Cool-Down Lap: Why Brad Keselowski is a legitimate Sprint Cup title contender
Sept. 17, 2012: Commentary
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET, Ill. -- Throughout his NASCAR career, Brad Keselowski has defied conventional wisdom.
Brash
and outspoken from the day he entered the sport, Keselowski, 28, drove
aggressively from the outset, eschewing the traditional approach of
treating your elders with deference
as you learn the intricacies of racing at NASCAR's highest level.
Keselowski
had his share of run-ins in the early going. On the track, he was a
moving target for Denny Hamlin and Carl Edwards. Off the track, he took
his share of broadsides,
too.
His
first full season as a Sprint Cup Series driver for Penske Racing, in
2010, was a season derailed. The feud between Edwards and Keselowski
came to a head, with Edwards sending
Keselowski's No. 12 Dodge upside-down into the frontstretch wall at
Atlanta in the fourth race of the year.
Though
Keselowski won the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship that year, his
Cup effort was fraught with failure. The third-generation driver from
Michigan posted his only two
top-10 finishes of the season -- back-to-back 10ths at Martinsville and
Talladega -- in the 32nd and 33rd races on the schedule.
In
2011, Paul Wolfe, Keselowski's champion crew chief in the Nationwide
Series, joined him at the Cup level, but for the first half of the
season, Keselowski continued to flounder.
Though he won at Kansas in race No. 13, he was 23rd in the standings
and absent from the Chase conversation 19 events into the season.
Then
came the accident that punctuated Keselowski's season and radically
altered the perception of the young driver throughout the Cup garage.
Testing at Road Atlanta on Aug.
4, Keselowski went off track in a high-speed corner when his brakes
failed and broke his left ankle.
The
injury coincided with a remarkable turnaround. Hobbling to the starting
grid on crutches four days later, Keselowski won at Pocono to start a
string of four straight top-three
results that included a second-place run at Watkins Glen, a third at
Michigan and a victory at Bristol, as Wolfe began to excel in his return
visits to many of the Cup tracks.
Ultimately,
Keselowski qualified for the Chase and edged five-time champion Jimmie
Johnson for the fifth spot in the final standings. As Keselowski
accumulated points on the track,
he also accrued respect in the garage and established himself as one of
the elite talents in the sport.
In
outrunning Johnson in Sunday's Chase opener at Chicagoland Speedway,
Keselowski sent a message to the rest of the Chase field that he's ready
to become only the second 20-something
in 14 years to win a Cup championship.
Is
it feasible for the lone Dodge in the Chase to win head-to-head against
the five-car armada of Hendrick Motorsports and Hendrick affiliate Tony
Stewart? Can Keselowski do over
10 races what he accomplished in the Chase opener?
Yes,
it's possible. Keselowski entered the sport much as Kurt Busch did.
Busch, who won the 2004 title at age 28, was brash, confident and
supremely talented, as is Keselowski.
Busch was a thinker. He and crew chief Jimmy Fennig developed a winning
road map in the first Chase, based on saving their test sessions for
the end of the season, when they really counted.
Likewise,
Keselowski is an elite driver. He's also a student of the sport. He
examines the minutiae of past races to develop his approaches to the
current ones. Keselowski is
calm under pressure and motivated by adversity -- a hallmark trait of
five-time champion Johnson.
Keselowski
has been careful not to make enemies as the Chase approaches. Yes,
there was the incident with Kyle Busch on an oily track at Watkins Glen
this year. And, yes, Busch,
who sorely needed the win at the Glen to make the Chase, let Keselowski
know he was there in Sunday's race.
A
lap after Keselowski passed Busch for position, Busch drove harder than
he needed to into Turn 1, snuggled up to Keselowski's rear bumper,
forced the Blue Deuce up the track
and retook the spot.
That aside, Keselowski doesn't have other drivers gunning for him in the Chase this year, and that's by design.
As
to his support group, Wolfe is one of the brightest crew chief s in the
garage, and he and Keselowski are a perfect pairing. Wolfe already has
distinguished himself as a premier
strategist, and his Dodge engines typically get the best fuel mileage
in the series -- an important advantage given that several Chase races
likely will come down to fuel strategy.
To
win the championship, Keselowski will have to improve his performance
at the three Chase tracks where he's never posted a top 10 -- Dover,
Texas and Homestead -- but the speed
he showed at Chicagoland suggests that he and Wolfe can accomplish
that.
Is
Keselowski the favorite to win the title? Hardly. As a five-time champ,
Johnson still deserves that distinction. Nevertheless, Keselowski
announced at Chicagoland that any
driver who hopes to be champion this year will have to beat the driver
of the No. 2 Dodge head-to-head.
Keselowski absolutely, positively will not beat himself.
ITAL/The opinions expressed are solely those of the author/ITAL
No comments:
Post a Comment