Busch aims to continue Richmond supremacy

Kyle Busch has a victory and two top-10 finishes this season. Busch is sitting in fourth place in the NASCAR Cup Series point standings entering today’s Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Va.
(AP/John Raoux)
Kyle Busch has a victory and two top-10 finishes this season. Busch is sitting in fourth place in the NASCAR Cup Series point standings entering today’s Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Va. (AP/John Raoux)

RICHMOND, Va. -- Kyle Busch is off to a solid start for Richard Childress Racing with a victory, two top-10 finishes and sitting fourth in points through six races.

Now comes Richmond Raceway, where Busch leads all active drivers with six career victories, to start a stretch of three consecutive short-track events.

Ford driver Joey Logano and Toyota driver Tyler Reddick have won the last two races after Chevrolet drivers won the first four, and Busch said that's a good thing.

"Parity is always good, right?" he said Saturday. "Last year we had 19 different winners, every manufacturer, obviously. ... it's been a while since it's been that few of races won by the top winner of the series," he said.

Chase Elliott led all drivers with five wins last season, one year after Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson won 10 and two years after Kevin Harvick won nine.

NASCAR's top series has had five different winners already, with William Byron the only two-time winner.

"You turn on NASCAR races and you don't really know who's going to win each week," Busch said,

That's in contrast to Formula One, for example, where Max Verstappen has won 16 of the last 25 races and his Red Bull teammate, Sergio Perez, has won two others.

But Larson, a fellow Chevrolet driver, isn't as much of a fan of parity.

"I don't care. No," he said. "Why would I want them to win? I want Chevys to win every race, Hendrick Chevys at that. No. No."

Kevin Harvick, second among Fords in the point standings and sixth overall, said the onus is on non-Chevrolet teams to catch up.

"They've had their stuff together. They've just been faster," he said.

HENDRICK APPEAL

Drivers said a lack of information about the particulars of NASCAR deciding to rescind points penalties against Hendrick Motorsports drivers for using modified air-deflecting pieces at Phoenix Raceway made it hard to comment.

An appeals panel appeals took away the 100-point penalties levied against drivers Alex Bowman, William Byron and Kyle Larson, but upheld fines and suspensions for Hendrick's four crew chiefs.

"I think there's obviously some technicalities in there that go along with whatever happened, because I like I say, I don't know the details," Harvick said. "It's really hard not knowing exactly what was said, which would make them like public hearings. That would be way more fun."

Denny Hamlin called the decision "unprecedented," adding, "I don't think we should be surprised about anything. But, you know, it certainly was unprecedented for them to say it was wrong, but we're going to change the penalty. ... Without a statement, without proof, without transparency, just none of us really know what's going on."

Hamlin has a particular interest in the partial about-face. He was fined $50,000 and docked 25 points for admitting on his podcast that he intentionally wrecked Ross Chastain on the last lap at Phoenix.

His appeal hearing is scheduled for this week.

Busch agreed with the unprecedented descriptor, but was dubious.

"Last year, a few guys got busted and they had all their stuff upheld. So, you know, for it to not be completely upheld this time around, I think shows a break in the system," he said. "I guess it's a matter of what you think you can get away with or how you build your case, how good your lawyers are."


At a glance

NASCAR CUP SERIES

TOYOTA OWNERS 400

WHEN 2:30 p.m. Central

WHERE Richmond Raceway, Richmond, Va.

RACE DISTANCE 400 laps, 300 miles

TV FS1


  photo  The American flag flies above the pole position sign before the start of the NASCAR Xfinity Series auto race at Richmond Raceway, Saturday, April 1, 2023, in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Mike Caudill)
 
 
  photo  A truck from the track drying team helps dry pit road before the start of the NASCAR Xfinity Series auto race at Richmond Raceway, Saturday, April 1, 2023, in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Mike Caudill)
 
 
  photo  A truck from the track drying team helps dry pit road before the start of the NASCAR Xfinity Series auto race at Richmond Raceway, Saturday, April 1, 2023, in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Mike Caudill)
 
 

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