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Amid Chase, Kurt Busch faces loss of crew chief

CONCORD, N.C. -- Kurt Busch learned his crew chief was leaving right before NASCAR's 2009 title race began. The impending split never distracted him, and Busch won a race and finished fourth in the final Sprint Cup Chase standings.

The Las Vegan could be forced to do the same thing this year.

Busch, ranked sixth in the standings, enters tonight's race at Charlotte Motor Speedway surrounded by whispers that crew chief Steve Addington will bolt after the season. The Charlotte Observer, citing unidentified sources, reported Addington is not likely to return in 2012.

Addington, who replaced Pat Tryson at the end of the 2009 season, did not want to discuss his job status.

"I have no comment on the story that's written off pure rumors and speculation that has no leg to stand on," Addington said Friday. "So that's all I can say. We're here to concentrate on winning the Bank of America 500 and this championship. I don't know where this is coming from. That's all I can say."

Busch was less talkative. He emerged from his hauler before Friday's practice and headed directly to his car.

"I don't want to talk to you guys," he said.

What could he possibly have to say?

It's that point of the title race when the contenders begin to separate themselves from the field, and even though Busch is only 16 points behind leader Carl Edwards, there's no room for error in what's shaping up to be a tight race to the final checkered flag.

Edwards, Kevin Harvick and five-time defending series champion Jimmie Johnson have established themselves as the strongest in the field. The verdict is still out on Tony Stewart, who opened the Chase with two wins but struggled at Dover and blew a decent finish last week at Kansas with a botched final pit stop.

Brad Keselowski and Matt Kenseth, who rank fourth and fifth in points, keep hanging around, as does Busch, who beat rival Johnson at Dover to pick up his first Chase victory of the year.

But team owner Roger Penske worried Friday that Busch's effort could be harmed by the Addington rumors.

"I don't know how this stuff gets started," Penske told ESPN.com during IndyCar events at Las Vegas. "But it's unfortunate because it's a big distraction to the team in the middle of the Chase."

After Busch and Stewart, who will start from the pole tonight, the championship race is at a critical state. Ryan Newman and Denny Hamlin, ranked 11th and 12th, are done. Dale Earnhardt Jr., ninth in points, hasn't won a race since 2008 and probably needs to snap that streak to have any shot at winning the championship.

That leaves Kyle Busch and Jeff Gordon, arguably the two biggest disappointments in this Chase.

Kyle Busch opened the 10-race title hunt tied with Harvick atop the points standings. He had four wins during the "regular season," and a new maturity level had many convinced he was poised to win his first Cup title.

One month later, he is eighth in points and doesn't have a top-five finish through the first four Chase races. But he has the worst of his tracks behind him.

"We feel we're definitely further behind than we would have wanted to be at this point," Kyle Busch said. "We just have to make sure we keep fighting and keep fighting hard and not allowing discouraging runs like we've had get us down."

Gordon dropped to 10th in points after his engine failed at Kansas. He opened the Chase second in points and had many fans convinced he would compete for his fifth title, 10 years after he won his fourth.

Gordon blamed the engine failure on a scuffed piston. It was his first engine problem for Hendrick Motorsports since last year's season finale.

Although he was confident he would have no further issues, an oil light flickered during Thursday night's qualifying and Hendrick engineers were under the hood Friday checking everything possible.

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