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Edwards wins the NNS Alliance Truck Parts 250 at Michigan Int’l Speedway

Carl Edwards passed teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. with less than 10 laps remaining in Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Alliance Truck Parts 250 at Michigan International Speedway (MIS) in route to his fourth NNS victory of the season.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”229″][/media-credit]“Ricky Stenhouse is a driving machine and here comes Jack Roush. Jack got us some fuel miles and we couldn’t dare run out of fuel with that Ford Focus out front in the pace car, it is all about fuel mileage today. Jack leaned her down and we didn’t need it, it was great. Mike Beam did a great job with the strategy. I didn’t think I was going to get by Ricky. I cannot drive any harder than that. That was as hard as I could drive to get by him. He is going to be a force to be reckoned with.” Edwards said.

Edwards won by 1.669 seconds over Stenhouse Jr. and the two teammates gave Roush Fenway Racing a 1-2 finish.

Edwards and Stenhouse also combined to lead 100 laps and Roush Fenway scored its 21st NASCAR win at its ‘home track’ of Michigan. It was the fifth win for the organization at MIS and the fifth win for Roush Fenway this season in the Nationwide Series.

“Our Tender Ridge Mustang was really fast for about 15 laps and then we got really tight. On that last restart I just tried to get as far out there as we could and didn’t quite get far enough. We just got too tight. Carl caught us. It was a good day for us. We definitely wanted one more spot. I gave it everything it had, we just got too tight.” Stenhouse Jr. said.

Kyle Busch finished third, pole-sitter Paul Menard fourth and Trevor Bayne finished fifth.

With his second place finish, Stenhouse Jr. took over the series point standings by two over Elliott Sadler.

“I guess that is a good thing for us for sure for the championship but it doesn’t do anything for us not winning. I feel like earlier in the year we gave some wins away, definitely some top-fives. We are right there where we need to be we just have to cap it off.” Stenhouse Jr. said.

Unofficial Race Results
Alliance Truck Parts 250, Michigan International Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/race.php?race=15
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Pos. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 3 60 Carl Edwards Ford 0
2 5 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 43
3 12 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 0
4 1 33 Paul Menard Chevrolet 0
5 7 16 Trevor Bayne Ford 40
6 9 20 Joey Logano Toyota 0
7 11 32 Mark Martin Chevrolet 0
8 6 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 37
9 8 22 Brad Keselowski Dodge 0
10 22 38 Jason Leffler Chevrolet 34
11 15 30 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 33
12 10 70 David Stremme Chevrolet 0
13 13 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 31
14 14 66 Steve Wallace Toyota 30
15 4 88 Aric Almirola Chevrolet 29
16 25 7 Josh Wise Chevrolet 28
17 16 11 Brian Scott Toyota 27
18 28 164 David Reutimann Toyota 0
19 21 62 Michael Annett Toyota 25
20 19 9 Kenny Wallace Toyota 24
21 23 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 23
22 27 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 22
23 17 19 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 21
24 2 12 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 21
25 18 81 Blake Koch * Dodge 19
26 29 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 18
27 39 15 Timmy Hill * Ford 17
28 35 28 Derrike Cope Chevrolet 16
29 33 14 Eric McClure Chevrolet 15
30 31 40 Charles Lewandoski * Chevrolet 14
31 41 103 Robert Richardson Jr. Chevrolet 13
32 36 113 Jennifer Jo Cobb * Ford 12
33 26 39 Danny Efland Ford 11
34 38 89 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 10
35 37 141 Carl Long Chevrolet 9
36 20 168 Matthew Carter Chevrolet 8
37 43 23 Scott Riggs Dodge 7
38 40 175 Andy Ponstein Ford 0
39 30 174 J.J. Yeley Chevrolet 0
40 34 142 Tim Andrews Chevrolet 0
41 32 44 Jeff Green Chevrolet 3
42 42 52 Tony Raines Chevrolet 0
43 24 49 Dennis Setzer Chevrolet 1

Kyle Busch: Not New, Not Old, Just Distracted

At the beginning of the season, all the talk was about the new Kyle Busch, the driver who was more mature, calculated on the track, and more accessible off the track even after a bad run.

[media-credit id=62 align=”alignright” width=”229″][/media-credit]This was in stark contrast to the driver who previously would take any chance on the track to win, no matter who got in the way, and sometimes sulked, making a quick exit if things did not go his way.

Currently, however, Kyle Busch is neither old nor new. The driver of the No. 18 M&Ms Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing is just plain distracted.

The major distractions for Busch started on May 7th when he and Kevin Harvick, driver of the No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing, got into it at the Darlington Showtime Southern 500.

After issues on the track, Harvick and Busch headed for trouble on pit road, with Harvick reaching into Busch’s car for some action and Busch driving away, pushing Harvick’s car into the pit road retaining wall.

“I knew that wasn’t going to be a good situation when I saw him getting out of his car,” Busch said. “My choices were limited.”

“I was either going to get punched in the face or just drive through his car,” Busch continued. “I made a judgment call there and it wasn’t one of the best choices that I had.”

As a result of their altercation, NASCAR penalized both drivers for actions detrimental to stock car racing.  They were both fined $25,000 each and put on probation for four races.

But the distractions for Kyle Busch continued shortly thereafter, with the 26 year old driver being pulled over for speeding, going 128 mph in a 4 mph zone in Iredell County, North Carolina. Busch was ticketed for reckless driving and speeding on May 24th.

“I’m certainly sorry that it happened,” Busch said. “It was a lack of judgment and all I can do is apologize to the public, my friends, my fans, my sponsors and everybody and look at this experience as a learning experience and move forward.”

“It’s certainly challenging sometimes, with things you have to think about, and, of course, actions that you may cause yourself,” Busch continued. “Thankfully, I’ve got some good people around me that can help me through these experiences.”

Busch’s next distraction, however, was right around the corner when he learned that not all the people surrounding him, particularly in the NASCAR garage, were in his corner.

After the Camping World Truck Series race in Kansas on June 4th, Kyle Busch tapped into another driver Joey Coulter, who just happened to be fielded out of the Richard Childress Racing stables.

Apparently that was the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back and the fight was on, with Childress reportedly placing Busch in a headlock in the garage area and striking him several times.

“I don’t know that I did anything out of the ordinary that would provoke something of Mr. Childress,” Busch said after the incident. “I’m going to leave it up to NASCAR and let them decide what they feel is best.”

In this case, NASCAR acted quickly, attempting to limit the distraction for Busch and finding him in no violation of his probation. Childress, however,  was fined $150,000 and placed on probation for the rest of the season.

Most recently, Busch’s distractions have continued, now with two major issues related to his car. The No. 18 M&Ms Toyota failed post-race inspection at Pocono on June 12th, with his third-place finishing car deemed too low.

NASCAR again took swift action, docked the driver six points and Busch’s crew chief Dave Rogers being fined for $25,000.

“Yea, we’ve talked a little bit this week and they found out what the problems were,” Busch said. “It was in the front springs so we’ll see if we can’t get with the manufacturer and figure out how we can make heat not be an issue.”

“It doesn’t matter whether you feel like the punishment fit the crime,” Busch continued. “It was something that we had wrong and we did not fit the rules after the race.”

“Joe Gibbs Racing issued a statement earlier this week that we accept the penalty and we’ll move forward.”

Yet the distractions for Kyle Busch, particularly with his race car, have continued right into this weekend’s racing at Michigan.

Prior to the first practice at Michigan International Speedway,  NASCAR announced that they had confiscated the oil pan on Busch’s car, along with the oil pans on the cars of his JGR teammates, Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin.

NASCAR spokesperson Kerry Tharp advised that the oil pans were not approved by NASCAR and they would have to be changed prior to practice or their times would not be considered when determining the qualifying order.

Busch and his teammates have complied, however, the distraction of having yet another penalty handed down next week after the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 race and weekend are completed, hangs over his head yet again.

There is at least one piece of good news in the distraction department for Kyle Busch. His probation period from the Kevin Harvick incident has expired and he is out from under that obligation at present in Michigan.

For Busch, however, he seemed to deem it no distraction at all.

“It didn’t matter being on it or being off it,” Busch said. “I try to race the best I can each and every week as hard as I can and as clean as I can.”