Is Brad Keselowski's championship a watershed event in NASCAR racing?
Dec. 1, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS VEGAS -- Brad Keselowski is a breakthrough champion in a sport where breakthroughs are anything but commonplace.
Does
his march to the title signal a new era in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
racing, or is it merely a speed bump in Jimmie Johnson's road
to immortality?
History suggests that the former might be the case.
A
first-time champion in a season that produced no first-time race
winners, Keselowski is the third driver in the modern era to win
NASCAR's most coveted title within three years of full-time Cup racing.
The two drivers who preceded him in that regard have left an indelible
impression on the sport.
Dale
Earnhardt won the Cup championship in 1980, a year after claiming
rookie of the year honors. Earnhardt won six more championships
over the next 14 years and ended his career with 76 victories.
Jeff
Gordon won the title in 1995 in his third season of full-time Cup
racing. Gordon was champion three more times in the following
six years and is still writing his legacy. With 87 wins, Gordon is
third on the career list.
There is much to suggest that Keselowski, like Earnhardt and Gordon, will be a force in NASCAR racing for years to come.
To
team owner Roger Penske, who reveled in his first Cup championship
almost as much as Keselowski did, his driver's breakthrough moment
came not this year but last.
After
Friday night's awards banquet at the Wynn, Penske offered that the real
turning point for Keselowski was his injury during testing
at Road Atlanta in August 2011.
Four
days later, with a broken left ankle, Keselowski won at Pocono to start
a run that would carry him from 21st in the standings into
the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
"He beat Kyle Busch," Penske said, underscoring the significance of that achievement.
The
Pocono win was Keselowski's in more ways than one. It began to turn
sentiment in the Cup garage in his favor. Once perceived as
a brash, too-big-for-his-britches kid from Detroit who raced too
aggressively for the veteran's liking, Keselowski quickly became a
serious threat.
After
winning at Pocono, he finished second at Watkins Glen, third at
Michigan and first at Bristol -- and perception of the young driver
among his peers was forever altered.
Not
in all quarters, perhaps. Tony Stewart characterized Keselowski's hard
racing against Johnson in the eighth Chase race this year
at Texas as "a death wish." But when he acknowledged the new champion
in his banquet speech on Friday, Stewart gave Keselowski his due.
"You
showed a lot of us that a not-so-conservative style can lead to great
things," Stewart said. "It's refreshing. It's nice to win
one being as aggressive as you can be and need to be, and it was nice
to see this year."
Will
it happen again? Keselowski has said repeatedly that the Champion's
Week celebrations have fueled his desire to win another title,
but that won't be easy. Change is coming to the sport next year.
First,
there's the new "Generation 6" race car, with much testing to be done
before the start of the new season, and much refinement
to be done as the season progresses.
Penske
Racing will switch from Dodge to Ford next year. From a single factory
team with Dodge, Penske will join a Ford armada that includes
Roush Fenway Racing and Richard Petty Motorsports. For years, Jack
Roush has been the kingpin in the Ford camp.
Penske no longer will build its own engines, but will rely on those supplied by Roush Yates Engines. That's a radical change.
In
addition, Keselowski will have a new teammate, Joey Logano, who comes
to Penske from Joe Gibbs Racing. Though it will be a benefit
to have a full-time driver in the No. 22 car providing feedback,
there's always an acclimation period when a new driver joins a team.
Somehow,
though, there's a sense that, on the strength of his talent, his focus
and his passion, Keselowski will weather the changes
unfazed.
Sooner rather than later, we'll know just how big a sea change his first championship really is.
No comments:
Post a Comment