James Buescher's First Series Victory at Daytona
James Buescher prevent the collapse of third major race on the last lap and he won the NASCAR Nationwide Series race Saturday at Daytona International Speedway. Buescher, 31, operated the No. 30 Chevrolet with a 11-car wreck in Turn 4, which eliminated the docking and opened the door for him his first NASCAR Nationwide Series to assert the victory.
Brad Keselowski, Truck Series race Friday night ruined, had much better luck on Saturday. Actually, it was seconds. After reviewing the tape, NASCAR determined Keselowski ended before Elliott Sadler, who finished third.
Into cloudy skies and cooler temperatures, waiting for the the estimated amount of 82,000 most of the race, a big wreck, and Daytona will not be disappointed. A wreck on Multicar Lap 103, with 19 cars the first of three major wrecks, among which the ending was a - that has taken its toll on the 43-car field in the 120-lap, 300-mile race. The wreck forced NASCAR to red flag the race to clean up the debris.
After restarting was out again, as prudence is connected to 14 cars 10 laps later Turn 4, allowing the field to regroup. The contest was characterized eight cautions, including one which took Danica Patrick. Patrick competing in her first full season in the series, the race started on pole, but her day went downhill. Danica Patrick's No. 7 Chevrolet came in the wall of Cole Whitt on lap 49 came. She managed to back their cars to measure, so the line for their team pushed him back into the garage for major carry out repairs. She returned to the track on lap 96 and ended in the 38th Space.
"More than anything, I'm just frustrated because the GoDaddy.com car was just so fast, and I could keep up with tandem cars in front of me all by myself," Patrick said. "I thought it was a lot of fun and quite chaotic up until the end. Hopefully, the fans were entertained."
Title defender Tony Stewart appeared on their way to record books with his seventh win Nationwide Series at Daytona to be - make a record of Dale Earnhardt was, however, was the 40-year-old Kurt and Kyle Busch put in the last prisoner-lap crash. Kurt Busch at 10 Place, 18 with brother Kyle finish.
Brad Keselowski, Truck Series race Friday night ruined, had much better luck on Saturday. Actually, it was seconds. After reviewing the tape, NASCAR determined Keselowski ended before Elliott Sadler, who finished third.
Into cloudy skies and cooler temperatures, waiting for the the estimated amount of 82,000 most of the race, a big wreck, and Daytona will not be disappointed. A wreck on Multicar Lap 103, with 19 cars the first of three major wrecks, among which the ending was a - that has taken its toll on the 43-car field in the 120-lap, 300-mile race. The wreck forced NASCAR to red flag the race to clean up the debris.
After restarting was out again, as prudence is connected to 14 cars 10 laps later Turn 4, allowing the field to regroup. The contest was characterized eight cautions, including one which took Danica Patrick. Patrick competing in her first full season in the series, the race started on pole, but her day went downhill. Danica Patrick's No. 7 Chevrolet came in the wall of Cole Whitt on lap 49 came. She managed to back their cars to measure, so the line for their team pushed him back into the garage for major carry out repairs. She returned to the track on lap 96 and ended in the 38th Space.
"More than anything, I'm just frustrated because the GoDaddy.com car was just so fast, and I could keep up with tandem cars in front of me all by myself," Patrick said. "I thought it was a lot of fun and quite chaotic up until the end. Hopefully, the fans were entertained."
Title defender Tony Stewart appeared on their way to record books with his seventh win Nationwide Series at Daytona to be - make a record of Dale Earnhardt was, however, was the 40-year-old Kurt and Kyle Busch put in the last prisoner-lap crash. Kurt Busch at 10 Place, 18 with brother Kyle finish.