Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Busch denies Elliott.

- DAN GELSTON

DOVER, Del. - Chase Elliott rubbed his head and leaned against his car, crestfalle­n as he replayed the final laps in his mind. Jimmie Johnson, his champion teammate, walked over to offer some encouragem­ent and let Elliott vent.

“I anticipate­d them being cuss words,” Johnson said, “and they were.”

Elliott had it, the first win in 70 career Cup starts in his sight, the white flag about to drop.

But the son of a NASCAR Hall of Fame driver simply could not find his way out of a thicket of traffic and Kyle Busch was ready to pounce. Busch spoiled Elliott’s bid at his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory, taking the lead with two laps left to win the Apache Warrior 400 Sunday at Dover Internatio­nal Speedway.

Elliott, largely expected to lead NASCAR’s next generation of stars, was in stunned disbelief that he let the lead slip away.

“I’m just so disappoint­ed in myself,” Elliott said. “Golly. I couldn’t have had it any easier. I gave it away.”

Busch, the 2015 Cup champion, went high on the concrete track and zipped past Elliott to win for the second straight week. He won for the fourth time in the No. 18 Toyota and is streaking at the right time as NASCAR’s playoffs head into the second round.

While Elliott was consoled, Busch took his customary bow.

He injected a ho-hum race with a thrilling finish and perhaps the best two closing laps of the season. Busch is 24 points behind fellow Toyota driver Martin Truex Jr. for the points lead and was already safely in the field of 12.

“The only thing Chase could have done differentl­y was just move around and try and to get out of the wave of the cars that were in front of him,” Busch said. “I was actually surprised he didn’t.”

Ryan Newman, Austin Dillon, Daytona 500 champion Kurt Busch and Brickyard 400 winner Kasey Kahne were eliminated as the playoff field was cut from 16 drivers.

Elliott was second, followed by Johnson, Truex and Kyle Larson.

Elliott followed in some superstar footsteps when he made his Cup debut in 2015. The son of perennial most popular driver Bill Elliott, he replaced retired four-time champ Jeff Gordon.

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