Kansas provides pivotal moments for Brad Keselowski, Jimmie Johnson
Oct. 22, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KANSAS CITY, Kan. -- Two snapshots.
Two very different pictures -- of two very different championships.
One shot will be the centerpiece of Brad Keselowski's album, should he win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title this year.
The other will hold a position of prominence in Jimmie Johnson's memory book, should Five-Time become Six-Time this year.
Keselowski's
photo is an action shot. On Lap 182 of Sunday's Hollywood Casino 400 at
Kansas Speedway, Kyle Busch's Toyota got loose
in Turn 4, and Ryan Newman's Chevrolet sent Busch spinning into the
wall. That was just for starters.
Newman
went for a ride himself off the front bumper of Sam Hornish Jr.'s Dodge
and spun through the tri-oval grass. Kurt Busch's Chevrolet
also caught a piece of the accident, which happened right in front of
Keselowski.
With a masterful piece of driving, Keselowski steered his way through the chaos.
"I
can't believe I saved it!" Keselowski crowed on the radio. "Man, if we
win the championship, go ahead and save that video clip. I
hope there's an in-car camera."
Ultimately, Keselowski would finish eighth, a vast improvement over his 25th-place starting position. Should he go on to
win his first Cup title, the action shot of the wreck he missed at Kansas will provide a treasured memory of a pivotal moment.
"I
said when we finished Talladega that somebody should make ‘I survived
Talladega' T-shirts," Keselowski said after the race. "Well,
I didn't know, coming to Kansas, it was going to be the same. Just
wrecks and accidents and blown tires -- everything you can imagine
happened today."
Jimmie
Johnson's prized photo is quite different. It's a still life -- at
least where his No. 48 Chevrolet is concerned. The car sits
immobile on pit road, but the activity surrounding it is frenetic.
On
Lap 135, Johnson tried an aggressive pass of Martin Truex Jr.'s Toyota,
lost control of the car and backed into the Turn 4 wall.
Lap after lap under caution, Johnson brought the car to pit road, where
his team repaired it as crew chief Chad Knaus barked orders, in effect
putting the car back together with bubble gum and baling wire.
Johnson didn't lose a lap in the process, and when the he restarted in 29th place on Lap 142, Knaus radioed to his driver,
"I looked at the car -- there's nothing wrong with it."
Anyone
scanning the No. 48 frequency would have been appropriately skeptical,
but as it turned out, Knaus was no pit box Pollyanna.
Johnson rallied to finish ninth, and because he had led laps before the
accident and Keselowski never got the lead, he and Keselowski both
scored 36 points on Sunday.
That left Johnson seven points behind Keselowski, the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup leader.
The
performance of Johnson and his team is a stern reminder that the
resilience that carried them to five straight championships from
2006 through 2010 hasn't dissipated one iota. Hence, the shot of the
BearBond ballet is emblematic of what may well become a championship
season.
"The
best way to send (a message) is how you perform on the track, and today
we showed what our team is capable of," Johnson said. "Outside
of that, and the one mistake I made, everything else went pretty
awesome. I'm proud of the team, and I hope the other guys are paying
attention."
Johnson
and Keselowski can point to Kansas as critical to their title hopes.
What happened Sunday will leave an indelible impression,
should either man win the championship.
Then
again, those two photos may find their way to the bottom of a drawer,
rather than an exalted place in an album, if another driver
enjoys a triumphant moment -- in a picture yet to be taken.
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