By Reid Spencer
Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service
(May 23, 2009)
CONCORD, N.C. -- Superior fuel mileage got Mike Bliss
out front late in Saturday night's Carquest Auto Parts
300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Lowe's Motor
Speedway.
Rain did the rest. Three laps after Bliss took the lead
from runner-up Brendan Gaughan on Lap 167, NASCAR
red-flagged the race because of rain and made Bliss' win
official by calling the event 30 laps short of its
scheduled distance of 200 laps.
Bliss' only other win in the series also came at
Charlotte, on Oct. 15, 2004. The second-place finish was
a career-best for Gaughan.
Where Kyle Busch charged to the front after changing an
engine, Bliss used fuel mileage to compensate for his
engine change. He and Gaughan were the only two drivers
who remained on the track during a cycle of green-flag
pit stops that started on Lap 144.
"We stayed out as long as we could, and it paid off,"
said Bliss, who gave team owner James Finch his second
unlikely victory in a month. Brad Keselowski won the
NASCAR Sprint Cup event at Talladega in April driving a
car owned by Finch and powered by a Hendrick Motorsports
engine. "I knew we had a pretty good car in practice and
kind of worked our way into the top 10. We stretched our
fuel mileage quite a bit, and that's why I'm here, I
guess."
Asked whether he felt as if he had stolen the race,
Bliss chuckled, "Yeah, I did -- but from a guy who wins
too much (Busch) -- and nobody likes him."
Gaughan felt he had an eighth-to-12th-place car but
wasn't about to look a gift horse in the mouth.
"The only thing that could have been better for us was
for (the rain) to come about three laps earlier, after
we passed Mike Bliss," said Gaughan, who got past Bliss
in traffic on Lap 165 but surrendered the lead two laps
later.
The two best cars in the race, the Toyotas of Busch and
Brian Vickers, finished third and fourth. Busch led a
race-high 98 laps after streaking from the rear of the
field to the front in the first 41 laps. Joey Logano was
fifth, followed by Jason Leffler, David Ragan and
Keselowski.
Jeff Burton and polesitter Carl Edwards completed the
top 10.
Busch made short work of the rest of the field as he
motored up to eighth in the running order before Michael
Annett's spin in Turn 2 brought out the yellow flag on
Lap 23.
Eleven laps after a restart on Lap 30, Busch passed
Edwards for the lead and held it until he came to the
pits under green of Lap 86. Busch regained the top spot
after the cycle of stops and remained out front until
Vickers overtook him on Lap 140.
Vickers came to the pits under green on Lap146,
returning the lead to Busch, who stopped for tires and
fuel three laps later. When caution flew for the fourth
time for Kevin Hamlin's spin in Turn 2 on Lap 153, Bliss
was the only driver who hadn't stopped for service, and
as such, his No. 1 Chevrolet was the only car on the
lead lap.
Busch was third, at the tail end of the lead lap, for a
restart on Lap 161, with Bliss in the lead but
restarting 12th in the order behind 11 tail-end cars.
That left Bliss and Gaughan to battle for the lead, with
Bliss regaining the top position two laps before rain
caused the fifth caution of the evening on Lap 169.
Busch expanded his lead over Edwards in the Nationwide
Series standings from 37 to 73 points.
"You could say it was a good points day, but we want
wins," Busch said.