Kasey Kahne followed up his All-Star Race win with a victory in Nascar's longest race the following week, surviving a wild Coca-Cola 600 to get to victory lane in a points-paying race for the first time since the fall race at Lowe's in 2006, as he survived the whole 600 miles as others fell from contention.
"Dale Jr. fell out, he was awesome. Tony Stewart fell out, he was
awesome," Kahne said, as teammate Elliott Sadler poured Coca-Cola on him. "They had us beat at times tonight, and we had
them beat at times tonight."
Just hours before the race, the Indianapolis 500 had a race-changing incident just a few laps after halfway, when Tony Kanaan was passed by two cars headed into the third corner. The second car to pass him was his teammate Marco Andretti, and the pass forced Kanaan into the mables and into the wall. Kanaan was then hit by Sarah Fisher, and just like that a contender to win the 92nd Indianapolis 500 was out of the race.
"As usual, I'm in the lead and something happens," Kanaan said.
However, this would be minuscule compared to all the contenders who's chances of winning were taken away during the Coca-Cola 600.
It all started with Kurt Busch, when he slammed into the wall after having led several laps. Busch would eventually finish 16th, being a non-factor for the rest of the race. Then Brian Vickers' left-rear wheel dislodged from his car, sending Vickers' Toyota into the wall and out of the race, as the tire made its way into the infield.
Then, with just over 100 laps to go, Dale Earnhardt Jr., who led the most laps, blew a tire and slammed into the wall while leading. Substantial damage was added when J.J Yeley rear-ended Earnhardt's car. Earnhardt would use fuel strategy to finish 5th, but was unable to contend for the win.
Earnhardt's teammate, Jimmie Johnson, was also running up front late when he had an engine failure, ending his day with a 39th place finish.
Then Tony Stewart, who had a commanding 5 second lead and was just cruising to the finish with four laps to go, blew a right-front tire, losing the lead to Kahne, finishing a disappointing 18th. From there, Kahne just had to keep his car off the wall to earn his 8th career victory.
Finishing 2nd to Kahne was Greg Biffle, who also finished 2nd to him in the All-Star Race, followed by Kyle Busch, Jeff Gordon and Earnhardt.
The race was the final one with Humpy Wheeler as track president. Wheeler is considered one of Nascar's greatest promoters, having introduced some of the best pre-race activites. He also was the first to introduce luxury suits to Nascar, and the first to put lights on a 1.5 mile track. Wheeler was honored before the race and all 150,000 fans in attendance gave him a standing ovation, as a plane carried a banner that read "Thank You Humpy."
"I owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to you for buying tickets to this
facility through all these years," Wheeler said, while nearby fans
erected a sign reading "Thanks Humpy" on top of their motor home.
so have we ever had the same guys go 1-2 in the same order in the All-star race and the 600? I know they said Jimmie won both like Kasey did but did the same driver finish second both races too?
The 600 was truly a race of attrition as one car after another went down. The strangest being the rear tire coming unbolted on Vickers car and then the tire boucing off the hood of a passing car and ending up in the infield camp!
Kyle Busch was trying to follow his Darlington script but just couldn't quite finish the deal... A very good race...
Tez- I'll look that up for you, give me a little bit and check back.
Dwindy1- That incident with Vickers was odd, I liked how the fans in the infield just clapped, lol. Kahne may again be a driver to beat next week at Dover, he almost earned his 1st victory there in his first start when he was leading with 16 laps to go, but then spun b/c there was oil on the track. That was a wild race. Thanks for reading.
From what I've found, I'm almost positive that the inaugural year of the All-Star Race, 1985, this happened with Darrell Waltrip over Harry Gant in each race.
UPDATE- Just read an article on it, Waltrip beat him in a photo finish in the Winston, so this happened in the inaugural year of the Winston.
UPDATE #2- The next time a driver won both the 600 and the Winston, as it was called back then, was 1991. Davey Allison won both events, and in both events was followed by Ken Schrader in 2nd.
UPDATE #3- 1993 was the first time this didn't happen, when Dale Earnhardt won both events. I don't actually know who finished 2nd to him in the Winston, but I know that Gordon finished 2nd to him in the 600, and since Gordon didn't make it into the Winston, I think it's safe to say he didn't finish 2nd, lol.
UPDATE #4- Didn't happen when Gordon won both events in '97, or in '03 when Johnson did. The Kahne-Biffle 1-2 finish of '08 is the first since 1991, but the third time it's happened overall.
Last edited by tylerhead24 on May 25th at 10:24 PM.
Ahh. I t was a good race. But A sad day as well. A great man is done with this track. On a bad note he didn't leave the way he wanted. I hope he doesn't leave racing all together. Humpy we will miss you at Lowes. I look foreward to seeing you down the road....
Wow - just finished watching the 600 that we recorded on Sunday. Went to Indy for the 500, and got home late.
Lots of action there at the end. And certainly some surprises. Good to see Kahne back in Victory Lane. It was nice to see Humpy Wheeler acknowledge all the fans in his prerace interview.
Hello, I'm Tyler Head. I live in Utica, NY and currently attend Ilion Jr. Sr. High School. I'm a senior this year (woot! haha), and I'm persuing a career in Computer Hardware design, or Journalism... I guess I'm undecided, lol. I enjoy a lot of sports, with my favorite being NASCAR. My favorite driver is Jeff Gordon, I even made a fansite. As much as I enjoy NASCAR, I also like Baseball, Football, and College Basketball.
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