RACE RECAP | PHOENIX
10 Joey Logano
9 Clint Bowyer
8 Kyle Busch had the race won, but 4 tires ended up being the wrong call
7 Carl Edwards
6 Matt Kenseth
5 Juan Pablo Montoya led a ton of laps
4 Mark Martin
3 Jimmie Johnson led the most laps
2 Jeff Gordon

VICTORY LANE

1 Ryan Newman takes home his first win driving for Stewart Haas Racing in the #39 car. Ryan held off Jeff Gordon during the Green-White-Checkered finish. He ends a winless slump of 78 races.

OTHER STORIES ON THE DAY

-Kasey Kahne and Kurt Busch got into each other with Denny Hamlin receiving some damage. Kasey finished 43rd, Kurt ended up 35th

-Jamie McMurray spun in a cloud of smoke

-Brian Vickers 83 machine found the wall

-Brad Keselowski brought out the 6th caution by slapping the wall going three wide

-Juan Pablo Montoya got into the left rear of Jimmie Johnson late in the race while battling for second and the 48 wasn’t same after leading a ton of laps

-A late caution when Scott Riggs blew a tire right in front of leader Kyle Busch set the scene for an exciting finish

By Reid Spencer
Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service

(April 9, 2010)

AVONDALE, Ariz.—Surging to the front after a restart with eight laps left in Friday night’s Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 at Phoenix International Raceway, Kyle Busch overcame a potentially devastating penalty with 50 laps left to post his second Nationwide Series win of the year and the 32nd of his career, third most all-time.

Busch restarted 10th on Lap 193 of 200 at the 1-mile track. By Lap 195 he had gained second position, and on Lap 196 he passed eventual third-place finisher Brad Keselowski for the lead.

Kevin Harvick passed Keselowski and came home second. Brendan Gaughan ran fourth and Greg Biffle fifth. Polesitter Carl Edwards, Paul Menard, Scott Lagasse Jr., Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Joey Logano completed the top 10.

Keselwski took the lead in the series standings by four points over Edwards.

Logano led at the final restart but fell back through the field after sustaining damage from contact with Busch’s car on pit road on Lap 191.

“Man, this car was pretty awesome tonight,” Busch said. “It was super, super fast. Hopefully, that was an exciting win for the fans. I don’t know how we could have made it any better of a show right there.”

Busch led the field to a restart on Lap 137 from the outside lane, but Keselowski nosed ahead before the cars reached the start-finish line. Cars in the outside lane stacked up behind Busch, triggering a 10-car wreck that necessitated a stoppage of nearly 10 minutes, as track workers cleaned up the debris.

NASCAR ruled that Busch failed to restart the race in the designated area between two red lines on the frontstretch wall and awarded the top position to Keselowski. On the subsequent restart on Lap 145, NASCAR posted Busch’s No. 18 Toyota for a pass-through penalty for jumping the restart.

The penalty dropped Busch to 19th in the running order, 20 seconds behind Keselowski. Over the next 38 laps, Busch improved to 11th before NASCAR called a caution for debris on Lap 188.

“All I know is I paid NASCAR back by winning,” Busch said.

Busch dominated early, having led 96 laps by the time Steve Wallace blew a right front tire on Lap 111 and bounced his No. 66 Toyota into the No. 01 Chevrolet of his uncle, Mike Wallace, to cause the fourth caution of the race.

In fact, the only segment of the race Busch didn’t lead resulted from an out-of-sequence pit stop on Lap 17. Keselowski inherited the top spot for 15 laps, but Clint Bowyer stalled in Turn 1 to bring out the second caution, and Busch regained the lead by remaining on the track.

Bowyer replaced John Wes Townley in Richard Childress Racing’s No. 21 Chevrolet after Townley wrecked the car in Friday morning’s Nationwide practice session.

Townley, 20, crashed hard into the outside wall at the 1-mile track. Bowyer subsequently qualified a backup car 21st for Friday night’s race.

1 43 A J Allmendinger Valvoline Ford
2 82 Scott Speed Red Bull Toyota
3 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Mobil 1 Dodge
4 47 Marcos Ambrose Kingsford / Bush’s Baked Beans Toyota
5 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard / AMP Energy Chevrolet
6 20 Joey Logano The Home Depot Toyota
7 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevrolet
8 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Auto Parts Toyota
9 99 Carl Edwards SUBWAY Ford
10 24 Jeff Gordon DuPont Chevrolet
11 14 Tony Stewart Office Depot / Old Spice Chevrolet
12 66 Michael McDowell PRISM Motorsports Toyota
13 1 Jamie McMurray Bass Pro Shops / Tracker Boats Chevrolet
14 39 Ryan Newman Tornados Chevrolet
15 31 Jeff Burton Caterpillar Chevrolet
16 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
17 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
18 87 Joe Nemechek Petsmart / 21st Century Toyota
19 2 Kurt Busch Miller Lite Dodge
20 9 Kasey Kahne Budweiser Ford
21 83 Brian Vickers Red Bull Toyota
22 12 Brad Keselowski Abyss Dodge
23 5 Mark Martin GoDaddy.com Chevrolet
24 29 Kevin Harvick Shell / Pennzoil Chevrolet
25 33 Clint Bowyer Cheerios / Hamburger Helper Chevrolet
26 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Office / March of Dimes Toyota
27 17 Matt Kenseth No. 17 Crown Royal Black Ford
28 78 Regan Smith Furniture Row Racing Chevrolet
29 6 David Ragan UPS Ford
30 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
31 55 Dave Blaney PRISM Motorsports Toyota
32 98 Paul Menard Moen / Menards Ford
33 7 Robby Gordon Blake Shelton / Warner Music Nashville
34 13 Max Papis GEICO Toyota
35 90 Scott Riggs Keyed-Up Motorsports Chevrolet
36 37 David Gilliland Taco Bell Ford
37 35 Johnny Sauter Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
38 19 Elliott Sadler Stanley Ford
39 00 David Reutimann Best Western Toyota
40 71 Bobby Labonte TRG Motorsports Chevrolet
41 34 Travis Kvapil Long John Silver’s Ford
42 38 Kevin Conway # Extenze Ford
43 46 Terry Cook # Whitney Motorsports Dodge