Roush Jr. gives dad historic 400th victory
Jack Roush Jr. left Homestead-Miami Speedway on Friday night
displeased with losing his first GRAND-AM Continental Tire Sports
Car Challenge pole position.
But Saturday, he left the track in a completely different
mood, as he and Billy Johnson won their second Grand Sport race
together, the two-and-a-half hour, 91-lap Homestead 200, in the No.
61 ROUSH Performance Products Ford Mustang GT. For Johnson, it was
his second consecutive victory at the 2.3-mile, 11-turn road
course, in a car that advanced 33 positions from start to finish.
The win was also Roush Sr.'s 400th as a car owner. In nearly
40 years as an owner, Roush Sr. has also won in NASCAR's three
National series, Trans-Am and IMSA.
“It’s been amazing and quite a ride,” said
Roush Sr. “To look back and think about all the great drivers
who have been in these cars, and what it’s meant to Roush
Racing and Roush Fenway and to their careers, it’s just
incredible. It makes me feel old.”
For Roush Jr., who celebrated with his father, Jack Roush
Sr., in Victory Lane, it was a complete turnaround of emotions from
close to 24 hours earlier.
"It was real exciting race for us," Roush Jr. said. "I can't
be more proud of my team and all the work they've done. It was a
real privilege to be part of history with the Roush Racing group. I
also have to hand it to my co-driver, Billy Johnson. He did an
awesome job today. I'm looking forward to many more races."
Roush originally set a track record Friday but his time was
disallowed following post-qualifying technical inspection, an
unapproved part to blame. But that didn't deter him, as he was
among the fastest in every session during the weekend. Starting
34th, he passed 10 cars on the first lap and was up to 21st after
two laps. He finally took the lead on Lap 35.
Johnson took over on Lap 39, and kept the duo among the top
five and eventually into second as late as the final half hour.
That's when Johnson was attempting to catch Matt Plumb, co-winner
of this season's opening race at Daytona.
Plumb took over from Miami native Gian Bacardi during the
race's first caution period, around the 30-minute mark, and pitted
again with enough fuel and solid tires to go the remainder of the
race. But with 20 minutes remaining, he went from leading to
retired.
Driving the No. 13 RumBum.com BMW M3, Plumb hit the rear of
Eric Curran's No. 46 Fall-Line Motorsports BMW M3 in Turn 1, as
Curran got bottled up behind slower traffic. The impact forced the
hood of the No. 13 to come up, and Plumb in a precarious position,
driving cautiously around the track with his windshield covered.
Plumb managed to make it to the final turn before hitting
barrels filled with sand at the pit entrance. The sand and debris
from the barrels forced the final of four caution periods, and put
Johnson in front. He never looked back when the green flag flew on
Lap 87, and charged to a 2.561-second victory.
It marked Johnson's seventh series victory and third in the
Grand Sport class..
"Jack did have quite a bit of fun today," said Johnson, who
led twice for nine laps. "He did an amazing job in qualifying. He
went through the entire field today, which is no easy feat with the
caliber of drivers at this track. He handled it like a pro. He kept
the fenders clean and just moved through everyone. He turned the
car over in one piece for, gave us good track position and I took
it from there. I had to work through a few people myself, but I was
able to come out on top again."
Finishing runner-up for the second time in three races were
Terry Borcheller and Andrew Hendricks in the No. 45 Fall-Line
Motorsports BMW M3, while third were Joey Hand and Michael Marsal
in the No. 97 Turner Motorsport BMW M3.