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Matt Kenseth beats out Kevin Harvick at Pure Michigan 400

NASCAR driver Matt Kenseth leads the field during the Sprint Cup Series Pure Michigan 400 on Sunday at Michigan International Speedway.

NASCAR driver Matt Kenseth leads the field during the Sprint Cup Series Pure Michigan 400 on Sunday at Michigan International Speedway.

(Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)
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Matt Kenseth had little to say about how NASCAR’s rules package affected his race Sunday at Michigan International Speedway.

“I didn’t see much of the race, which was totally fine with me,” he said. “We were up front the whole time.”

Kenseth started in the lead, stayed there for most of the race and finished with his third Sprint Cup victory this season, beating Kevin Harvick by 1.7 seconds.

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It was the second race under NASCAR’s high-drag aerodynamic package, which was also in place at Indianapolis last month in an effort to improve passing. At Michigan, Kenseth won while leading 146 of 200 laps, so whatever excitement there was occurred further back in the pack.

“Cars could really, at the end of the straightaway, gain on others, two or three car lengths,” said Jason Ratcliff, Kenseth’s crew chief. “But they just couldn’t do much once they got there, and they got down in the corner. They were kind of helpless. On the restarts, it got exciting. … I’d say eighth place back, it was fun to watch. Like Matt said, I’m glad he was watching it in the rear-view mirror.”

Kenseth led for 73% of the laps, the highest percentage by anyone in a Cup race this year. He had led for only 147 laps this season before dominating the Pure Michigan 400 in his No. 20 Toyota.

It was his 34th career victory, and Joe Gibbs Racing has won five of the last six Cup races, two by Kenseth and three by Kyle Busch.

“You really need to enjoy it, because about 10 races back, we were struggling, trying to get there,” Gibbs said. “You just hope now that we’ll be able to hold some momentum here and head into the Chase, but it’s very hard to do. In pro sports, it can come and go in a week.”

Martin Truex Jr. finished behind Harvick in third. Austin Dillon, who was sent to the back at the beginning of the race because of an engine change, managed a fourth-place showing, and Kyle Busch took another step toward wrapping up a spot in the Chase with an 11th-place run in his backup car.

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Kenseth had a comfortable lead before a caution with 17 laps remaining tightened things up, but he had little trouble holding off Harvick after the restart. Kenseth led for the first 22 laps, and there were 16 lead changes after that.

Clint Bowyer’s Chase chances look more tenuous after he went into the wall and finished 41st. He is 15th in the standings.

Busch went into the race in 30th place, needing to avoid major mistakes because, although he has four victories in 2015, a top-30 ranking is required for entry into the Chase. Busch wrecked his car in practice Saturday and had to start the race from the back, but he had an uneventful day, even leading for a couple stretches.

He is 29th in the standings, 23 points ahead of 31st-place Cole Whitt.

“It was a success,” Busch said. “It wasn’t what we wanted. We had a really, really fast car yesterday, but I screwed up and wrecked that car. It was a winning car, maybe not the winning car. But congratulations to our teammate Matt Kenseth and the 20 bunch. It’s really good times for Joe Gibbs Racing right now.”

Harvick remained atop the standings and leads Joey Logano by 48 points. Logano finished seventh.

The rules package caused some concerns over the heat, and NASCAR mandated a dual outlet duct be used on the right-side window to help with ventilation and keep the cockpit from being too hot for drivers. NBC Sports showed a reading of more than 150 degrees in the cockpit of Casey Mears’ car, and that was still during the first quarter of the race.

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“You knew it was going to be a little bit hotter. We prepared for that,” Kenseth said. “Started hydrating a couple days ago and drinking a lot of Gatorade and tried to eat right and get some sleep. … It really wasn’t bad. Yeah, it was hot, but I’ve been a lot hotter.”

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