Brad Keselowski wins rain-shortened Nationwide race at Kentucky
June 28, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SPARTA, Ky.—When you win a rain-shortened race, you can't do a burnout - but Brad Keselowski certainly tried.
After
being declared the winner of Friday night's Feed the Children 300
NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Kentucky Speedway, 30 laps short of the
scheduled finish, Keselowski did donuts on the frontstrtech, minus the
usual smoke because of the wet, slippery asphalt.
The
win was by no means a fluke, because as the race progressed,
Keselowski's car identified itself as the clear class of the field. He
took the
lead for good on Lap 156, seven laps before NASCAR called the final
caution for rain.
The victory was Keselowski's second of the season and the 22nd of his career.
"I
didn't want it to end this way, but we had a great car," Keselowski
said. "This is the type of car you get like once a year—if you're lucky.
In driving this car I felt like Jimmie Johnson. This is a rocket."
Elliott
Sadler finished second, followed by Matt Crafton, who was making his
Nationwide debut. Brian Vickers ran fourth, with Kyle Busch finishing
fifth.
A
caution on Lap 141 for Carl Long's spin in Turn 4 gave the lead-lap
cars a chance to pit for enough fuel to finish the race, but varying
tire
strategies scrambled the field for a restart on Lap 146. Matt Crafton,
who took fuel only, led the field to green but quickly yielded to
Sadler, who took right-side tires only on pit road.
Eleven
laps into the run, Keselowski, on four fresh tires, passed Sadler for
the top spot. By then he had already put significant distance between
his No. 22 Ford and the No. 54 Toyota of Busch, who lost 10 positions
on pit road after sliding through his pit stall under the caution.
On
Lap 163, NASCAR threw the fifth caution of the race when a brief rain
shower hit the track. After seven laps under caution, the rain
intensified,
and NASCAR ordered the cars to pit road and red-flagged the race after
Lap 170 — 30 laps short of the scheduled finish — at 9:44 p.m.
"I
don't want to win a rain race—I want to race!" Keselowski asserted
under the stoppage. Keselowski didn't get his wish, but he got the win.
Notes:
Series leader Regan Smith had suspension issues and lost 18 laps in the
garage during repairs. His 28-point lead over Justin Allgaier entering
the race is now an eight-point advantage over Sam Hornish Jr. (who
finished ninth Friday) leaving Kentucky. ... Sadler, Vickers, polesitter
Austin Dillon and Kyle Larson, the top finishing NNS regulars,
qualified for the Nationwide Dash 4 Cash, which starts
next week at Daytona.
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