Brad Keselowski wins NASCAR Nationwide race at Richmond from the Coors Light pole
Apr. 26, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASACR Wire Service
RICHMOND,
Va.—Polesitter Brad Keselowski held off Kevin Harvick in a 12-lap run
to the finish to win Friday night’s ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond
International Raceway.
Keselowski
passed Kyle Busch to the lead with nine laps left, with Harvick
following into second place a lap later. Keselowski crossed the finish
line .718 seconds ahead of
Harvick with Busch rolling home in third.
The
victory was Keselowski’s first of the season in the Nationwide Series
and the 21st of his career. Brian Vickers finished fourth, followed by
Regan Smith.
The
victory was a breakthrough of sorts for Keselowski, who won for the
first time this year in either the Nationwide or Sprint Cup Series,
after Penske Racing switched from
Dodge to Ford during the offseason.
“It’s
very gratifying,” Keselowski said. “We’ve had a lot of seconds this year
(two in the Nationwide Series), and we’ve been really close on the Cup
side. We just haven’t
been able to get that win. We’ve struggled here at Richmond, too, both
in the Cup and the Nationwide cars, so it’s great to get that turned
around and finally get to Victory Lane in a Ford.
“This
is a Mustang (in NNS). Now we’ve got to win a Fusion (in Cup). The Fords
have been really fast, and new finally closed one out today.”
Harvick’s car was superior over long runs, but he didn’t have time to Keselowski over the final run.
“Our
car was pretty good on the longer runs,” Harvick said. “The 22
(Keselowski) was really good for the short runs, and I had to try to
fend him off as good as I could… All
in all, it was a fun night. He just had a better car for the short
runs. I enjoyed the race, back and forth. I always want to win, but it
was still enjoyable.”
Harvick
dominated a long green-flag run from Lap 107 until NASCAR called the
third caution for Juan Carlos Blum’s contact with the Turn 2 wall on Lap
151. After pit stops under
the yellow, however, Keselowski wrested the lead from Harvick on Lap
158 powering his No, 22 Ford to the inside of the No. 33 Chevrolet.
Keselowski’s
lead was short-lived. On lap 170, Harvick regained the top spot near
the start/finish line. After two laps of intense racing, Busch took over
the second spot from
Keselowski on Lap 177 but trailed Harvick by 1.763 seconds.
Busch
was closing the gap when Tanner Berryhill’s spin in Turn 2 brought out
the fourth caution on Lap 190. Harvick was off pit road first for a
restart on Lap 197, and he,
Keselowski and Busch were running 1-2-3 when Kevin Swindell spun in
Turn 2 to cause the fifth yellow on Lap 201.
Keselowski
grabbed the lead after the subsequent restart on Lap 210, but one lap
later, a hard wreck in Turn 3 involving series championship hopefuls
Austin Dillon, Brian Scott
and Justin Allgaier slowed the field once again and set up a Lap 221
restart with Keselowski at the point.
Harvick
passed Keselowski to the outside off the restart, but on Lap 225, as
Harvick went to the inside to block Keselowski, Busch powered around
both cars to the outside to
take the lead before the seventh caution slowed the race on Lap 228.
Note:
Seventh-place finisher Sam Hornish Jr. retained the series lead by one
point over Smith…
Scott and Nelson Piquet Jr.—and their crews—skirmished after the race
after repeated contact between their cars in the closing laps. Scott
accused Piquet of kicking him below the belt. Both drivers were called
to the NASCAR hauler for further discussion.
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