Keselowski tops Johnson in first Chase race at Chicagoland
Sept. 16, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET,
Ill.— Brad Keselowski delivered a body blow to the championship
aspirations of Jimmie Johnson, but the five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series champion was hardly down for
the count.
With a
pass for the lead that seemed certain to spark controversy in the
Hendrick Motorsports camp, Keselowski won Sunday's Geico 400 at
Chicagoland Speedway, the first race
in the Chase for the Sprint Cup.
Keselowski
took the lead over Johnson, the polesitter, after an exchange of
green-flag pit stops, with Keselowski re-entering the track one lap
later than Johnson, on Lap 231,
and pulling up in front of Johnson's No. 48 Chevrolet off Turn 2 on Lap
232.
Keselowski inherited the top spot on Lap 242 after the pit stops cycled through and led the final 26 laps of the race.
"It
feels like Round 1 of a heavyweight title bout," said Keselowski, who
took the series points lead for the first time in his career. "It's a
10-round bout. Week one's done.
We might have won the round, but we didn't by any means knock 'em out.
"We've got a lot of racing left to go. We're feeling good about today, but (we) know that we have a lot of work to do."
Keselowski
pulled away to win by 3.171 seconds over Johnson, who led a race-high
172 laps but couldn't catch Keselowski during the last green-flag run.
The
victory was Keselowski's fourth of the season, his first at Chicagoland
and the eighth of his career. Kasey Kahne ran third, followed by Kyle
Busch and Ryan Newman, as
Keselowski took a three-point lead in the Chase standings over
second-place Johnson with nine races left in NASCAR's playoff.
During
the race, NASCAR looked at videotape of Keselowski's return to the track
in front of Johnson and decided no action was warranted.
At
first perturbed by what he considered Keselowski's early entry into the
racing groove, Johnson said after the race that the outcome didn't hinge
on that particular situation.
"He did
cut up early," Johnson said. "It did impede my progress. I had to check
up and wasn't sure where things were going. But it didn't affect the
outcome, I don't believe.
"The
way he made quick work of traffic and stretched it out on me, I'm not
sure I would have held him off. At the time, it messed me up, but I
don't think it played (a part
in the) outcome in the race."
Keselowski thought he was well within the spirit and letter of the law in re-entering off Turn 2.
"There
is no enforced line like you see in other sports, and that's not a bad
thing," Keselowski said. "That's just one more thing to monitor during
the race. But it's certainly
a, I don't want to say a gentlemen's agreement, it's a policy of
merging down the backstretch, off of Turn 2, I think it said
specifically in the driver's meeting, and I feel like that's what we
did.
"You
can make rules that count it down to the inches and just make it a pain
in the [neck] for everybody that participates in the sport, or you can
just have a rule like we
do, and I felt like I was inside those guidelines."
A
caution for Casey Mears' crash into the Turn 2 wall brought out the
third caution of the race on Lap 149 and interrupted a cycle of
green-flag pit stops. Johnson, Keselowski
and Kahne had not pitted before the caution, and that trio remained out
front for a restart on Lap 158.
Johnson
quickly opened a gap of one second on Keselowski, with Kahne trailing
the leader by more than four seconds as the green-flag run progressed.
When Jeff Gordon passed
Ryan Newman for fourth on Lap 174, Hendrick Motorsports had three of
the top four cars in the running order.
Matt
Kenseth dropped back drastically during the run, and his team prepared
to change a right front shock absorber, but Gordon became the first
major casualty of the Chase
on Lap 188, when the throttle of the No. 24 Chevrolet stuck as he
entered Turn 1 and the car slammed the outside wall.
"I just
let off the throttle, and it just didn't come all the way back," Gordon
said as his crew tried to repair the car. "It was probably about
half-throttle, which is still
enough to do a lot of damage. We're looking at what the issue is right
now, what could have caused it.
"We'll get back out, but in this deal you can't afford to have issues like that."
Gordon,
the last driver in the Chase as the second wild card, finished 35th
and, in all likelihood, fell out of the championship conversation.
Kenseth
salvaged an 18th-place finish but fell to 11th in the standings, 26
points behind Keselowski and 21 ahead of Gordon in 12th. Defending
champion Tony Stewart ran sixth
and sits third in points, seven ahead of Denny Hamlin (16th Sunday
after running out of fuel in the closing laps), Kahne and Clint Bowyer
(10th Sunday).
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