Motorsport News

Bubba Wallace, Kyle Busch Bounce Back

NASCAR Cup Series

Welcome to the first 2023 edition of Monday Morning Pit Box, where we break down the critical calls that shape the outcome of each week’s race. We take a look through the minds of those on pit road and, at times, call atop race control as well.

Busch, Wallace Persevere

The thing about this type of restrictor-plate racing is that it’s a luck of the draw. As long as you are there in the end, you have a chance to take advantage of the drafts and pushes at the right time … and avoid calamity around you.

That’s what both Bubba Wallace and Kyle Busch did on Sunday (Feb. 19) up until the final-lap wreck, as both were in a position to finish in the top five up to that point. It was very much a pattern of staying focused and not panicking from the No. 23 pit with Bootie Barker calling the shots and with Randall Burnett atop the No. 8 pit box.

Both had their share of adversity; Busch had a pit-road speeding penalty and Wallace fought back from early damage from contact with the backstretch wall. Wallace battled back from being a lap down to lead at one point, following Barker’s decision to have Wallace stay out when most the rest of the field pitted, although that edge would later be negated by having to put more fuel in to compensate for having less fuel in the tank.

Going into the final laps, Busch and Richard Childress Racing teammate Austin Dillon were in prime position for a 1-2 finish before the late rash of cautions.

Dillon was swept up in the Big One on lap 203, and Busch was in a position coming to the white flag to finish in the top five prior to being hung up in the wreck that ended the race. Neither has a result to show for it, but being able to fight back to be in a position to finish near the front is a nice momentum bump heading to the West Coast swing.

Calamity Undoes Late-Race Green-Flag Stops

With less than 30 laps to go, matters appeared to be going about as textbook as possible. It’s key on plate tracks to have partners not just in drafting but entering pit road as well. If you pit by yourself, your day for all accounts is over at Daytona, Talladega and Atlanta.

That understanding was clear as the Daytona 500 approached 25 laps to go, starting with a sizeable group of Fords pitting, followed in the next laps by Toyotas and others in the next few laps. Had things stayed green, it was set up to be a Ford coast to the finish, thanks…

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