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The Future of NASCAR – Spotlight on Trevor Bayne

Photo Credit: Stock Car Montreal Press Conference

Trevor Bayne, one of NASCAR’s rising stars, began racing at the age of five. Since then, the 18-year-old rookie from Knoxville, TN, has earned 22 championships.

In eight years on the go-kart circuit, he amassed 3 World Championships, 300 feature wins and 18 State and Track Championships combined. From there, he entered the Allison Legacy Race Series and at 13 became the youngest top rookie in the series. During his two years in the series, Bayne had 14 wins, 19 poles and 30 top five finishes in only 41 starts. In 2005, he became the series National Champion.

One of Bayne’s grandfathers raced cars and the other raced boats so you might assume that he grew up surrounded by a family of racers who encouraged him to go in that direction. But, he explains that when he began racing, he wasn’t aware of the family connection.

“Well I don’t know if the family deal was really a big factor in that. My grandfather did race but that was before I was ever around and so that was kind of already washed away by the time I was growing up and knew what was going on. Once I got involved in racing then that’s when I realized that he used to race and that’s when the support factor came in from him and from my Dad because my Dad was around the racetrack with his Dad. So I had a lot of support.

“But that wasn’t the reason that pushed me into racing. Sometimes you see the Dads with the sons and they say Hey I’d like my son to race so this is the only option I’m going to give him. But I did everything, I played Tee Ball when I was little, I played football, I played quarterback for a little while. Then when I was five years old I started racing. And, you know, I had my options. It was like, ‘hey I want to be good at one of these things, now which one am I going do?’ And it was up to me. My Dad said ‘whatever you want to do, I’m going to support you.’

“So, I chose racing and it’s been on since then.”

It was while racing in the Legacy Series that Trevor met Donnie Allison. Allison proved to be one of Bayne’s biggest supporters and helped guide the young racer as he rose through the ranks.

“Somebody else that has really helped me out as a driver is Donnie Allison. I had the chance to work with him when I was 13 years old running the Allison Legacy Series. He actually helped crew chief alongside my Dad for the second season in the Allison Legacy cars when we won a National Championship. He’s taught me a lot about momentum and really about how to treat people.

“Donnie’s a great guy. He’s taught me a lot on and off the track.”

After the Legacy Series, Bayne transitioned to the USAR Hooters Pro Cup Series Southern Division and at the age of 15 became the youngest in the series to win top rookie honors.

His big break came in 2008 when Dale Eanrhardt Inc. signed him to their driver development program. Bayne and Jeffrey Earnhardt became the first two drivers enrolled in the DEI driver development program. He began competing in the Camping World East series and got his first win at Thompson International Speedway in July 2008. By the end of the season, he had six top-fives, seven top-10s and finished fourth in the points standings.

In 2009, he started off the year by finishing second in the Toyota All-Star Showdown at Irwindale Speedway. This outstanding finish helped him capture the Sunoco Rookie of the Race honor. His season, however, came to an abrupt halt when he lost his ride with DEI due to economic concerns and lack of sponsorship. He found himself out of a ride for the first time in his career.

I asked Bayne what he considered to be the turning point in his career. It wasn’t the success that he had previously earned that drove him forward but the disappointment of losing his ride with DEI. It taught him what he needed to do to become successful in this sport. Instead of letting it discourage him, he used the experience to help propel him to the next level.

“At the last minute in December, going into the year thinking we were running a full time Nationwide Series this year, the deal was gone away. And I was put back on the ground trying to find a ride and most of the seats were already taken because it was so late in the game.

“So I spent half a season just trying to get my hands on anything I could drive. I ran a couple of races. I ran the Hooters Pro Cup race in Concord and we actually won that. And I ran the All-Star Showdown in January and finished second. And I ran a couple of other races.

“It’s devastating to see what can actually happen. You know, I was kind of put in a bubble growing up my whole life because everything went so smooth. We were always running good in races, and that just created more opportunity. And then, the economy, when that happened, it didn’t matter the amount of talent that you had, or the ability, because nobody could fund it at that point.

“It kind of brought me back down to earth and I realized that we needed to work on some other things too. We met with a lady named Danielle ( Danielle Randall-Bauer, President of Everest Marketing Group) in February at Daytona and we started talking to her about some sponsorship opportunities. She introduced us to Gary Bechtel (former owner of Diamond Ridge Motorsports) who became a great friend of ours.

“He turned around and started talking to MWR (Michael Waltrip Racing). We’d already talked with MWR a couple of times and they said they had eight races available for the season that weren’t sold yet. We put together a deal between MWR and Gary Bechtel to put me in the seat for those eight races. Well those eight turned into four more races so we had 12 total. We were able to prove ourselves in that amount of time. It’s drawn a lot of opportunity and I’m really appreciative for that chance to show what we can do.

“I would say that’s been the biggest turning point, just being able to get back in a race car and show what we can do and help create that interest. It’s been pretty awesome.”

On September 11, Bayne competed in his first race at Richmond in the No. 11 car for CJM Racing, qualifying ninth and finishing in the seventh position. This impressive run has generated increased interest and will almost certainly result in more future opportunities for Bayne.

He’s hoping for a full time Nationwide ride with the possibility of some Cup experience as well. This desire is tempered with the awareness that he needs to take his time and gain all the experience he can along the way.

“I don’t want to go too fast either. I want to learn things as I go. You can always step up but you can’t really take that step down and then step back up. So when I move to the next level I want to make sure that I’m doing it at the right time and that I’m ready to go.”

Bayne’s father has been there for him every step of the way and has never missed a single lap that his son has run. This family support and his faith in a higher purpose have given Bayne a firm foundation on which to build his career.

“God’s got a plan for my life and he’s shown that. Every time that I’ve been in a tough spot, he’s always prevailed and pulled me through. I know that he has a plan for everything. And at the time it seemed like the worst thing in the world that could possibly happen, losing the deal at DEI. But now, the opportunities that have been created, it’s been amazing to me. To see the plan going into action that God has laid out for my life, it’s pretty awesome.”

His calm self assurance and media friendly good looks are reminiscent of Jeff Gordon. He also has the competitive edge of Kyle Busch, without the brashness. These qualities combine to make Trevor Bayne the perfect candidate for the future of NASCAR.

Skinner wins at Gateway

Mike Skinner started ninth and led the final six (of 162) laps en route to his victory in Saturday’s Copart 200 Camping World Trucks Series race at Gateway Int’l Raceway.

The race was marred by late crashes in back-to-back restarts in the final 10 laps.

Matt Crafton sent race leader and points leader Ron Hornaday spinning out after contact with four laps to go. Colin Braun and Rick Crawford were also collected in the accident. The race was red flagged for cleanup.

NASCAR black-flagged Crafton and he had to restart at the end of the lead lap cars. Crafton battled back to finish sixth.

“I don’t believe it. I’m usually end on the short side of that call with the 13 (Johnny Sauter) there. I was better than he was and he was doing his job. He did a good job. I guess we got by him on the wreck. I have to applaud NASCAR. Sometime we gotta stop being able to wreck the leader to win these races.” Skinner said.

“We didn’t have the best truck. We probably had a second or third place truck and we had a mishap in the pits. I just applaud NASCAR for putting a stop to wrecking the leader to win races. They gotta stop it sooner or later. I could’ve done that twice this year and I decided not to. Today it paid dividends for me.” Skinner added.

Johnny Sauter finished second, Brian Scott third, Aric Almirola fourth and Tayler Malsam finished fifth.

Unofficial Race Results

Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps Status
1 9 5 Mike Skinner  Toyota 190 5 162 Running
2 3 13 Johnny Sauter * Chevrolet 170 0 162 Running
3 4 16 Brian Scott  Toyota 165 0 162 Running
4 15 51 Aric Almirola  Toyota 160 0 162 Running
5 17 81 Tayler Malsam * Toyota 155 0 162 Running
6 6 88 Matt Crafton  Chevrolet 150 0 162 Running
7 8 117 Timothy Peters  Toyota 151 5 162 Running
8 10 60 Stacy Compton  Toyota 147 5 162 Running
9 13 139 Ryan Sieg  Chevrolet 138 0 162 Running
10 11 14 Rick Crawford  Ford 134 0 162 Running
11 23 129 Mikey Kile  Chevrolet 130 0 162 Running
12 18 8 Todd Kluever  Chevrolet 127 0 161 Running
13 30 184 Chris Fontaine  Chevrolet 124 0 161 Running
14 26 7 Jason Young  Chevrolet 121 0 161 Running
15 22 15 Brian Ickler * Toyota 118 0 160 Running
16 14 24 David Starr  Toyota 115 0 159 Running
17 2 33 Ron Hornaday  Chevrolet 122 10 156 Accident
18 7 30 Todd Bodine  Toyota 114 5 153 Accident
19 1 6 Colin Braun  Ford 111 5 152 Accident
20 19 23 Jason White  Dodge 103 0 144 Running
21 12 25 Terry Cook  Toyota 100 0 123 Running
22 20 4 Ricky Carmichael * Chevrolet 97 0 103 Accident
23 16 10 James Buescher * Ford 94 0 87 Accident
24 5 11 T.J. Bell  Toyota 91 0 80 Accident
25 36 273 Dexter Bean  Chevrolet 88 0 77 Engine
26 33 157 Norm Benning  Chevrolet 85 0 61 Overheating
27 24 144 Tommy Joe Martins  Ford 82 0 33 Ignition
28 27 85 Brent Raymer * Ford 79 0 33 Ignition
29 34 47 Brandon Knupp  Chevrolet 76 0 22 Engine
30 31 121 Nick Tucker  Dodge 73 0 17 Vibration
31 32 8 Butch Miller  Chevrolet 70 0 15 Overheating
32 21 212 Mario Gosselin  Chevrolet 67 0 11 Rear End
33 35 148 Wayne Edwards  Chevrolet 64 0 4 Overheating
34 25 293 Mike Garvey Chevrolet 61 0 4 Rear End
35 29 165 Lance Hooper  Chevrolet 58 0 3 Brakes
36 28 172 John Jackson  Chevrolet 55 0 2 Transmission

Busch wins at NHIS

NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series

Kyle Busch led four times for 75 of 200 laps en route to his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory on Saturday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Busch’s No. 51 team used pit strategy to get the win by only taking a splash of fuel to minimize their time on pit road.

“It barely made it. It ran out (of fuel) coming into victory lane.” Busch said.

This was Busch’s his fifth win of the season and also gave Toyota five consecutive victories in the series.

“It was a great race today. I’m real proud of the guys and Richie (crew chief) for working so hard on these trucks. We come to these tracks and sort of struggle sometimes. This is I think our third year together now and we seem to hit on something a little bit better not quite as good as the 33 or the 2 but there at the end we were out front when it mattered and had just the right amount of fuel in order to make it.” Busch said.

Busch has now won at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in all three of NASCAR divisions.

“That’s cool, man. That’s something special. We look to do that everywhere we go but we’ve been fortunate enough to have good race trucks like we’ve had this year.” Busch said.

Ron Hornaday finished second, Kevin Harvick third, Matt Crafton fourth and Johnny Sauter finished fifth.

Hornaday sits atop the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series point standings by 217 points over Matt Crafton with just six races remaining.

“It was a good day until after the race I guess. I didn’t know, I thought I was better than Kevin (Harvick) for a while and then he had newer tires.” Hornaday said.

The series heads to Las Vegas Motor Speedway next Saturday night.

Kyle Busch outduels Mark Martin, returns to Victory Lane at Bristol

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Kyle Busch held off Mark Martin to win the Sharpie 500 Saturday night at the Bristol Motor Speedway in front of the track’s 55th straight sold-out crowd.

A four-lap shootout between Busch and Martin followed a 10-minute red-flag period started when Michael Waltrip blew a tire after contact with David Reutimann with nine laps to go. Busch and Martin battled side by side for three laps before the No. 18 pulled ahead for good on the final time down the backstretch.

Busch climbed from his car, which went untouched by Martin during their battle for the lead, with more praise for Martin and the competition than himself.

“Racing in the Sprint Cup Series with these guys is really an honor,” Busch said. “And Mark Martin, what a class act. He deserved to win this race.

“We didn’t have the best car tonight, but we had a car capable enough of doing it if I drove it hard enough.”

The same upbeat Busch appeared from his car in Victory Lane as did Wednesday after a Truck Series win, also at Bristol. Busch’s crew chief Steve Addington was feeling the same vibe as his team inched closer to the Race to the Chase cutoff line with the win.

Addington said that even during Busch’s slump, which saw last season’s top seed in the Chase finish outside of the top 10 in 10 out of the series’ last 13 races, he never doubted the team’s potential to win.

“That guy sitting behind that steering wheel right there is the man,” Addington said of his driver. “We’ve just got to get back on our track with giving him what he needs to win races. We’ll get this M&Ms Toyota in the Chase on way or another.”.

Rookie Marcos Ambrose finished third, Greg Biffle fourth and Denny Hamlin fifth. Dale Earnhardt Jr. fell from fifth to finish ninth in the final four laps.

Eleven yellow flags waved at Bristol for a total of 75 laps, with five caution periods occurring after lap 400 of the 500 scheduled. Rain threatened to stall the race after causing the race’s penultimate caution, but storms held off long enough for Busch to hand the checkered flag to a fan and do a reverse-direction victory lap.

Shaking up the points battle were Tony Stewart and Jimmie Johnson, who struggled through radio problems and poor pit stops, respectively. Stewart remains ahead of Johnson by 220 points.

Busch’s victory brought him to 33 points outside the Chase cutoff. After being involved in two separate incidents, Clint Bowyer’s Chase hopes were dashed.

Fireworks could fly between Kyle Busch, Brian Vickers during Bristol pre-race

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Saturday night’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway could be interesting from before the start.

After a press conference with reporters Friday, Brian Vickers once again criticized Kyle Busch for being “so mad about something so small.” Vickers was once again reacting to the end of last weekend’s Nationwide Series Race at Michigan, when Brad Keselowski flew by the two drivers on the outside as they fought amongst themselves for the lead.

Both drivers are trying to make the Chase, and they qualified in close proximity — 14th and 15th.

The pre-race procedures have been changed for Saturday’s Sharpie 500, as drivers will walk out of the Turn 3 tunnel to the tune of a song of their choice before entering a truck that will escort them around the track.  Both Vickers and Busch will ride in the same truck by virtue of their close qualifying positions.

Here’s to both of them making it to the race in one piece.

Brad Keselowski wins Nationwide Series pole in telling day for his future

BRISTOL, Tenn. – After leading Nationwide Series final practice, Brad Keselowski won the pole for Friday night’s Food City 250 at the Bristol Motor Speedway.

Keselowski’s lap of 120.565 mph paced the field that will include Sprint Cup Series drivers Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Kasey Kahne, Kevin Harvick, Clint Bowyer, Reed Sorenson and David Reutimann.

While the No. 88 sat firmly on the pole, news leaked that the JR Motorsports driver would be headed to Penske Racing, which competes under the Dodge banner in the Sprint Cup Series, in 2009. Keselowski chose to remain mum on his future plans.

“I really am not in a position to talk about any of that stuff right now,” Keselowski said. “I’m really not prepared to address any of the rumors about next year. I’m here to race the Nationwide car and win with it tonight and I am not going to let anything get in the way or distract us from that end.”

Edwards will roll off second, Bowyer third, Kenseth fourth and hometown favorite Trevor Bayne rounds out the top five. The green flag is expected to fly shortly after 7:30 p.m. ET.

Qualifying Results

Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time Bnd
1 88 Brad Keselowski Chevrolet 120.565 15.915
2 60 Carl Edwards Ford 120.444 15.931 -0.016
3 29 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 120.429 15.933 -0.018
4 16 Matt Kenseth Ford 120.354 15.943 -0.028
5 99 Trevor Bayne Toyota 120.301 15.95 -0.035
6 12 Justin Allgaier* Dodge 120.278 15.953 -0.038
7 20 Brad Coleman Toyota 120.022 15.987 -0.072
8 66 Steve Wallace Chevrolet 119.985 15.992 -0.077
9 6 David Ragan Ford 119.85 16.01 -0.095
10 5 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 119.581 16.046 -0.131
11 33 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 119.388 16.072 -0.157
12 1 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 119.351 16.077 -0.162
13 15 Michael Annett* Toyota 119.328 16.08 -0.165
14 10 Kasey Kahne Toyota 119.18 16.1 -0.185
15 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 119.099 16.111 -0.196
16 11 Brian Scott Toyota 119.091 16.112 -0.197
17 27 Jason Keller Ford 118.995 16.125 -0.21
18 177 Peyton Sellers Chevrolet 118.988 16.126 -0.211
19 26 Michael McDowell* Dodge 118.929 16.134 -0.219
20 62 Brendan Gaughan* Chevrolet 118.841 16.146 -0.231
21 9 John Wes Townley* Ford 118.672 16.169 -0.254
22 40 Scott Wimmer Chevrolet 118.613 16.177 -0.262
23 1 Danny O’Quinn Jr. Chevrolet 118.591 16.18 -0.265
24 5 Casey Atwood Chevrolet 118.591 16.18 -0.265
25 61 Matt Carter Ford 118.584 16.181 -0.266
26 38 Jason Leffler Toyota 118.459 16.198 -0.283
27 7 Chase Austin Chevrolet 118.379 16.209 -0.294
28 47 Coleman Pressley Toyota 118.306 16.219 -0.304
29 49 Mark Green Chevrolet 118.291 16.221 -0.306
30 28 Kenny Wallace Chevrolet 118.087 16.249 -0.334
31 178 Kevin Lepage Dodge 118.029 16.257 -0.342
32 173 Derrike Cope Dodge 117.971 16.265 -0.35
33 172 Benny Gordon Ford 117.848 16.282 -0.367
34 91 Terry Cook* Chevrolet 117.804 16.288 -0.373
35 90 Johnny Chapman Chevrolet 117.516 16.328 -0.413
36 52 Brad Teague Chevrolet 117.487 16.332 -0.417
37 87 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 117.15 16.379 -0.464
38 23 Ken Butler III* Chevrolet 116.957 16.406 -0.491
39 24 Eric McClure+ Ford 116.474 16.474 -0.559
40 81 Sean Murphy+ Dodge 116.284 16.501 -0.586
41 32 David Reutimann+ Toyota 116.08 16.53 -0.615
42 234 Tony Raines+ Chevrolet 115.968 16.546 -0.631
43 198 Paul Menard Ford 117.343 16.352 -0.437

Mark Martin on pole for fifth time this season at Bristol

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Mark Martin will start from the pole for the fifth time in the 2009 season Saturday night at the Bristol Motor Speedway in the Sprint Cup Series Sharpie 500.

Martin’s lap of 124.484 mph was just good enough for first, edging second-place Greg Biffle by just over two one hundredths of a second.

“We just ran so many really special laps,” Martin said. “I believe the law of averages caught up with us. I didn’t need to choke today.

“We got a great lap again, and so that was really really good.”

Rookie Scott Speed qualified fourth in his effort to return the No. 82 team back to the top-35 in points, Dave Blaney drove his start-and-park operation to a season-high fourth and Matt Kenseth will roll off fifth.

Qualifying Results

Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time Bnd
1 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 124.484 15.414
2 16 Greg Biffle Ford 124.307 15.436 -0.022
3 82 Scott Speed* Toyota 124.146 15.456 -0.042
4 66 Dave Blaney Toyota 123.969 15.478 -0.064
5 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 123.897 15.487 -0.073
6 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 123.89 15.488 -0.074
7 7 Casey Mears Chevrolet 123.754 15.505 -0.091
8 20 Joey Logano* Toyota 123.706 15.511 -0.097
9 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 123.642 15.519 -0.105
10 43 Reed Sorenson Dodge 123.61 15.523 -0.109
11 171 David Gilliland Chevrolet 123.586 15.526 -0.112
12 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 123.586 15.526 -0.112
13 2 Kurt Busch Dodge 123.538 15.532 -0.118
14 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 123.451 15.543 -0.129
15 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 123.435 15.545 -0.131
16 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 123.34 15.557 -0.143
17 26 Jamie McMurray Ford 123.245 15.569 -0.155
18 0 David Reutimann Toyota 123.126 15.584 -0.17
19 44 A.J. Allmendinger Dodge 123.103 15.587 -0.173
20 96 Bobby Labonte Ford 123.047 15.594 -0.18
21 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 122.984 15.602 -0.188
22 8 Terry Labonte Toyota 122.842 15.62 -0.206
23 6 David Ragan Ford 122.787 15.627 -0.213
24 1 Martin Truex Jr. Chevrolet 122.756 15.631 -0.217
25 47 Marcos Ambrose Toyota 122.67 15.642 -0.228
26 4 Scott Wimmer Chevrolet 122.646 15.645 -0.231
27 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 122.584 15.653 -0.239
28 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 122.576 15.654 -0.24
29 9 Kasey Kahne Dodge 122.537 15.659 -0.245
30 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 122.521 15.661 -0.247
31 7 Robby Gordon Toyota 122.482 15.666 -0.252
32 99 Carl Edwards Ford 122.419 15.674 -0.26
33 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 122.411 15.675 -0.261
34 12 David Stremme Dodge 122.31 15.688 -0.274
35 37 Tony Raines Dodge 122.217 15.7 -0.286
36 55 Michael Waltrip Toyota 122.115 15.713 -0.299
37 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 122.108 15.714 -0.3
38 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 122.053 15.721 -0.307
39 187 Joe Nemechek Toyota 121.566 15.784 -0.37
40 36 Mike Skinner Toyota 121.497 15.793 -0.379
41 98 Paul Menard Ford 121.389 15.807 -0.393
42 34 John Andretti Chevrolet 121.243 15.826 -0.412
43 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 120.626 15.907 -0.493

David Ragan earns second Nationwide Series win after showdown with Carl Edwards at Bristol

BRISTOL, Tenn. – David Ragan shot ahead of Carl Edwards in a green-white-checkered finish to win the NASCAR Nationwide Series Food City 250 Friday night by a 1.379-second margin.

Debris on the .5-mile oval’s frontstretch brought out the race’s final caution with eight laps remaining, setting up a two-lap run to the finish four laps after regulation. Ragan, who earlier in the race saw Edwards jet ahead on the outside line on a double-file restart, elected to take to the outside as the leader.

“The outside was just great all night,” Ragan said. “I really struggled passing cars on the bottom.

“I just can’t say enough about our Nationwide team and everybody back at the Roush Fenway shop.”

The win was Ragan’s second Nationwide Series victory this season, his first coming at Talladega last spring. Ragan gained the lead after maneuvering lapped traffic to where he could pin Edwards in the preferred middle groove and drive by on the bottom.

Edwards said he hesitated to overdrive his car and hit Ragan, his teammate, on the restart with a good points day the risk.

“David’s car was just so much faster through the center,” Edwards said. “I just can’t say enough about David Ragan. We didn’t come here to finish second, but he’s a great guy.”

Points leader Kyle Busch was involved in an incident with the lapped car of Chase Austin on lap 54 while leading. Busch came out from the garage after repairs and ended up 28th, 59 laps down.

Busch led one lap before contact with Austin, but his points lead was cut to 248 with Edwards’ second-place finish. The series heads to Montreal next weekend, where Edwards will again look to slim Busch’s lead down.

Pole-sitter Brad Keselowski finished third after an eventful night that saw him nudge leader Justin Allgaier, cut down Allgaier’s tire and sustain enough front-end damage to head to pit road off sequence.

The incident, which Keselowski said was “100 percent” his fault, sent Allagaier spinning for the first time of the night.

“I just was racing hard and I guess I was racing a little too hard,” Keselowski said. “I feel terrible about it. He had a really great car and could have won the race.”

Allgaier’s second spin on lap 250 ended the race before the white-flag lap was completed.

Kevin Harvick, who won at Bristol in the spring, was fourth and Matt Kenseth fifth after recovering from a spin on lap seven.

Unofficial Race Results

Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps Status
1 9 6 David Ragan  Ford 190 5 254 Running
2 2 60 Carl Edwards  Ford 175 5 254 Running
3 1 88 Brad Keselowski  Chevrolet 170 5 254 Running
4 11 33 Kevin Harvick  Chevrolet 170 10 254 Running
5 4 16 Matt Kenseth  Ford 155 0 254 Running
6 26 38 Jason Leffler  Toyota 150 0 254 Running
7 3 29 Clint Bowyer  Chevrolet 146 0 254 Running
8 13 15 Michael Annett * Toyota 142 0 254 Running
9 43 198 Paul Menard  Ford 138 0 254 Running
10 19 26 Michael McDowell * Dodge 134 0 254 Running
11 41 32 David Reutimann  Toyota 130 0 254 Running
12 25 61 Matt Carter  Ford 127 0 254 Running
13 10 5 Ryan Newman  Chevrolet 124 0 254 Running
14 30 28 Kenny Wallace  Chevrolet 121 0 253 Running
15 37 87 Mike Bliss  Chevrolet 118 0 253 Running
16 17 27 Jason Keller  Ford 115 0 253 Running
17 8 66 Steve Wallace  Chevrolet 112 0 253 Running
18 33 172 Benny Gordon  Ford 109 0 252 Running
19 20 62 Brendan Gaughan * Chevrolet 111 5 252 Running
20 40 81 Sean Murphy  Dodge 103 0 252 Running
21 22 40 Scott Wimmer  Chevrolet 100 0 251 Running
22 38 23 Ken Butler III * Chevrolet 97 0 251 Running
23 42 234 Tony Raines  Chevrolet 94 0 250 Running
24 5 99 Trevor Bayne  Toyota 91 0 250 Running
25 39 24 Eric McClure  Ford 88 0 249 Running
26 32 173 Derrike Cope  Dodge 85 0 236 Running
27 6 12 Justin Allgaier * Dodge 87 5 226 Running
28 15 18 Kyle Busch  Toyota 84 5 195 Running
29 7 20 Brad Coleman  Toyota 76 0 177 Running
30 16 11 Brian Scott  Toyota 73 0 162 Accident
31 18 177 Peyton Sellers  Chevrolet 70 0 161 Accident
32 23 1 Danny O’Quinn Jr.  Chevrolet 67 0 137 Accident
33 21 9 John Wes Townley * Ford 64 0 133 Susp.
34 36 52 Brad Teague  Chevrolet 61 0 79 Ignition
35 12 1 Reed Sorenson  Chevrolet 58 0 52 Accident
36 27 7 Chase Austin  Chevrolet 55 0 51 Accident
37 14 10 Kasey Kahne  Toyota 52 0 30 Overheating
38 29 49 Mark Green  Chevrolet 49 0 25 Brakes
39 28 47 Coleman Pressley  Toyota 46 0 23 Overheating
40 31 178 Kevin Lepage  Dodge 43 0 13 Ignition
41 24 5 Casey Atwood  Chevrolet 40 0 12 Transmission
42 34 91 Terry Cook * Chevrolet 37 0 3 Brakes
43 35 90 Johnny Chapman  Chevrolet 34 0 2 Ignition

Kyle Busch snaps Ron Hornaday’s winning streak with come-from-behind effort at Bristol

BRISTOL, Tenn. – As evidenced by a wide smile and upbeat attitude in the Bristol Motor Speedway’s Victory Lane, his swagger was back, his style no longer cramped.

Kyle Busch ended Ron Hornaday’s Camping World Truck Series streak Wednesday night at the .5-mile bullring, winning the O’Reilly 200 for the second year in a row. The victory was Busch’s first in 17 NASCAR National Touring Series races and third in the Truck Series with Billy Ballew Motorsports.

“For some reason I’ve really taken to the new surface,” Busch said. “I loved the old surface. I love the new one.”

Since being wrecked by Tony Stewart approaching the checkered flag in July’s Sprint Cup Series race at Daytona, Busch has slipped to 15th in the series standings, three spots outside the Chase for the Cup cutoff line officially drawn after only three more races.

While winning in the Truck Series doesn’t help his Cup car get faster, Busch said it will aid his confidence as a driver.

“It just gets the momentum going. It just tells you that you can do it,” Busch said. “I’m my myself’s biggest critic. This definitely helps out. Gets me back in the right mindset. Gets me back in the right frame.”

The race wasn’t decided after pit strategy played out. Busch and crew chief Richie Wauters elected to come in under the race’s first caution, take four tires and stay out for the remainder of the race. The strategy worked out, but not before Busch picked off most of the field’s lead-lap cars along with Jason White, who led 86 laps in a gutsy bid to win his first Truck Series race.

Wauters said the tire compound keyed the No. 51 team’s strategy.

“The tires, they’re so hard here. They’re not falling off,” Wauters said. “It seems like when they cool down you can run just like you have stickers on again, so we decided to stay out. It was the right call tonight.”

Busch finished ahead of the second-place car of Matt Crafton and third-place Hornaday. The two are locked in a points battle that was trimmed to 211 points following 200 laps at Bristol, where Hornaday has multiple wins but hasn’t fared as well on the track’s revamped surface.

Wednesday night, a pit-stop error would doom any chance of Hornaday continuing his record streak, which hasn’t seen the No. 33 team anywhere but in Victory Lane since the series visited the Milwaukee Mile in June.

“We ran good, we just ran into some bad luck,” Hornaday said. “Kyle was just so dominant up top, and he had his truck free enough in the beginning. I learned that, and when he pitted and came right back in for fuel, that’s hurt us right there.

We lost too much track position right there. It was my own fault. I should have been paying more attention.”

The race was slowed five times for a total of 32 laps.

Pole-sitter Ryan Newman, who competed in the NASCAR Modified Series race earlier in the day, finished fourth. Brian Scott rounded out the top-five finishers with a no-tire strategy, still recovering from an accident at Michigan that broke his arm.