Cool-Down Lap
There was more than meets the eye in Sunday’s Coke 600
May 26, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
No
doubt about it. A glance at the race report from Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600
at Charlotte Motor Speedway would lead you to believe that top two
competitors—Jimmie Johnson and
Kevin Harvick—slugged it out for the win in the race’s two fastest
cars.
Yes,
Johnson led 164 of the 400 laps, and Harvick was out front for 100
circuits. Johnson picked up his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory
of the 2014 season in the 12th
race of the year. Harvick was 1.272 seconds behind him in second place.
Johnson
started from the pole after pacing Thursday night’s qualifying. He is
still the only driver to win at Charlotte from the top spot on the grid
since 1998, and he’s done
it three times.
Harvick
started 11th after failing to take the green before time expired in the
final round of knockout qualifying, but everyone in the garage and the
grandstands knew Harvick’s
No. 4 Chevrolet was lightning fast, as it has been all year.
So,
yes, the best two cars Sunday night at Charlotte finished 1-2. But to
assume that the race distilled into a battle between Johnson and Harvick
is to ignore the complexity
and intrigue that permeated the event before Johnson took the checkered
flag.
First,
the obvious. There were 34 lead changes among nine drivers—and that with
an opening green-flag run that lasted 108 laps. Brad Keselowski led 43
laps, Jamie McMurray
34 and Matt Kenseth 33, though none of the three had a car that could
keep up with Johnson or Harvick on speed alone.
Nevertheless, all three of those drivers had winning chances.
Keselowski
delayed his final pit stop until Lap 344, using his acknowledged talent
for saving fuel to best advantage before bringing his car to pit road.
From that point, Keselowski
could have made it to the end of the race without stopping again.
But a mistake on that crucial pit stop ruined his chances.
“We had
the strategy and very close to having the speed to win the race, and
then on that late-race pit stop, we left the right front wheel loose,
and that ended our chance
to win,” Keselowski said.
Keselowski had to bring his car back to pit road, negating the tactic he and crew chief had devised.
“We
rebounded to finish 10th, which I guess isn’t bad, all things
considered,” Keselowski said. “The crew gave me a great car. I drove my
butt off, but we just didn’t get it
done on pit road.”
Like
Keselowski, Carl Edwards’ No. 99 Roush Fenway Racing team came up with a
strategy that put Edwards in position to win the race. Unlike
Keselowski, the 99 team didn’t make
a critical mistake.
In
Edwards’ case, fate intervened in the form of a caution flag for Alex
Bowman’s accident in Turn 3 on Lap 379, three circuits after Edwards had
taken the lead with enough
fuel to get to the end of the race. With the field bunched for a
restart on Lap 384, Edwards was no match for Johnson or Harvick and
finished fourth.
“That
was probably as good as we deserved to finish, but (crew chief) Jimmy
(Fennig) made that call, and I thought we were going to win it,” Edwards
said.
Kenseth
passed Jeff Gordon for the lead moments after the Lap 384 restart and
pulled away temporarily. But Johnson, who had restarted third, gave
chase, and Kenseth wasn’t
able to make his car fast enough or wide enough in the closing laps to
hold off the six-time champion.
Ultimately, Johnson passed Kenseth on Lap 392, and Harvick followed as the race neared its conclusion.
Accordingly,
Keselowski, Edwards and Kenseth became footnotes to an event that, on
paper, looked like a two-man battle between the two pre-race favorites.
But those who simply read the box score will never know how close those three footnotes came to being headlines.
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