Brad Keselowski ends Ford drought with Martinsville victory
April 2, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
MARTINSVILLE,
Va. – In Sunday’s STP 500 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at
Martinsville Speedway, everything worked – but nothing more than Brad
Keselowski’s race-winning
No. 2 Ford.
Yes,
that’s right, a Ford. The car maker found Victory Lane at the .526-mile
short track for the first time since Oct. 20, 2002, when Kurt Busch won
at NASCAR’s oldest and smallest
premier series track in a Roush Fenway Racing Ford.
Keselowski
and runner-up Kyle Busch swapped the lead during the final 64-lap
green-flag run, with Busch taking the point on Lap 444 of 500, and
Keselowski powering back past
Busch’s No. 18 Toyota on Lap 458. From that point, Keselowski pulled
away to win by 1.806 seconds, as Busch lost the long-run speed he had
demonstrated for most of the afternoon.
“This
is awesome,” said Keselowski, the season’s first two-time winner.
“We’ve ran so good here with the Miller Lite Ford, but something always
happens and we haven’t been able
to bring it home. Martinsville is just one of those champions’ tracks.
The guys that run well everywhere run well here, and it’s really just an
honor to win here and get to compete here.
“This
track is 70 years old and a lot of legends have won here. It feels
great to be able to join them and bring home a (grandfather) clock
(trophy). A lot of people don’t know
this, but those clocks are built in my hometown in Rochester Hills,
Michigan, so it’s cool to get one of them from back home. I have one as a
truck owner, but not as a driver, so I’m glad to bring one back as a
driver…
“I don’t like to keep trophies at my house, but this one’s going to my house. That’s how special it is.”
The
victory was Keselowski’s 23rd in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series,
and it vaulted him into the playoff points lead with 10. In the series
standings, Keselowski leaves
Martinsville in fourth place, 34 points behind leader Kyle Larson and
30 behind second-place Chase Elliott, who parlayed a front-row starting
position into a third-place finish.
Fourteen
cautions for 95 laps punctuated an action-filled afternoon that
featured remarkable comebacks, perfect weather, Ford board member and
namesake Edsel Ford II in the pace
car and a tire combination that started to open up the outside lane and
facilitate passing on the high side.
Keselowski
had to overcome his own challenges. A speeding penalty under caution on
lap 72 sent him to the rear of the field, but pit strategy – staying
out under yellow on Lap
109 – got him back to the front. Joey Logano, Keselowski’s Team Penske
teammate, overcame both a pit road penalty and a cut tire that put him
two laps down to finish fourth.
Austin Dillon ran fifth, posting his first top-five finish since a fourth-place run at Bristol last August.
Busch,
who led a race-high 274 laps to Keselowski’s 116, was disappointed that
the performance of his Camry fell off after his final pit stop on Lap
336.
“All
we did was put four tires on it, and it went to junk,” Busch said. “I
hate it for our guys. They’ve deserved all year much better finishes
than what we’ve been able to produce,
and here’s another one today. Just a frustrating season so far, but we
give it everything we got. We do all we can with what we’re given at the
particular time and try to execute and do a good job.
“My
pit crew did great today. (Crew chief) Adam (Stevens) and the guys did
an awesome job on this car this weekend to get it to where it was. We
were lights out faster than those
guys after 20 laps or so. There on that run it was at minimum at least
three tenths slower the entire time, and that’s why Brad just was able
to drive away there at the end. We were really really, really
struggling. I’m surprised I held off the 24 (Elliott),
but you know, overall, just not quite getting the finishes we need.”
Martin
Truex Jr. won the first stage to bring his playoff point total to nine,
second only to Keselowski. By the end of Stage 2, which featured a
119-lap green-flag run, the
intensity had ratcheted up considerably.
Coming
to the green/checkers on Lap 260, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., who had just
been lapped, gave race leader Kyle Busch a couple of sharp taps with his
bumper, sending Busch toward
the top of the track. Elliott powered to the inside off Turn 4, edging
Busch for the stage win at the stripe.
But
Keselowski and Busch dominated the proceedings from then on, with
Keselowski winning the clock and Ford finding the winner’s circle after a
28-race drought at the vaunted
short track.
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