Talladega
Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala., Sunday.
Talladega
Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala., Sunday.
TALLADEGA,
Ala- The leader on the last lap isn’t supposed to win at Talladega
Superspeedway. Everybody knows that.
Brad
Keselowski disagrees, and he showed how to do it Sunday with a
calculated plan
that sent him to Victory Lane.
Keselowski
used a big push from Kyle Busch to pass leader Matt Kenseth, and after
leaving
the Daytona 500 winner in their wake, Keselowski staved off Busch’s
attempt to
snatch the win. Using a move Keselowski said he had dreamed about, he
held on
for his second win of the season and second at Talladega.
‘’I had
this whole plan if I ever got in that situation where I was leading; I
thought
about it and thought about it, dreamed about what to do, and sure
enough, going
into (turn) three, it was just me and Kyle,’’ Keselowski said. ‘’I knew
the
move I wanted to pull. It worked because the guy running second should
have the
advantage, but I had this move all worked up in my mind.’’
Keselowski
was the first driver in the last five races at Talladega to take the
white flag
and hold on for the win. He did it with a plan that left both Busch and
Kenseth
flat-footed, and both praised Keselowski after the race.
‘’He’s no
dummy, that’s for sure,’’ said Busch, who wound up second for the
second
consecutive day.
Busch was
the leader on the last lap of Saturday’s Nationwide Series race, and
was passed
by Joey Logano right at the finish line. He conceded there’s little the
leader
can do to preserve the victory on the last lap of a restrictor-plate
race, and
predicted how Sunday would unfold.
‘’If you’re
leading, being pushed, plan on finishing second. That’s all there is to
it,’’
Busch said after Saturday’s defeat.
So he
should have been sitting pretty after pushing Keselowski to the front.
Instead,
Keselowski went high into the third turn, then pulled off of Busch’s
bumper to
create some separation.
‘’That
allowed me to drive untouched to the checkered flag,’’ Keselowski said.
‘’It
wasn’t easy to convince myself to do that, but it was the right move.’’
Busch
initially seemed dumbfounded.
‘’I must
have screwed something up, because we got to turn three and came
unhooked,’’
Busch said. ‘’Just gave the win away over there. Not sure exactly what
happened. We definitely need to go back and figure out what it was.’’
Kenseth
didn’t feel much better. He led seven times for a race-high 73 laps,
but
believed he gave the win away on the final restart.
A nine-car
accident with four laps remaining brought out the yellow flag, setting
up a
two-lap overtime sprint to the finish. Kenseth, as the leader, got to
pick
where he wanted to restart and chose the outside line so Roush Fenway
Racing
teammate Greg Biffle woud line up behind him and presumably push him to
the
victory.
That put
Keselowski and Busch together on the inside line, but they drifted back
on the
restart as Kenseth indeed was able to jump out to a huge lead.
It was
probably too big of a lead.
Kenseth got
a little too far away from Biffle, which gave the Keselowski-Busch
tandem a
chance to catch him. The two cars sailed past Kenseth on the outside
line.
‘’I think
we had the winning car, really just didn’t have the winning driver,’’
Kenseth
said. ‘’I looked forward for a second, when I looked back, Greg and I
were
separated, those guys were already outside of him. With me not paying
attention, keeping us hooked up, just cost us a shot at the win, cost
Greg a
shot at the win.’’
‘’I wasn’t
too fast. I was just too stupid I guess at the end to keep a win.’’
It put
Keselowski in Victory Lane for the second time this season, which helps
his
championship chances. He’s been streaky through the first 10 races of
the year,
and even with this second victory, he’s only ranked 12th in the Sprint
Cup
standings.
But those
wins should guarantee him at least a wild-card berth into the 12-driver
Chase
for the Sprint Cup championship field.
‘’Two wins,
with the wild card and all, that almost makes you immune to missing the
Chase,’’ Keselowski said. ‘’This team is going to be strong come Chase
time.
The best is yet to come.’’
The victory
continued a hot streak for team owner Roger Penske, who won for the
first time
in the Sprint Cup Series at Talladega. It was also the first win for
manufacturer Dodge at Talladega since Dave Marcis in 1976.
Penske,
meanwhile, has won all four of the IndyCar races so far this season and
driver
Will Power is leading the series standings as they prepare for the May
27
Indianapolis 500. For now, though, the team owner is thinking about
where
Keselowski can take him.
Penske has
never won a Cup title since entering NASCAR in 1972, although he was
out of the
series from 1981 through 1990.Keselowski gave him a Nationwide Series
championship in 2010, his only NASCAR title.
‘’Obviously,
one of the goals in my life is to sit up on that stage (at the
championship
banquet), and I think he’s the guy that can make it happen this year,’’
said
Penske, who called it the perfect race.
That might
be going a little too far, which even Keselowski would admit.
He helped
cause a caution with seven laps to go when he ran into the back of
former
Penske teammate Kurt Busch. Keselowski was apologetic immediately after
climbing from his car in Victory Lane.
‘’I got to
Kurt and tried to push him. He tried staying in line. He didn’t want to
go,’’
Keselowski said. ‘’He probably didn’t know what was going on behind
him, which
is natural. When he decided not to go, I tried to force him to go. It
was a
combination of events that were unfortunate. I hated to see that
happen.’’
On the
restart with four laps remaining, Penske’s other driver, AJ
Allmendinger, was
part of the accident that stopped the action again.
It was the
last of five cautions in yet another race that featured fairly clean
racing.
NASCAR’s now had six consecutive uncharacteristically clean races,
which drew a
tongue-and-cheek response from defending series champion Tony Stewart,
who was
collected in the Allmendinger accident.
‘’I’m upset
that we didn’t crash more cars,’’ said Stewart, who finished 24th.
‘’That’s
what we’re here for. I feel bad if I don’t spend at least $150,000 in
torn-up
race cars going back to the shop. We’ve definitely got to do a better
job at
that.’’
Kasey Kahne finished fourth and was
followed by Biffle, Clint Bowyer and David Ragan. Trevor Bayne was
eighth, Dale
Earnhardt Jr. ninth and Jeff Burton rounded out the top 10.
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