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Sebastian Vettel

Sebastian Vettel defeats Busch brothers for Nations Cup

Brant James
USA TODAY Sports
Sebastian Vettel celebrates his victory after winning the Nations Cup, next to Kyle Bush (left) and Kurt Bush, from Team USA NASCAR.

 

MIAMI – In a contest of America vs. everyone else, the world had a solid day, despite the best efforts of Kurt and Kyle Busch.

Four-time Formula 1 champion Sebastian Vettel defended his Nations Cup title for Germany and Norwegian former World Rally champion Petter Solberg romped Scott Speed by 2.1 seconds in the decisive final of the “America vs. The World” competition in the Race of Champions at Marlins Park.

The Nations Cup final came down to the Buschs and their Team NASCAR against Vettel, and he was more than up to the challenge in winning for a record seventh time, beating the former NASCAR Cup champions single-handedly. He beat Kurt Busch in a buggy by 1.2 seconds in the final and Kyle Busch by .22 in a rally car.

The Buschs also were crucial in the unique second event, in which a team of Americans competed against a world contingent in a series of best-of-threes, with points awarded for each win. Kurt Busch won one of his two events and his younger brother both, including a sweep of F1 driver Jensen Button that gave the Americans a two-point lead entering the final. But Solberg’s win over Speed was worth three points, giving the global team an 8-5 triumph.

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Kurt Busch described the camaraderie among drivers as “a very controlled group of guys in a frat house.” Former NASCAR driver Brian Vickers, a South Florida resident drafted by organizer Fredrik Johnsson as American captain, described wrangling his drivers and car assignments for the Sunday competition as enjoyable chaos.

A 1 a.m. text to Busch bloomed into a massive group text among the Americans haggled over which cars they wished to drive.

“We went backwards,” Vickers grinned.

“Brian pretty much threw his hands up 20 minutes into a 30-minute deal,” Kyle Busch laughed. “But he sorted of came back at the end and re-organized and finished it up.”

But then the captain regained control.

“He’s solid. He’s great. He should be our president,” Busch joked. “He lost control of the group twice but the third time he put his foot down hard.”

Still, there was enough frenzy in filling out a roster in a pre-race driver meeting to completely amuse Canadian IndyCar driver James Hinchcliffe.

“Watching them fill out that paper was hilarious,” he said.

Follow James on Twitter @brantjames

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