The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series moved from New Hampshire to Indianapolis for the Jeff Kyle 400 at the Brickyard, with Kyle Busch looking to solidify his spot in the chase for the Sprint Cup.

Busch would come away with the victory, sweeping the weekend series. This is his third-straight win and fourth in the last five races. Only Dale Earnhardt Jr. has been in victory lane during that stretch and it was at Daytona.

What Kyle Busch has done this season is remarkable, considering the fact he missed the first 11 races with a broken left foot and right leg.

Austin Dillon had a bad luck day on pit road as he was caught for speeding twice, the first time happening on Lap 34 when he made a green flag pit stop. He was forced to make a second pit stop by NASCAR, which put him a lap down.

The first caution of the day came out on Lap 44 for debris. Once the green flag returned, it didn't stay for very long as Jeff Gordon and Clint Bowyer made contact on Lap 50. Following the contact, Gordon hit the wall, forcing him to the garage after he could not maintain minimum speed. It was not the day Gordon was looking for in his final race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway as he finished 42nd.

The caution flag returned on Lap 91 for more debris, and Michael McDowell would be penelized by NASCAR for having too many pit members over the wall. After serving the penalty, he was also a lap down from the leaders.

The fourth caution flag came on Lap 108 when Aric Almirola spun into the inside retaining wall in turn two. He would make an extended pit stop before returning to the race.

The caution reappeared on Lap 140 for debris. After the debris was cleaned up, Kevin Harvick led the field back to green with 14 laps to go. Harvick had a phenomenal restart, and looked like he was in position to win the race. That was until Kasey Kahne bumped Dale Earnhardt Jr, sending him into the wall to bring out the caution with just 13 laps to go.

Harvick led the field back to green with eight laps to go, but was overpowered on the restart by Kyle Busch, who jumped out to the lead. The caution would reappear with five to go for debris from Casey Mears' car, setting up a restart with two laps to go. On that restart, while Kyle Busch led the field to green, Trevor Bayne spun out bringing out the caution before the leaders could take the white flag, which set up the first of three potential attempts at a green-white checkered finish. On the first attempt, Kyle Busch sped out front, and held off a furious challenge from Joey Logano and Kevin Harvick to win his fourth race of the season.

"This has been a phenomenal return," Busch said post race. "I won't say phenomenal year because it was a dismal year to start, but I guess I'll take that 11-week vacation any year if it's going to look like this."

The win puts Busch in a very good position to get into the Chase for the Sprint Cup. With the win, Busch is 23 points away from cracking the top-30 in points, and NASCAR has already done his a solid by granting him a waiver to be eligible for the Chase. He has until the Richmond race on Labor Day weekend to become eligible.

With the first victory at Indianapolis, Joe Gibbs Racing has now won at all 23 active tracks

Rounding out the top-five were Logano, Harvick, Martin Truex Jr, and Hamlin. Carl Edwards, the pole sitter, led a lot of the race but finished in 13th position. After spinning late thanks to contact with Kahne, Earnhardt Jr finished in 22nd position. Next week, the race to the Chase heats up as the series moves to Pocono Raceway next Sunday Afternoon. VAVEL USA will have coverage throughout the week.