Biffle wins one for Roush, Ford at Pocono

By Sporting News Wire Service August 2, 2010

LONG POND, Pa. — With his team owner at the Mayo Clinic recovering from injuries sustained in a plane crash, Greg Biffle found the remedy for the ills of Roush Fenway Racing and Ford’s racing program.

Pulling away from the rest of the field after a rain delay of more than 17 minutes, Biffle beat pole-sitter Tony Stewart to the finish line by 3.598 seconds to win Sunday’s Sunoco Red Cross Pennsylvania 500 at Pocono Raceway.

The victory, Biffle’s 15th in the Cup Series, was his first since 2008 and the first for Ford and owner Jack Roush since Jamie McMurray won at Talladega this past November.

“I wish he was here, and I’m sure he’s watching, and this one’s for him,” Biffle said of Roush, who suffered injuries to his face and eye when he crash-landed his plane Tuesday night in Oshkosh, Wis. “It’s been really tough. We worked so hard.”

Roush released a statement calling it a “proud day” for the entire organization.

“They’ve done a wonderful job and this is just the beginning of the rewards that have resulted from all of their hard work,” he said.

Biffle said Roush called him in Victory Lane and the owner said, “he never met somebody that had the will to win like I do.”

“I’m glad he thinks of me like that,” Biffle said. “No matter how grim the outcome can be, I’ll still be digging.”

Biffle won Chase races at New Hampshire and Dover in 2008 before falling into a 64-race winless drought. Biffle was winless last year for the first full season of his career. He joked in Victory Lane he had forgotten how to celebrate.

“We know we have a great team and I know I can do it behind the wheel and we were able to prove it [Sunday],” Biffle said.

Biffle’s crew kept the same car after driving the No. 16 Ford to a season-high third-place finish last week at Indianapolis. Before Indianapolis, he finished 16th-20th-35th in his past three races and hardly seemed like a Chase contender.

Not now. Biffle’s strongly positioned himself for a spot in the 12-driver Chase field

“The whole company needed it,” Biffle crew chief Greg Erwin said. “I can’t really explain what this means. I know [Roush] is with us. This is a brand-new car at Indianapolis and we brought it here because we liked it so much.”

Carl Edwards, who came home third, spoke with Roush on Sunday morning and said his boss sounded in good spirits.

“He was Jack,” Edwards said. “Don’t mess anything up. Don’t wreck. He’s been through a lot this last week. He really needed that victory. That’s pretty cool. I’m sure he’s really hard to handle for all those nurses in the hospital.”

Series points leader Kevin Harvick was fourth and Denny Hamlin fifth. Sixth-place finisher Jeff Gordon saw his bid for his first victory since April 2009 disappear when a four-tire stop under caution on Lap 167 of 200 left him mired in traffic behind cars that took two tires or fuel only. Gordon led 39 laps, second only to teammate Jimmie Johnson’s 96.

The start of the 500-mile race was delayed by rain, and another rain delay was the second time the race was red-flagged. After a stoppage of nearly 29 minutes to clear the debris from a horrific crash involving Kurt Busch, Elliott Sadler and Clint Bowyer on Lap 165, the race took a bizarre turn. All of the lead-lap drivers — except Sam Hornish Jr. — came to pit road for four tires, two tires or fuel only.

Hornish stayed on the track, inherited the lead and ran 11 laps under yellow before NASCAR stopped the field on pit road with 23 laps remaining. But, after the rain delay, Biffle went to the front on the restart on Lap 180 and never looked back.

The rain was exactly what Biffle needed to win the race.

“I felt like we didn’t have the best car [Sunday],” he said. “For some reason, when it cooled down, this car just took off — that’s all there was to it. The temperature cooled down, we really didn’t make any adjustments, and the thing just started going on the restarts and got in clean air, and the thing just took off. I don’t know what happened.”

Hornish raced hard over the last 21 laps but faded to 11th at the finish.

Gordon was fourth when the field restarted on Lap 151 after a debris caution. Juan Montoya, who had short-pitted before the leaders came to pit road under caution on Lap 146, had the lead by virtue of staying on the track. Dale Earnhardt Jr., who took two tires under caution, was second.

Though Gordon passed three cars to take the top spot on Lap 151, Montoya regained the lead on Lap 152, only to surrender it at the stripe a lap later. Gordon finally cleared Montoya through Turn 3 on Lap 154 and pulled away before two quick cautions slowed and ultimately stopped the race.

Earnhardt spun off Turn 1 to cause the fourth yellow on Lap 158, but no one near the front of the field came to pit road, being outside the pit window that would allow them to finish the race without another stop.

On Lap 165, Johnson attempted to bump-draft Busch as the cars approached Turn 2 and instead turned the No. 2 Dodge sideways. After twice turning across the nose of Bowyer’s Chevrolet, Busch slammed into the inside fence.

Busch’s analysis of the incident was succinct. “I got wrecked on the straightaway,” he said. “Jimmie Johnson drove straight through us.”

Johnson wasn’t surprised by Busch’s assessment.

“Kurt isn’t very fond of me,” Johnson said. “He never has been. I think when he has a chance to take a shot at me, he’ll probably do so. But certainly nothing intentional, and if he’d like to talk about it, I’m more than willing to talk about it.”

Johnson, who apologized over his radio, explained his side of the incident.

“I came up to bump-draft him and push him along down the back straightaway,” Johnson said. “So, we did make some contact. He was already wobbling, and I bumped him, and then it [Busch's No. 2 Dodge] was wobbling some more, then eventually it did a lazy turn to the right and into the wall.

“I certainly feel bad. I’m glad the No. 19 [Sadler] is OK. I understand he took a heck of a hit. Last thing I wanted to do was cause a wreck or crash the No. 2 or anything like that. I feel bad about that, but we were all just racing real hard down the back.”

Sadler got the worst of the melee, as his No. 19 Ford slowed and then spun after contact from behind. Sadler’s car plowed nose-first into the inside guardrail and berm behind it with enough force to rip the engine from the car.

When safety trucks removed the debris from the infield, Sadler’s car rode on one wrecker, the engine on another. Despite the severity of the impact, Sadler later walked out of the infield care center.

“I’m fine. I’m OK,” he said. “I’m a little sore, I think, from where the belts grabbed me. It knocked the breath out of me pretty good, but it’s definitely the hardest hit I’ve ever had in a race car.

“I’m not sure what happened. I know some guys got spun out and moved up in front of us, and I saw some smoke. Everybody started checking up, and I checked up, but whoever was behind did not — and ran in the back of us and knocked me down through the grass.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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NASCAR: Kahne and Edwards Post Top-10 Finishes in Coke Zero 400

DAVID RAGAN – No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion (Finished 38th) – “I just got loose getting into turn three. We had a pretty fast UPS Ford Fusion, so it’s a shame to tear one up like that. I don’t know who else got involved because it happened pretty quick, but I just got free. I don’t know if someone was right underneath me on the bottom, but our car just got free and I was chasing it and tore it up.”

DAVID STREMME – No. 26 Air National Guard Ford Fusion (Finished 37th) – “I don’t know. We either cut a tire down or got in that oil or something, and I got loose and then wrecked. We were just riding and trying to mind our own business and it ended up not working out, but we’ll just keep going.”
 
ROBERT RICHARDSON, JR. – No. 37 Mahindra Tractors Ford Fusion (Finished 23rd) – “We’re gonna go try and get back in it because all he did was knock the right rear tire out, so we might be able to get back in it. Still, I was very impressed with how the backup car drove tonight, but hopefully we’re not done. We’re gonna try to figure it out and get back out there.”
 
TRAVIS KVAPIL – No. 38 Long John Silver’s Ford Fusion (Finished 34th) – “For us, it was just a bad day and it kind of got worse. I don’t know what happened. All I saw was smoke. I was up by the wall and I couldn’t really go any slower and came down the hill into the grass and there were just a pile of cars there and I couldn’t make my way through when I was going through the grass and piled into the 78. It was just a mess. I about had it stopped, but there was nothing you could do with all those cars parked there.” IS THIS WHAT HAPPENS WITH LESS THAN 20 TO GO AT THESE RACES? “Yeah, it is. The give and take is all just take. When the money is on the line, everybody is just gonna go for everything they’ve got and not really give an inch and not cut anybody any slack. When you do that and with how these cars are already sliding around as much as they are, it’s pretty easy to get turned around.”
 
GREG BIFFLE – No. 16 3M Ford Fusion (Finished 20th) – “It was actually gonna be a pretty good night. I got through those major wrecks with minor damage, but the real problem was we had a major oil leak and I had to stop on pit road and fix it. It’s just frustrating because our car was okay to continue, but our oil wasn’t. That’s kind of mysterious, so we’ll have to figure out how that happened next week so it doesn’t happen to somebody else.”
 
CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion (Finished 6th) – “I’m not exactly sure what happened, so that’s why I went and asked. We were just coming to the start-finish line, having a good race, and the 2 car for some reason just turned left and hit me. I don’t know if he didn’t know I was there or if he did it on purpose, but it seems like he was just frustrated. We all get frustrated when we have a bad day, so I’m sure it’ll be no big deal.” DID YOU GET IT STRAIGHTENED OUT? “No, he didn’t want to talk, so that’s okay. He doesn’t have to talk. I just wanted to see what the deal was.” YOU WERE IN POSITION TO WIN. WHAT WERE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE FINAL RESTART? “We just got hung up on the bottom and the guys got a good run on the top. And then the second time Jeff went to go around the 33 a little early. I thought maybe we could stay in line and the three of us could make a run on the top, but he had to do everything he could and that’s the way it ended up.”
 
KASEY KAHNE – No. 9 Budweiser Ford Fusion (Finished 2nd) – “I have no idea. Everytime I looked up there was a crash going on it seemed like the last 30 laps there. I hit oil when I hit the wall. We had a great run going with our Armed Forces Budweiser Ford and I think I hit oil and just spun out, and then they wrecked in front of me so it actually helped me or I definitely would have been in that wreck because I was already slowed up. The team did a nice job. Another top five. That’s kind of four top fives in a row. I want to thank all of the men and women out there fighting for this country on Fourth of July weekend. It’s a great weekend and we’re happy as can be that we get to race and we love all of them.” WHAT WERE YOU THINKING ON THE GREEN-WHITE-CHECKERED? “Just pick the right line, pick the right car. I got behind Harvick and thought that would be the spot. I knew he had four tires and we cleared the guys and I just stayed behind him. I was watching Jeff because I knew he would be coming and would be quick. It would have been nice to get our Budweiser Ford in Victory Lane. It was still a good run for our Armed Forces car and the team did a good job. It’s another top five.” WHAT WAS THE HARDEST PART OF THIS RACE?  “You had to be aggressive and drive your car sideways all night long. That’s just the way it was. I felt like I had one of the best cars from start to finish, even hitting the wall I still felt like we had a great car. It was just a wild race. I really enjoyed it. I don’t know if the tires were wrong or not, but I thought it was pretty exciting.”
 
ELLIOTT SADLER – No. 19 Air Force Ford Fusion (Finished 22nd) – “I’m pretty sure the 77 caused it. We kind of knew that. I was trying to stay away from him, but that’s just the way my season has gone. I just cannot get a break. I’m proud of my guys. They worked really hard on Thursday. We didn’t unload that great, but we made a lot of good changes. I felt really fast tonight and got in a little bit of a wreck and repaired it, and were making our way back up. We were gonna have a solid top seven or eight finish, just trying to make it to the end, but it’s just one of those years. It’s just very hard to swallow.”
 
MATT KENSETH – No. 17 Jeremiah Weed Ford Fusion (Finished 15th) – “You never know about these plate races because there’s a lot of wrecked stuff, but you can sometimes still get a good finish. Our car doesn’t look very pretty, but we still finished okay. We kind of struggled today. We had something happen to the car and got real loose a couple times. We got in the wall and never recovered from that, but we were still doing okay and I don’t know if Mark got hit or what, but I was running down through three and four and got hit in the right rear and ended up in the wall and that was kind of the end of our day. Fortunately, we were still able to stay on the lead lap.”
 
KEVIN CONWAY – No. 34 ExtenZe Ford FusionRAYBESTOS ROOKIE OF THE YEAR CANDIDATE (Finished 14th) — “All in all, it wasn’t pretty but I think that was the best finish in the history of Front Row Motorsports. It was a great night, but it was ugly. We fought a very loose race car and couldn’t tighten it up all night long. I just tried to stay out of trouble at that point and trying to survive these plate races is half the battle and we were able to do that all night long. Everybody worked really, really hard every stop making huge adjustments and trying to figure out how to tighten the car up. To come out with a solid top 15 finish in my first race ever at Daytona, we’ll take it.” HOW DID YOU GET IN POSITION AT THE END. YOU WERE IN THE TOP 10 ON THE FINAL RESTART. “Reutimann came on the radio and wanted to know if we were gonna push or work with him and I gave him a really big shove down the backstretch on that green-white-checker. We hooked up really well, but the problem is it pushed us out a little bit too far ahead of the 83 and he caught us in the center and got into us and turned us sideways in the middle of the corner, so we lost a few spots coming to the checkers. That was a little frustrating because we wanted a top 10, but we’ll take a top 15 for sure. Overall, it was a really solid day in the points and a great effort for our whole ExtenZe team. I think it shows the progress we’ve made in the first half of the year.”
 
KASEY KAHNE PRESS CONFERENCE – CAN YOU DESCRIBE YOUR LAST TWO LAPS? “I was just going as hard as I could there at the end. I think we got the 33 pretty quick down into three, I don’t remember how it went, but I was just pushing the 29.   That was my only choice and I did that. I never had a chance to pass the 29, so I just kept pushing.” HOW RELIEVED ARE YOU TO GET A TOP 3? “I feel really good. There was a lot of stuff going on. Like I said, I hit the wall once when I hit oil and spun just about all the way around and then hit the wall, and then they wrecked all in front of me, so I definitely would have been in that wreck. So I avoided that one by running into the wall myself, and the other ones were in my mirror and I’m happy to run second. It’s definitely a relief to get out of here with a good finish.” 
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