Brad Keselowski riding wave into treacherous Talladega
Oct. 5, 2012: Weekend preview
NASCAR Wire Service
Brad
Keselowski has more than once referred to Talladega Superspeedway as
"its own animal" in recent weeks. It's a beast he tamed just five months
ago, but Keselowski knows that
past successes and a recent hot streak are no guarantee of impending
glory on NASCAR's most unpredictable track.
Keselowski
leads the Sprint Cup Series standings by five points over Jimmie
Johnson heading to Sunday's Good Sam Roadside Assistance 500 (2 p.m. ET,
ESPN), the fourth race in
the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason. But Keselowski knows
well that no points lead is safe at Talladega, where an otherwise strong
day can end in tangled machinery.
"There's
not one strategy that works consistently to keep you out of trouble,
which is part of what makes it so unique," Keselowski said Tuesday at
Charlotte Motor Speedway, site
of the Chase's fifth round. "I haven't really put a lot of thought yet
into Talladega; it's still pretty early in the week, and I've found
every time I go to Talladega with a plan, they usually change it. I
haven't really thought about it that much, and I
don't know if I'm going to."
Even
if strategies may not be at the forefront for Keselowski just yet, the
mental tenacity to compete flat-out for 500 miles in large,
close-quarters packs is a requirement.
Keselowski scored his first career Sprint Cup win at Talladega in 2009,
famously making last-lap contact that sent Carl Edwards tumbling into
the catch fence within sight of the checkered flag. His most recent Cup
win at the 2.66-mile track relied more on
smarts than brute force.
Keselowski
pulled one over on conventional wisdom at Talladega last May, leading
with one lap remaining while plenty of rivals were in line to slip past
for the win. But Keselowski
used Kyle Busch's push for as long as possible before deftly breaking
their slipstream and coasting to a relatively easy victory.
Those
laurels, combined with his winning two of the first three Chase races
in style, aren't enough to convince Keselowski he's peaking in a quest
for his first Cup championship.
"It's
easy for me not to get too high emotionally knowing that there's still
seven races left," said Keselowski, who announced he would cut back on
his NASCAR Nationwide Series
schedule the rest of the year to focus on his Sprint Cup efforts.
"We're not even a third of the way through this, and that's a long ways
to go."
If
there's a dark horse points-wise at Talladega, it could be the driver
on the opposite end of the Chase spectrum. Matt Kenseth opened NASCAR's
playoffs with a whimper, but his
strength this season on restrictor-plate tracks Talladega and Daytona
has been unquestioned. He has a Daytona 500 win and a third-place run at
the Florida track this year and placed third at Talladega in May.
"For
the first time in my career, I'm probably really looking forward to
going to Talladega," said Kenseth, who sits 72 points behind Keselowski.
"Our plate stuff has been extremely
strong this year. I think we've led a lot of laps all three plate
races. They all ended in a green-white-checkered (finish); unfortunately
lost the last two, I messed up both of them and didn't do the right
things, but we've had really fast cars."
BUESCHER BEARING DOWN AT TALLADEGA
In
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season with so much parity, James
Buescher has been the exception. He's one of 12 drivers to have tasted
victory in 17 races thus far, but
no one has come close to Buescher's series-best four wins.
Buescher
will aim to keep his breakthrough NASCAR season rolling in Saturday's
fred's 250 (4 p.m. ET, SPEED) at Talladega Superspeedway, a true
wild-card track with just five
races left on the 2012 slate.
Despite
his win tally, Buescher ranks a close second in the truck tour's
standings, just one point behind ultra-consistent rookie Ty Dillon.
Championship or not, it's been a solid
ride for the 22-year-old Texan, who had zero wins in his NASCAR career
before this season.
Buescher's
also shown he knows a thing or two about superspeedway racing, winning
the NASCAR Nationwide Series opener in February at Daytona International
Speedway after navigating
past a thundering last-lap crash at the front of the pack. Any prior
conditioning for chaos should serve him well at Talladega, where
three-wide racing is almost commonplace.
"I
really enjoy racing on superspeedways for the pure fast speeds and
action-packed racing," Buescher said. "I am also on edge because
anything at any time can happen on them.
This is a place that we can win and I hope we are in place to
accomplish that."
Dillon
has led the truck series points for the last three weeks, but hasn't
been able to breathe easily -- his largest advantage in that span has
been just eight points. Though
third-place Timothy Peters has slipped back to 24 points off the top,
just 41 points separate the top six.
"It's
hard to stay focused with so many different teams that are able to win
every week in the truck series," Dillon said. "That's just applause to
NASCAR for making the series
so great and so close, and it's really fun to be racing in it, but the
only thing that we can do is focus on us and winning races in the
future. I think that's what we're doing and I think that's why we have
such good momentum."
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