* Kyle Busch won the LifeLock.com 400 at Chicagoland Speedway. Busch posted his 11th career win in his 133rd start. He posted his seventh win of the 2008 season; his last win came at Daytona last week. Busch scored his first victory at Chicagoland Speedway in his fourth start. He became the sixth different driver to win at Chicagoland Speedway. Busch led five times for 165 laps, setting a new record for the most laps led by a driver in a Chicagoland race. * Busch has now led 1,065 laps this season, the most of all drivers. * Toyota scored its eighth win of the 2008 season, the most of all manufacturers. * Joe Gibbs Racing scored its third victory at Chicagoland Speedway, the most of all teams. JGR has won eight of the 19 races this season, the most of all teams. * Busch scored his 14th NASCAR win in 2008: seven Sprint Cup, five Nationwide and two Craftsman Truck. * The Busch brothers (Kyle and Kurt) have now won four consecutive races; three by Kyle and one by Kurt. Kyle Busch has won six of the past 11 NSCS races; including three of the past four. * Busch swept both the NNS race and the NSCS race at Chicagoland; the last time a driver swept both races at a track was in February 2007, when Matt Kenseth swept both races at Fontana, Calif. * Toyota scored its first win at Chicagoland Speedway, ending a four-race streak of Chevrolet victories at the track. * Busch and Jimmie Johnson both led in the race. Both drivers have now led in 14 of the 19 races this season, the most of all drivers. * Busch became the 17th different driver to win seven of the first 19 races of the season. Ten of the 16 drivers to do it before have gone on to win the championship. * Busch won the race from the first starting position, marking the first time a driver has won a race from a top-five starting position at Chicagoland. * The race featured 16 lead changes among 10 drivers. * The race featured nine cautions for 33 laps. * The top 10 consisted of three Toyotas, three Fords, three Chevys and a Dodge. * The highest-finishing rookie of the year contender was Patrick Carpentier, who finished 30th.(ESPN.com)(7-15-2008)
