LOUDON, N.H. — Matt Kenseth was always near the front of the pack. He stalked the leaders and waited for contenders to wilt.

Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. faded down the stretch. So did Denny Hamlin.

It almost seemed like a repeat scenario for Kenseth.

Just like last fall on the same track when Kevin Harvick’s lead evaporated when he ran out of fuel, Kenseth pounced. He pulled away down the stretch to win the Sprint Cup race Sunday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Truex and Busch each led more than 120 laps before faltering over the final 75 laps, paving the way for Kenseth to win for the second time this season.

Kenseth also won the New Hampshire race last September. He has 38 career victories.

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“Last fall, we squeaked one out, a little more fuel than Kevin and a little different strategy, but not quite as good a car,” Kenseth said. “Today, I felt like we had the best car.”

NASCAR said Kenseth’s No. 20 Toyota failed the postrace laser inspection station and will be brought to the research and development center in Concord, North Carolina, for more evaluation. The penalty for that kind of failure has traditionally been 15 points. But this was the first time a race winner was busted since the lasers were instituted in 2013.

Tony Stewart finished second and strengthened his spot inside the top 30 in the points standings. Stewart has a win this season and needs to secure a spot in the top 30 in points to clinch a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.

Joey Logano was third, followed by Harvick and Greg Biffle.

Alex Bowman had a solid day ruined when he hit the wall late and finished 26th driving for Dale Earnhardt Jr. Earnhardt was sidelined because he is suffering from symptoms of a concussion.

Truex tumbled to 16th when his Toyota suffered a broken shifter, and Busch dropped to eighth when he could never break free on late-race restarts.

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“We’re doing everything right, but we’re taking some on the chin here,” Truex said.

That allowed Kenseth, Busch’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, to cruise to the top and snatch the lead. He drove away on the final restart with 11 laps to go in the 301-mile race, and soon the traditional lobster plopped on the hood of his Toyota.

It was also a good day for Stewart, who snapped an 84-race losing streak last month at Sonoma and was fifth last week at Kentucky Speedway. The three-time Cup champion is retiring after this season.

“Everyone wants this last year to be good,” Stewart said. “Sonoma, I think, really helped relax everybody.”

Kenseth became the first driver since Kurt Busch in 2004 to win consecutive starts at New Hampshire. He didn’t win in his first 27 Cup starts at the track but has three wins in his last six races at the 1.058-mile track.

“It used to be one of my worst places and now I feel like it’s one of our better places,” he said.


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