2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Top Performances
New King Crowned As Keselowski Topples Reign Of Johnson, Stewart
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 6, 2012) – No one saw this coming. No one.
Brad
Keselowski won his first race in 2009 at Talladega Superspeedway,
running a part-time schedule with single-car team Phoenix Racing. It was
a nice story in a long season, one that ended with Jimmie Johnson
winning the championship.
His
second victory came in 2011 at Kansas Speedway while in his second full
season with Penske Racing. That win moved him into 21st in points.
Again, a feel-good story to weave into the year; one that culminates
with Tony Stewart capturing his third title.
Big-picture
speaking, Keselowski’s yearly career followed a similar story arch.
Flashes of brilliance wherever he drove – be it the NASCAR Camping World
Truck Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series or his thus far brief tenure in
the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series – all followed by a premier series title by
two no-doubt-about-it NASCAR legends: Jimmie Johnson and Tony Stewart.
Now
it’s Keselowski’s turn. Keselowski turned in a championship-worthy
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, besting both Chase-participants Johnson
and Stewart. His average finish of 6.3 in the Chase was the exact same
figure of Stewart’s last season. He won twice, including an opening
salvo at Chicagoland Speedway that set the rest of the sport on high
alert. So, for the first time since 2004, NASCAR has a premier series
champion not named Johnson or Stewart.
From
the first primetime Daytona 500 through Keselowski and owner Roger
Penske’s first NASCAR Sprint Cup championship, the 2012 season was
filled with drama, intrigue and more than a few “Top Performances.” Here
are a few of them, and as always, the choices are always up for welcome
discussion.
Top Driver
Brad Keselowski:
His series-high five wins notwithstanding, Keselowski’s clutch playoff
performance may live as the most memorable chapter from his first
championship. He tallied two wins and eight top-10 finishes in the
10-race Chase. His worst finish was just 15th in the season finale at
Homestead-Miami Speedway – the exact finish he needed to guarantee the
championship. In the last 40 years, Keselowski became only the third
driver to win a NASCAR Sprint Cup title within his first three seasons,
joining NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon.
Jimmie Johnson (Honorable Mention): A
missing lug nut and a rear gear problem in the season finale destroyed
any chance of a sixth NASCAR Sprint Cup championship for Johnson, one of
the few blemishes in yet another brilliant season. Johnson led the
series in Driver Rating with a 109.5 and tied for the series-high in
wins (five), including his record-tying fourth victory in the Brickyard
400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Comeback Driver of the Year
Clint Bowyer: In
2011, Clint Bowyer eked out one win, at Talladega, and missed the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup in his final season with Richard Childress
Racing. Even Bowyer admitted that his move to Michael Waltrip Racing for
the 2012 season likely wouldn’t lead to immediate success. Wrong.
Bowyer won three times this season, leapfrogging Jimmie Johnson in the
season finale at Homestead to finish a career-best second in points.
Those three wins all came on different layouts – road course (Sonoma),
short track (Richmond), and intermediate (Charlotte). Along with
teammate Martin Truex Jr., the duo gave MWR its first Chase berth since
joining the series fulltime in 2007.
Greg Biffle (Honorable Mention): Greg
Biffle, one of the more understated drivers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series, slogged through an uncharacteristic 2011 season. He went
winless, with only three top fives and 10 top 10s, missing the Chase en
route to a 16th place points finish. This year? Call it a comeback, a
big-time one. Biffle won twice, with 12 top fives and 21 top 10s, the
latter tying a career-high. Holding the points lead after a series-high
14 races this season, he finished fifth in the final standings, his
third top-five points finish and first since 2008.
Top Team
Hendrick Motorsports:
Usually this spot is reserved for the championship team, but it’s
impossible to ignore – and tribute – Hendrick Motorsports’
history-making and milestone-achieving season. HMS, with Jimmie Johnson
at the wheel, captured its 200th victory in one of NASCAR’s crown jewels
– the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway. It also won the Brickyard
400, also with Johnson. In all, HMS had a series-high 10 victories
(Johnson, 5; Jeff Gordon, 2; Kasey Kahne, 2; Dale Earnhardt Jr., 1) and
placed all four of its drivers in the Chase.
Penske Racing (Honorable Mention): With
Brad Keselowski leading the improbable charge, owner Roger Penske won
his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship in a NASCAR career that
began in 1972. The No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge won five races, which was
tied for the series high with the No. 48 driven by Jimmie Johnson and
the No. 11 driven by Denny Hamlin. Penske’s other fulltime car – the No.
22 Dodge – chipped in a Coors Light Pole at Kansas Speedway by AJ
Allmendinger, along with four top-10 finishes (three by Allmendinger;
one by Sam Hornish Jr.)
Top Breakthrough Performance
Brad Keselowski: In
2011, Keselowski made the Chase as one of the two Wild Card contenders.
This year, he made it as the fourth seed. There’s little reason to
believe his meteoric rise to stardom won’t continue for years to come.
Keselowski’s five wins this season came on some of the tougher tracks in
the series, including Bristol, Dover and Talladega. But his ability to
brush off pressure – and a five-time champion – during the Chase made
him a champion, and a breakthrough performer.
Martin Truex Jr. (Honorable Mention): Truex’s
“breakthrough” was a long time in the making. Since his first Chase
appearance in 2007, from 2008-11, his average points finish was just
19.5. This season was a rebirth of sorts for the New Jersey native. He
had seven top-10 finishes, which is one short of the last four seasons combined.
His 19 top-10 finishes are as many as the last two years combined. And
his season-ending Driver Rating of 95.6 ranked 11th – which was also his
final points position.
Top Races
IRWIN Tools Night Race, Bristol Motor Speedway (Aug. 25)
– Bristol’s night race evolved into Bristol’s Night Race – capitalized –
because of the emotional fender-bending, bump-and-running and
temper-igniting qualities that blossom under the lights on the high
banks. This race had all that, and more. The racing? Intense: Thirteen
different drivers led a lap, three short of the all-time Bristol record.
The action? Robust: There were 13 cautions, the most in the last 11
Bristol races. Denny Hamlin won the race, but two side acts stole the
show. One, of course, is Tony Stewart’s helmet toss at Matt Kenseth’s
No. 17. The other, an undercard to Stewart vs. Kenseth, was Danica
Patrick’s finger point at Regan Smith after a wreck in her first Bristol
race.
Finger Lakes 355 at The Glen, Watkins Glen International (Aug. 12)
– Road course races have provided some of the most thrilling NASCAR
moments, especially in recent years. This year’s Watkins Glen race was
no different, especially on an epic last lap that will be remembered for
years to come. Three prominent road course talents – Kyle Busch, Brad
Keselowski and Marcos Ambrose – battled for the lead on the last
circuit, trading paint, running off course and doing literally anything
to capture the checkered. Ambrose finally won the race, and earned it.
According to NASCAR’s Loop Data, Ambrose and Keselowski traded the lead
four times on the final lap, a rarity on road courses.
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