Earnhardt lucky and good, in Pocono victory
June 8, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
LONG POND, PENNSYLVANIA –
Dale Earnhardt
Jr. was in position to pounce on Sunday, punching his ticket to the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup by winning his second race this season
and his first-ever at Pocono
Raceway.
It took a little racing luck.
Runner-up Brad Keselowski was terrific in clean air. What he lacked was a clean grille.
On
Sunday, when Keselowski’s car began to overheat due to a piece of trash
on his front end, Earnhardt roared by, becoming the fourth consecutive
Hendrick Motorsports driver
to put a Chevrolet in Victory Lane at Pocono Raceway.
“Brad
had the better car; he had me beat,” said Earnhardt, who has known his
share of late-race misfortune. Take the third race of the season at Las
Vegas, when he ran out
of gas on the final lap, enabling Keselowski to win.
“I’ve lost some in some strange ways, so it feels good to win one like that,” Earnhardt said.
Earnhardt’s
triumph in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’ Pocono 400 gave him two
victories this season, his first multiple-win campaign since 2004 when
he won six times. He has
seen and appreciated the gradual-but-steady strides his team has made.
“The
difference between running fourth at the end of this race and running
second is a very small thing,” said Earnhardt, praising the effort of
his crew chief Steve Letarte
in the process. “In years past, it was someone else seizing the
opportunity. We’d be third or fourth, watching it happen.
“Each
year we’ve seen a progression of performance. What I’m seeing us do and
how I’m seeing us run makes a lot of sense to me. We’ve been fast every
week. We started [to improve]
toward the middle of last year. We haven’t peaked, but we’re certainly
doing some of our best work right now.”
Keselowski
led 95 of Sunday’s 160 laps and led Earnhardt by more than one second
when his engine temperature forced him to take decisive action with five
laps to go. Keselowski
tucked in behind the lapped car of Danica Patrick, hoping to draw the
debris off his grille.
“I felt
really bad for Brad to see him in a situation to be that desperate,”
Earnhardt said. “He’s a good friend … he had it won. We weren’t going to
get to him. I could not
believe he was going to do that when I saw him go up the race track
behind the No. 10 (Patrick's car). His temperature had to be super-hot
for him to do that.”
Keselowski said he was desperate and felt he had no choice.
“There
was debris on the grille, so I had to do something,” Keselowski said.
“[Maybe] I should have just ran it to see if it would have blown off …
but I had to make some kind
of move or the car wasn’t going to make it. The car was starting to
blow up. It was going to break or I was going to get passed because we
were really down on power in the straightaway.
“I took
a shot to clear it off and not lose time, but I misjudged it. [The
move] made enough difference for me to lose the lead in the process.
When I got down in the corner
and the car finally got sideways, I realized I’d made a mistake.”
In 28
previous Sprint Cup starts at Pocono, Earnhardt had managed seven
top-five finishes including a pair of second-place finishes despite what
he thought were some excellent
cars.
“We’ve
had so many opportunities slip away,” he said. “We’ve been so close. So
it feels so good to get into Victory Lane here. I used to come here as a
kid because it was a
summer race. I just always wanted to win at this place. We’ve had some
good cars here, so it feels good to finish the deal.”
Kurt
Busch finished third, polesitter Denny Hamlin fourth and rookie Kyle
Larson took fifth. Hendrick driver Jimmie Johnson, winner of the
previous two Sprint Cup races, started
20th, overcame a pit road collision with Marcos Ambrose that dropped
him as far back as 31st, and wound up sixth.
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