Kyle Busch wins Buschy McBusch 400 at Kansas Speedway

Kyle Busch wins Buschy McBusch 400 at Kansas Speedway

Kyle Busch completed the weekend double at Kansas Speedway, adding to his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win from Saturday with a win in the Buschy McBusch Race 400 NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday. The win on Busch’s 36th birthday was Busch’s first Cup Series victory of the 2021 season, 11 races into the year, and the first, ever, for crew chief Ben Beshore.

“It’s awesome. Just such a testament to this team and everybody at Joe Gibbs Racing,” Busch said. “Ben Beshore, his first win as a Cup crew chief. It’s awesome to put M&M’s back in victory lane – M&M’s Mix on board with us here this weekend. Super thanks to our vendor partner, Hy-Vee; they did a cool promotion with Rowdy Energy and M&Ms a couple weeks ago. Great things going all around. It’s cool to come back to Kansas; it’s great to get back to victory lane. I have to thank my teammate, [Martin] Truex Jr. I forgot to mention it on television, but I just saw the replay, and he was behind me, pushing me and gave me one hell of a run down the frontstretch to get me clear. That was the winning ticket for us.”

Kevin Harvick finished second after an uncontrolled-tire penalty during a lap 230 caution for the retrieval of another team’s uncontrolled tire. Brad Keselowski and Matt DiBenedetto finished third and fourth to, along with Harvick, put three Fords inside the top-four of the finishing order. Chase Elliott rounded out the top-five.

“We had the right pit strategy once the cautions came out, there,” Harvick said. ”We had the pit-road penalty and came in for tires and Rodney [Childers, crew chief] made a great call of coming back in to put tires on, and that kind of put us on the offense. We were able to be really aggressive on the two restarts we had at the end and were able to make up some ground. Everybody on our Busch Light Ford Mustang did a great job today of just hanging in there. We made a few mistakes, but we made our car better throughout the whole day and were more competitive than we had been in the last couple mile-and-a-half races.”

Kyle Larson dominated the race, leading 132 laps of the 267-lap race, but wound up 19th as a result of contact with Ryan Blaney and the wall just before the white flag. Blaney wound up 21st.

Larson previously lost the lead to Denny Hamlin with 30 laps remaining, but retook the position when Hamlin got into the wall a few laps later. Hamlin hit the wall harder with 22 laps remaining, bringing out a caution. After another caution on lap 253 of the 267-lap race, Busch took his race-winning lead on a lap-258 restart.

“You don’t know who’s going to pick behind you. You can guess, but you don’t really know. A couple of the times that I guessed, I guessed right,” Busch said of making the right lane-choice decision to take the lead. “A couple times I guessed, I guessed wrong. It’s just a matter of what’s going to happen behind you. I felt like if I could get Truex behind me, that would be the best thing for us. Being a teammate, he would help push, and I’d tell him when we’re going to get the best run we could, and it all worked.”

Larson started in the 32nd position as a result of a blown engine a week earlier in the opening laps of the race at Talladega Superspeedway, but he got to the front to lead four laps in the opening 80-lap stage and dominate the race from the beginning of the second stage.

Pole sitter Keselowski led most of the opening stage, running up front for 72 of the 80 laps before falling back to fourth as Busch led the final four laps of the stage en route to the stage-one win.

“What’s really cool is that we started the race good and we worked our way forward from the start of the race,” Busch said “We made minor adjustments all day to the car and nothing really did anything. We kept getting tighter as the day went on, even though we were trying to free up. We did a long sim session this week; that was helpful. I feel like we’re really close for Kansas, at least, and what we can do and what we can learn on that. I look forward to, hopefully, being able to celebrate with my team and, hopefully, have a good night tonight. It’s cool to be able to work the way we did today.”

Larson’s dominance after the first stage included a stage-two win at lap 160. After getting off pit road during the caution after the first stage, he continued to lead until pitting during a green-flag cycle of stops on lap 122.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. stayed out longer than everyone else during the cycle to lead laps and hope for a caution that didn’t come. Larson, on newer tires, was able to catch Stenhouse and retake the lead on lap 145 before Stenhouse finally made his pit stop.

Larson, once back to the lead, maintained the position until another cycle of green-flag stop, the final one of the race. Larson, once again, gave up the lead to pit on lap 213. Chris Buescher, like Stenhouse before him, stayed out longer, waiting until 226 to make his pit stop. When Buescher finally stopped, Larson retook the lead.

Martin Truex Jr. finished sixth, Tyler Reddick was seventh, Chris Buescher eighth, William Byron ninth, and Austin Dillon finished 10th.

“At the end there, I was second through three and four and came off of four and the 2 [Keselowski] and the 4 [Harvick] somehow got linked together and went flying past me doing the old bump draft deal. When they got to turn one, the 4 never lifted and turned the 2 sideways right in front of me, and I had to stop, so I lost two more spots on the last lap, because I lost all my momentum. Tough deal there, but overall, just a tough day for us. We started, there, mid-pack with our Auto-Owners Camry, and it took a while to get any progress. We struggled with the handling, back and forth between tight and loose all day. Just could never get it all tied together. Never could get it to do what we wanted. It was a real handful in traffic. Scratched and clawed for the best we could get, and that was sixth, which is not all that terrible.”

Cla#Driver ManufacturerLapsTimeGapIntervalLaps Led
118Kyle Busch Toyota2673:05’20.818  20
24Kevin Harvick Ford2673:05’21.1540.3360.336 
32Brad Keselowski Ford2673:05’21.5320.7140.37872
421Matt DiBenedetto Ford2673:05’21.5700.7520.038 
59Chase Elliott Chevrolet2673:05’21.6740.8560.104 
619Martin Truex Jr. Toyota2673:05’21.7320.9140.058 
78Tyler Reddick Chevrolet2673:05’21.8571.0390.125 
817Chris Buescher Ford2673:05’21.9231.1050.06613
924William Byron Chevrolet2673:05’22.0321.2140.109 
103Austin Dillon Chevrolet2673:05’22.1231.3050.091 
1199Daniel Suarez Chevrolet2673:05’22.2211.4030.098 
1211Denny Hamlin Toyota2673:05’22.3741.5560.1537
1334Michael McDowell Ford2673:05’22.4421.6240.068 
1442Ross Chastain Chevrolet2673:05’22.6831.8650.241 
151Kurt Busch Chevrolet2673:05’23.0152.1970.332 
166Ryan Newman Ford2673:05’23.1842.3660.169 
1722Joey Logano Ford2673:05’23.3572.5390.173 
1848Alex Bowman Chevrolet2673:05’23.5202.7020.163 
195Kyle Larson Chevrolet2673:05’23.5222.7040.002132
2014Chase Briscoe Ford2673:05’23.9873.1690.465 
2112Ryan Blaney Ford2673:05’24.8264.0080.839 
2233Austin Cindric Ford2673:05’39.17618.35814.350 
2338Anthony Alfredo Ford2663:05’23.6851 Lap1 Lap 
2441Cole Custer Ford2663:05’23.8421 Lap0.157 
2543Erik Jones Chevrolet2663:05’24.0831 Lap0.241 
2623Bubba Wallace Toyota2663:05’24.1751 Lap0.092 
277Corey Lajoie Chevrolet2653:05’25.6382 Laps1 Lap 
2820Christopher Bell Toyota2653:05’50.5292 Laps24.891 
2910Aric Almirola Ford2643:05’32.1413 Laps1 Lap 
3077Justin Haley Chevrolet2633:05’27.5094 Laps1 Lap 
3178B.J. McLeod Ford2603:05’29.8427 Laps3 Laps 
3237Ryan Preece Chevrolet2592:58’41.6908 Laps1 Lap 
3353Garrett Smithley Ford2593:05’32.5708 Laps6’50.880 
3447Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Chevrolet2582:53’05.6969 Laps1 Lap23
3515Joey Gase Chevrolet2583:05’31.3799 Laps12’25.683 
3651Cody Ware Chevrolet2573:05’26.96810 Laps1 Lap 
3700Quin Houff Chevrolet2563:05’30.94111 Laps1 Lap 
3855Matt Mills Ford2553:05’34.09912 Laps1 Lap 
3952Josh Bilicki Ford2503:05’33.28117 Laps5 Laps

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