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Kurt Busch Wins Kobalt Tools
500
HAMPTON, Ga. (March 7, 2010) — Kurt
Busch won two races Sunday: the Kobalt Tools 500 and the Carl
Edwards 25.
In a race that went 16 laps—nearly 25 miles—past its scheduled
distance, after Edwards retaliated against Brad Keselowski for an
incident earlier in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Atlanta Motor
Speedway, Busch took advantage of a strong restart to grab the lead
during the second attempt at a green-white-checkered-flag restart
and crossed the finish line .482 seconds ahead of runner-up Matt
Kenseth.
Juan Pablo Montoya, who was closing in on Busch near the end of the
regulation 325 laps, finished third but lost his chance to battle
for the victory when Edwards hit Keselowski’s No. 12 Dodge on the
frontstretch and sent it flying on Lap 323.
Keselowski’s car landed on its roof in the tri-oval, righted itself
and slid into the Turn 1 wall. After extensive clean-up, NASCAR
restarted the race on Lap 332—without Edwards, who was black-flagged
on Lap 326—with Busch assuming the lead from Clint Bowyer, who had
taken the point on a two-tire pit stop under caution on Lap 324.
Before Busch could take the white flag, however, a seven-car pileup
in Turn 3 caused the 11th caution of the race and set up the second
try at the green-white-checkered.
Edwards’ aggression toward Keselowski was payback for a Lap 40 wreck
in Turn 2, where Edwards felt Keselowski didn’t give him enough
room.
“Brad knows the deal between him and I,” said Edwards, who returned
to the track on Lap 191 after losing 150 laps in the garage. “The
scary part was that his car went airborne, which was not at all what
I expected.
“At the end of the day, we come out to race, and people got to have
respect for one another. I have a lot of respect for people’s
safety, and I wish that wouldn’t have gone like it did, but I’m glad
he’s OK. We’ll just go on and race some more, and maybe him and I
won’t have any more incidents together—that’d be the best thing.”
The wreck, with Keselowski running sixth at the time, was eerily
similar to a collision involving the two drivers last April at
Talladega, where Keselowski held his line at the bottom of the track
and won the race after Edwards No. 99 Ford flew into the catch
fence, injuring eight spectators.
“He cut down on me on a restart, and I lifted (off the accelerator),
and I couldn’t lift fast enough for him,” Keselowski said of the Lap
40 wreck. “I lifted for him to let him in, but I was there. I don’t
know what more you could do.
“I apologized to him, but there’s nothing I could do in that
situation, and to come back and just intentionally wreck
someone—that’s not cool. It could have killed somebody in the
grandstands. I know that it’s a little ironic that it’s got me
saying that, but at least I didn’t do it intentionally when it
happened.
“It’s going to be interesting to see how NASCAR reacts to it. They
have the ball. If they’re going to allow people to intentionally
wreck each other at tracks this fast, we will hurt someone, either
in the cars or in the grandstand.”
Busch claimed the 21st victory of his career and his first with crew
chief Steve Addington, who joined Penske Racing during the offseason
after guiding Busch’s brother, Kyle, to 12 victories in 2008 and
2009 with Joe Gibbs Racing.
“With Steve Addington, all of his new ideas, I never knew how we
could mesh them together and how soon we were able to do it,” Busch
said. “Even on those restarts at the end, I just felt like we had
the car to beat.”
Fourth-place finisher Kasey Kahne led the most laps (144), but his
car tightened at the end of the race. Paul Menard ran fifth and AJ
Allmendinger sixth, giving Richard Petty Motorsports a 4-5-6 finish,
the organization’s best result since announcing a switch from Dodge
to Ford late last year.
Brian Vickers, Greg Biffle, Kevin Harvick and Scott Speed completed
the top 10.
Notes: Dale Earnhardt Jr. regained two lost laps during the last two
cautions and finished 15th. He’s 13th in the Cup standings, seven
points out of 12th, the last Chase-eligible position. … Harvick
retained the points lead by 26 over Kenseth and 59 over Biffle. 
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