and Joey Coulter. They all saved it.  Nobody came in for pit stops due to coming in just 2-3 laps ago.

They restarted on lap 72 with Busch being the leader. He cleared Sadler easily into turns one and two with three wide racing behind them. Busch increased his lead to 1.277 lead after Smith passed Sadler for second.

Right after Smith passed Busch for the lead, the caution came out for Richardson Jr spinning for the second time. Everyone came in except for Danica Patrick who took tires the previous stop. Stenhouse and Sadler both took four tires and fuel but Sadler did not put all of the lug nuts on the tires which will result in a penalty. Smith, Sam Hornish Jr. and others just came in for fuel only. Sadler will restart from 19th.

Patrick restarted from the lead but did not last long as Busch and Hornish Jr took her three wide and she was down to five by the backstretch. Hornish Jr. took over the lead but with 95 laps to go Austin Dillon reeled him in and took over the spot. Dillon, who is still mathematically eligible for the championship, also got tires during that stop which is why he is rolling. Smith then took the second spot from Hornish Jr. Hornish Jr. was going backwards as he got passed for third from the championship leader, Stenhouse Jr.

Green flag pit stops started to occur with 54 laps to go with Smith starting then. Steve Latarte, Smith Crew Chief, said he wanted a track bar but then called it off saying he would make Smith’s car to tight. They put four tires on with fuel and was away. Smith was wanting some new tires as he has had 78 laps with the ones he has had on. Busch came in after saying he wanted to snug it up some more. He told his Crew Chief that this was not the car they had at the beginning. Sadler was in saying his main problem was not having enough right rear lateral grip. He got four tires with a air pressure adjustment and some fuel and was gone. Dillon came in and was very happy with his car. He wanted no changes, just four tires and fuel.

Stenhouse Jr. stayed out and led a lap and then came in. Stenhouse Jr. was not happy at all telling Mike Kelley, his Crew Chief, this has been the worst the car has been. They made a wedge adjustment along with some tires and fuel and off he went. Kevin Swindell and Kenny Wallace stayed out to lead a lap and then came in for the pit stops.

After 78 laps of green flag racing, the caution came out for debris in turn 1. All of the leaders came in for the last stop which could define the championship. Sadler came in, telling his crew that this was a break since he would be five laps short, told his team he was lacking right rear grip. They dropped the track bar down and got only one can of fuel. Stenhouse Jr. was terrible and that he wanted triple the adjustment from last time. He got three rounds down in the right rear. Dillon was to tight on the gas and got a air pressure adjustment and was off first. Kevin Swindell did not pit so he will lead the field back to the green.

Green flag waved with 22 laps to go. Swindell lead them to the green but easily got passed into turn 1 as they went four wide to pass him. Smith took over the lead as Sadler was screaming at crew shouting” THIS CAR IS JUNK! WHAT DID YOU GUYS DO?!?!”  While he was saying this the caution came out for the 70 of Johanna Long who got turned by Joey Logano and slammed the inside wall on the back stretch.

Smith led the field back to green with 15 laps to go. Smith and Sadler were clear as the the top-10 were going two and three wide to gain positions. As they were going side by side looking like they were about to wreck, Stenhouse Jr’s spotter was yelling at him to settle back and not to race them. He lifted a little bit but he got the championship!

This is the first time in Roush Fenway history that a driver has won back-to-back championships.

“Thank you. It is unbelievable. These guys have put a lot of hard work into it. From the engine shop to the body shop and chassis shop these guys that go on the road and their families. There are a lot of people that have put a lot of effort into this. I am just the lucky guy that gets to drive it” Stenhouse said.

“Ricky Stenhouse has won our first back-to-back championship for a driver in a series. We had back-to-back Cup championships in 2003 and 2004 but with different drivers. He did a great job and he has made a great champion and is going to make a great Cup driver next year.” Jack Roush said.

Unofficial Race Results
Ford EcoBoost 300, Homestead-Miami
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/race.php?race=33
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 10 5 Regan Smith Chevrolet 0
2 1 54 Kyle Busch Toyota 0
3 16 33 Brendan Gaughan Chevrolet 0
4 11 12 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 41
5 3 3 Austin Dillon * Chevrolet 40
6 4 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 39
7 7 11 Brian Scott Toyota 37
8 20 22 Ryan Blaney Dodge 36
9 2 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 36
10 8 88 Cole Whitt * Chevrolet 34
11 6 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 33
12 32 43 Michael Annett Ford 32
13 14 7 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 32
14 15 21 Joey Coulter Chevrolet 0
15 17 199 Kenny Wallace Toyota 30
16 5 18 Joey Logano Toyota 0
17 18 38 Brad Sweet * Chevrolet 27
18 25 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 26
19 24 10 Mike Bliss Toyota 25
20 13 8 Scott Lagasse Jr. Chevrolet 0
21 22 198 Kevin Swindell Ford 24
22 23 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 22
23 31 108 Jeffrey Earnhardt Ford 21
24 28 124 David Starr Toyota 0
25 19 30 Dakoda Armstrong Chevrolet 0
26 34 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 18
27 30 14 Eric McClure Toyota 17
28 21 27 Andrew Ranger Ford 16
29 35 81 Jason Bowles * Toyota 15
30 26 19 Hal Martin Toyota 0
31 41 4 Danny Efland Chevrolet 13
32 33 52 Joey Gase * Chevrolet 12
33 40 23 Robert Richardson Jr. Chevrolet 11
34 36 70 Johanna Long * Chevrolet 10
35 37 40 Erik Darnell Chevrolet 9
36 27 44 John Blankenship Chevrolet 0
37 38 41 Juan Carlos Blum Chevrolet 7
38 12 20 Ryan Truex Toyota 6
39 9 100 Blake Koch Toyota 5
40 42 191 Jeff Green Toyota 4
41 29 46 Chase Miller Chevrolet 3
42 43 42 Josh Wise Chevrolet 0
43 39 39 Dexter Stacey Ford 1

Lap by Lap: Ford Ecoboost 300 won by Regan Smith; Stenhouse Jr. crowned champion

After grabbing the lead with 15 laps to go, Regan Smith would win the Ford Ecoboost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway for his first ever Nationwide Series victory. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. would finish sixth to win the driver’s championship for the second straight season. Joe Gibbs Racing would win the owner’s championship with the No. 18 car for the fourth time in five years.

 

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. clinches the championship by finishing 16th or better. Kyle Busch starts on pole, followed by Elliott Sadler, Austin Dillon and Stenhouse Jr.

Green flag

Kyle Busch grabs the early lead through turns one and two as Stenhouse and Dillon are side-by-side for second. Sadler clears Dillon for second going into turn four. Stenhouse fourth

Lap 2 Busch leads Sadler, Dillon, Stenhouse, Allgaier, Scott, Whitt, Smith, Logano and Hornish Jr.

Lap 3 Hornish Jr. passes Logano for ninth; Stenhouse passes Dillon for third

Lap 6 Whitt and Smith side-by-side for seventh

Lap 8 Busch and Sadler side-by-side for the lead

Lap 11 Sadler falls back behind Busch as Stenhouse begins to close on them

Lap 17 Busch leads Sadler, Stenhouse Jr., Dillon, Allgaier, Scott, Smith, Hornish Jr., Whitt and Logano

Lap 22 Hornish Jr. passes Scott and Smith; Logano passes Whitt

Lap 23 Busch leads Sadler, Stenhouse, Dillon, Allgaier, Smith, Hornish Jr., Scott, Logano and Whitt

Lap 24 Smith passes Allgaier for fifth

Lap 32 Busch leads Sadler, Stenhouse, Smith, Dillon, Hornish, Allgaier, Scott, Logano and Whitt

Lap 36 Blaney passes Whitt for 10th

Lap 39 Gaughan passes Blaney for 10th

Lap 46 Busch leads Sadler, Smith, Stenhouse, Hornish Jr., Dillon, Scott, Logano, Allgaier and Gaughan

Lap 48 Patrick pits.

Lap 49 Smith pits so its Busch leading Sadler, Stenhouse, Hornish Jr……..Allgaier and Busch pit. Sadler to the lead.

Lap 50 Dillon, Hornish, Stenhouse and Sadler pit, handing the lead to Logano.

Lap 51 Logano pits, handing the lead to Whitt. Whitt pits, handing the lead back to Busch to complete the cycle

Lap 53 Busch leads Smith, Sadler, Stenhouse, Hornish, Scott, Gaughan, Dillon, Allgaier and Logano. 17 cars on the lead lap.

Lap 62 Busch leads Smith, Sadler, Stenhouse, Hornish, Scott, Dillon, Gaughan, Allgaier and Blaney

Caution lap 66 Ryan Truex wrecks off of turn four while running 13th. Truex got into the wall and then over corrected, causing more contact…..leaders pit under caution. Some teams take fuel only, some take tires. Stenhouse wins race off pit road ahead of Busch, Dillon, Blaney, Smith, Logano, Patrick, Scott, Hornish Jr. and Gaughan.

Restart Lap 70 – Busch goes three-wide and grabs the lead

Caution lap 72 Richardson Jr. taps the inside wall. Busch leads Sadler, Smith and Stenhouse.

Restart lap 82 Busch gets a good restart as Sadler is clear for second with Stenhouse third

Lap 83 Smith and Allgaier side-by-side for fourth

Lap 84 Smith passes Allgaier and Stenhouse to move up to third; Allgaier passes Stenhouse for fourth

La 85 Hornish Jr. passes Stenhouse for fifth; Gaughan passes Stenhouse for sixth

Lap 86 Smith and Sadler side-by-side for second; Smith completes the pass off of turn four; Hornish Jr. passes Allgaier

Lap 87 Busch leads Smith, Sadler, Hornish Jr., Allgaier, Gaughan, Stenhouse, Whitt, Scott and Sweet

Lap 89 Patrick and Sweet side-by-side for 10th; Patrick completes the pass; Hornish Jr. passes Sadler for third

Lap 90 Busch lead Smith, Hornish, Sadler, Gaughan

Lap 93 Smith grabs the lead

Caution lap 94 richardson spins…..leaders pit with a variety of strategies……Sadler has to come back in due to missing lugnuts. Danica Patrick stays out to take over the lead

Restart lap 99 as three-wide into turn 1, Hornish Jr. grabs the lead while Smith and Busch are side-by-side for second with Patrick back to fourth.

96 laps to go Hornish leads Smith, Dillon, Busch, Allgaier, Stenhouse, Sweet, Blaney, Gaughan and Scott

95 to go Dillon passes both Smith and Hornish to take the lead. Hornish second, Smith third.

94 to go Dillon leads Hornish, Smith, Stenhouse, Blaney, Busch, Gaughan, Allgaier, Sweet and Whitt

92 to go Smith passes Hornish for second; Sadler up to 10th past Whitt

91 to go Dillon leads Smith, Stenhouse, Hornish, Blaney, Gaughan, Busch, Sadler, Sweet and Whitt

82 to go Dillon leads Stenhouse, Smith, Gaughan, Blaney, Sadler, Hornish, Sweet, Busch and Coulter

79 to go Sadler passes Blaney for fifth

69 to go Dillon leads Stenhouse, Smith, Sadler, Gaughan, Blaney, Sweet, Busch, Coulter and Whitt

59 to go Dillon leads Smith, Stenhouse, Sadler, Gaughan, Blaney, Sweet, Busch, Coulter and Whitt

58 to go Sadler passes Stenhouse for third

55 to go Gaughan passes Stenhouse for fourth

54 to go Smith pits from second

53 to go Blaney and Busch pit

52 to go Dillon leads Sadler, Gaughan, Stenhouse, Sweet, Coulter…..Sadler and Dillon pit, handing the lead over to Stenhouse.

51 to go Stenhouse pits, handing the lead to Swindell

49 to go Swindell pits, handing the lead to Kenny Wallace; Logano pits;

48 to go Wallace pits, handing the lead to Dillon. Dillon leads over Smith and Sadler

41 to go Dillon leads Smith, Sadler, Hornish, Gaughan, Stenhouse, Blaney, Sweet, Busch and Scott. 15 cars on the lead lap.

39 to go Gaughan and Stenhouse Jr. pass Hornish

36 to go Sweet passes Blaney

27 to go Caution for debris. Patrick gets the lucky dog…….leaders head down pit road. Dillon leads Smith, Sadler, Gaughan, Stenhouse, Blaney, Whitt, Scott, Busch and Hornish off pit road. Swindell stayed out to take over the lead. Stenhouse leads Sadler by 19 points, Dillon by 21 points.

Restart 22 to go four-wide for the lead with Sadler, Dillon, Smith and Swindell. Smith grabs the lead off of turn two followed by Sadler and Dillon.

21 to go Sadler and Dillon side-by-side for second; Dillon clears Sadler off of turn two. Stenhouse and Busch side-by-side for fourth. Sadler clears Busch off of turn four.

20 to go caution for Johanna Long hitting the inside backstretch wall due to contact from Logano

Restart 15 laps to go as Smith grabs the lead ahead of Sadler while Busch and Dillon battle for third.

14 to go Smith leads as Sadler and Busch are side-by-side for second; Busch grabs the spot

13 to go Smith leads Busch, then Sadler. Hornish and Gaughan side-by-side for fourth…..Hornish gets loose, up towards Dillon, Dillon pushes up into Stenhouse and Stenhouse barely stays off the outside wall

11 to go Smith leads Busch, Sadler, Gaughan, Hornish, Dillon, Stenhouse, Whitt, Scott, Blaney

10 to go Gaughan and Hornish pass Sadler

8 to go Smith leads Busch, Gaughan, Hornish, Sadler, Dillon, Stenhouse, Scott, Blaney and Whitt.

7 to go Sadler passes Dillon…..Stenhouse looked under Dillon, but backed off.

6 to go Sadler and Dillon side-by-side for position with Scott and Stenhouse right behind.

3 to go Stenhouse passes Sadler; Scott passes Sadler.

2 to go Smith leads Bush, Gaughan, Hornish, Dillon, Stenhouse, Scott, Sadler, Blaney and Whitt

FL Blaney passes Sadler for eighth

Regan Smith wins the race ahead of Busch, Gaughan, Hornish, Dillon, Stenhouse, Scott, Blaney, Sadler and Whitt. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is the champion. Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 wins the owner’s championship.

James Buescher feels blessed after phenomenal championship season

[media-credit name=”Chris Graythen/Getty Images” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]For the majority of the Ford Ecoboost 200 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, James Buescher ran inside of the top 10, looking to seal the championship. As the race drew into the final laps though, Buescher fell outside of the top 10, almost going a lap down at one point.

Meanwhile, Ty Dillon restarted sixth and quickly began to make his way through traffic, up to second in the running order at one point. With Dillon continuing to make passes, the gap between Buesher and Dillon began to shrink, all the way down to one single point.

“It definitely was a nail-biter down to the end,” Buescher said in the media center. “We were in range of being the champion for most of the race, and one of the late restarts there Ty got a good jump on the field and was making a charge for the lead it looked like.  But I was doing everything I could to keep our Great Clips Chevy going forward.”

Buescher said throughout the whole night, he was keeping his eye on the championship situation, seeing where he was running versus Dillon and Timothy Peters, watching the position.

“When he was up to second, I didn’t know where I was, I just knew I needed to be further up for some insurance,” he added.

However, Dillon’s championship chances would come to end when Kyle Larson dived underneath Dillon in turns three and four and Dillon came down slightly. The pair would make contact, both hitting the wall, collecting Ryan Blaney.

Buescher would escape the wreck and pit under caution to make sure that none of the debris cut the tires.

“When they wrecked, I didn’t know if I hit any debris or not, but there was a lot of it, and parts flying everywhere, and the fact that the 17 (Peters) was right around us on the racetrack, we didn’t have a lot to give up to go in and pit, so it was the safe call to go in, put four fresh tires on, or fresher tires on, and make sure that we didn’t have any holes in the tires and nothing crazy to happen for a green-white checkered,” he said. “It was definitely the right call to me, and now we get to celebrate as champions.”

He would complete the final green-white-checkered of the event, finishing 13th to win the championship.

“It was pretty loose and really slick out there,” he said. “We struggled finding speed in our truck tonight.  But we did what we had to do to win the championship, and it worked out in our favor.”

Buescher thought that he would’ve run better, considering this was the same truck that gave Buescher the four victories this year.

“For whatever reason, we were just off,” he said. “We got off in practice, and we figured out where we were off, and my teammates — the 4 and the 30 were really fast all night.  We saw that, and we looked into their notes after practice, talked with those guys and were able to get our truck back in the right direction.  This racetrack is a lot different than every other mile and a half out there.  It is just different.”

Truck owner Steve Turner said that the truck will be put in the warehouse, never run again as they are proving week after week that the new trucks they are building are better.

After the checkered flag, Buescher admits he was worried about celebrating prematurely.

“There was kind of silence on the radio after we crossed the start-finish line,” he said. “I think I made it all the way to Turn 3 before somebody really said that we were the champions.  I was seeing where the 17 was on the track.  I knew he was quite a few spots ahead of us, but I didn’t know exactly how many, and I wanted the official word before I started getting too excited.”

It marks the first ever championship for the 22-year-old driver, who becomes the series second youngest champion.

“I’ve got to thank everybody on this team, Michael Shelton, Steve Turner for a great year,” he said. “Championship or no championship, it was going to be a great year, and to win the championship after winning four races this season makes it an incredible year.”

Four wins, 10 top fives and 14 top 10s in 22 races for Buescher showcases the strength of Turner Motorsports for the second straight year. Last year, he finished the year with 0 wins, 10 top fives and 19 top 10s, though would finish third in points.

With three races to go, Buescher looked to be in the driver’s seat with a 21 point lead. However, after blowing a tire with four laps to go at Phoenix while running in the top 10, Buescher came into Phoenix leading by only 11 points over Peters.

“It seems like the points leader all year long in this Camping World Truck Series has had just bad luck,” Buescher said. “Anybody that took over the points lead would run into trouble, and we saw it all year long, the 3 (Dillon), the 17 (Peters), the 6 (Justin Lofton) when he was leading the points early on, and us earlier this season, we got the points lead and gave it right back.

“It seems like if you’re the points leader, you were giving up points.  We did everything we could to give up not too many.”

Buescher’s worst finish of the year was a 30th at Iowa, however he only managed to finish outside of the top 20 twice – Iowa and a 22nd at Charlotte.

“Coming into this weekend with an 11-point lead, I knew that our team was good enough not to give up 11 points,” Buescher continued. “So it was just a matter of things that are out of our control that could have played into us not winning this championship tonight.”

The season caps off a great year for Buescher, which saw him marry Kris in January before the season started.

“My wife is my No. 1 supporter, so to be able to start off the race season after taking that next step in my life with a win at Daytona was incredible, best thing I’d ever done in racing,” he said. “You know, that kind of opened the floodgates for us to win some races on the truck side.  We won four of them, and now we’re the champions.

“Being the champion of the Truck Series definitely trumps winning a race at Daytona, but the race at Daytona is still pretty high up there.  But it’s been a phenomenal year for my racing career and for my personal life.  I just feel really blessed.”