Cool-Down Lap
Should Kasey Kahne have used his bumper to win at Bristol?
Aug. 25, 2013
The opinions expressed are solely those of the author.
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Nice guys don't always finish last.
Oftentimes they finish second--but they don't win championships.
And
Kasey Kahne won't win a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title—despite his
consummate skill and the unquestioned quality of his equipment—until his
level of aggression begins to
approach the level of his talent.
In
Saturday's Irwin Tools Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kahne had
the best car at the end of the race, hands-down, and failed to win. For
the third time this season,
Kahne chased Matt Kenseth to the finish line with fresher tires and/or a
faster car.
Kenseth refused to lose, driving perilously deep into the corners to prevent Kahne from clearing his car.
Kahne, on the other hand, refused to win, refraining from using his bumper to move Kenseth in the closing laps.
Had
Kahne cleared Kenseth, he would have run away with the race. Kenseth
knew it, and so did the fans in the stands who stood and cheered as they
watched some of the most breathtaking
racing we've seen this year.
We
watched and waited for Kahne to seize the moment, but it didn't happen.
Kahne settled for second. That sort of mind-set doesn't work in the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup,
where victories are paramount.
Just
ask Carl Edwards, who took an eight-point lead into the final three
races of the 2011 Chase, finished second three times and lost the
championship in a tiebreaker to Tony
Stewart, who won two of the last three events.
No one
would have blamed Kahne for moving Kenseth out of the way on Saturday
night. It was Bristol, after all, the high-speed home of the
bump-and-run.
Though
he doesn't look a day older than 25, Kahne turned 33 in April. My
belated birthday present to the driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet is a
wristband inscribed “WWDD,” as in
“What would Dale (Earnhardt) do?”
Perhaps that could serve as food for thought when the Chase starts.
WRECKING BALL TOUR
At the
opposite end of the spectrum, Brian Vickers was hardly the model of
restraint in his approach to Saturday night's race—and understandably
so.
Vickers
had something to prove, having started the weekend with the news that
his crew chief and long-time friend, Rodney Childers, was leaving
Michael Waltrip Racing to work
with Kevin Harvick next year at Stewart-Haas Racing.
Childers'
comments to the effect that he couldn't pass up an opportunity to work
with a driver of Harvick's caliber had to sting Vickers, who drove on
and beyond the edge at
Bristol to prove a point.
Vickers
was involved in the Lap 358 wreck that KO'd Jimmie Johnson. On Lap 447,
he turned left into Denny Hamlin's Toyota, cut Hamlin's right front
tire and triggered a collision
that wiped out Chase contenders Martin Truex Jr., Ryan Newman and Brad
Keselowski, among others.
When
the dust settled, however, Vickers finished fourth. Harvick, another
victim of the Lap 447 accident, rolled home 34th, 51 laps down.
WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN, JUAN PABLO?
It was beautiful to watch.
With a
near-perfect blend of elegance and aggression, Juan Pablo Montoya was a
major player at Bristol, contending for the win until the handling of
his car tightened up in
the closing laps.
Montoya
was one of few drivers who found a racing line around the .533-mile
short track that allowed him to cut through the field. Arcing his No. 42
Earnhardt Ganassi Racing
Chevrolet high into the corners, Montoya would steer to the bottom of
the track on exit, carrying momentum that allowed him to streak past
cars in the outside lane.
Montoya started 16th and finished third, his fourth top-five result of the season.
One can
only think that, had Montoya driven consistently with that sort of
focus and intensity since making the Chase in 2009, the former Indy 500
winner might not be looking
for a new job next year.
No comments:
Post a Comment