Sadler parlays strategic call into Nationwide win at Bristol
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
March 17, 2012
BRISTOL,
Tenn.—- Elliott Sadler wasn't sure about the decisive call in
Saturday's Ford EcoBoost 300 at Bristol Motor Speedway -- until crew
chief Luke Lambert gave him a history lesson.
Lambert's
astute call to keep Sadler on the racetrack under the final caution
gave Elliott Sadler the boost he needed to win his second Nationwide
Series race of the season, two weeks after he broke a 14-year drought in
the series at Phoenix.
The
Nationwide points leader drove away from Kasey Kahne and Brad
Keselowski after a restart on Lap 273 of 300 and beat Kahne to the
finish line by 1.159 seconds. The victory was Sadler's second at
Bristol, the seventh of his career, and it came at the .533-mile track
that gave him the first of his three Sprint Cup victories in 2001.
That was part of Lambert's reminder when Sadler questioned the call to stay out on old tires late in the race.
"He
reminded me that I won a race here in 2001 by doing the same thing,"
said Sadler, who celebrated with his parents in victory lane -- a
special moment, because Sadler's parents never before had been on hand
for one of his NASCAR victories. "Luke made a great call to stay out."
Though
he was a high school senior at the time, Lambert, 28, remembers that
2001 race—because he watched it from the grandstands with his father.
"I
was here, and I watched it, but I was definitely a spectator," Lambert
said. "I do study all the history of our driver and what track we're
going to and everything else -- but I was here for that one. And I was
pretty young."
Keselowski
finished third, followed by polesitter Joey Logano and Dale Earnhardt
Jr. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Justin Allgaier, Trevor Bayne, Kevin Harvick
and Ryan Truex completed the top 10.
Keselowski
didn't think the pit call necessarily made the difference. In his view,
Sadler simply had a potent No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.
"He drove by me under green there, right before the caution came out," said Keselowski, the 2010 series champion.
"I
think he was legitimately running the fastest lap times. He had a fast
car. You can't say he won that on strategy, in my mind.
"He's
been doing a good job. The 2 and the 6 car (Stenhouse) have been the
two fastest cars since the end of last year. They've both got it going
on."
With a
two-tire stop on Lap 160, Bayne took the lead off pit road and held it
until Stenhouse passed him in traffic on Lap 224. Stenhouse drove away
as Bayne and Keselowski battled for the second spot; with 40 laps left
Stenhouse held a 2.873-second advantage over Sadler, who had blown by
both Bayne and Keselowski to take over the second position.
Sadler
stayed out under caution after Kyle Busch's No. 54 Toyota pounded the
wall between Turns 3 and 4 to bring out the fourth caution of the race
on Lap 262. Kahne stayed out with Sadler, but all the drivers behind the
top two came to pit road.
It
didn't matter to Sadler that the drivers behind him had new tires. On
old rubber, he pulled away for his second win in four Nationwide starts
this year.
Notes:
Danica Patrick finished 19th, two laps down... Logano led a race-high
119 laps... Nationwide Series regulars have won the first four events of
the season, the first time that's happened since 1995, when Chad Little
won the first two races, Kenny Wallace the third and Johnny Benson the
fourth.
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