Kenseth loses points lead after up-and-down day
Oct. 20, 2103
By Mike Hembree
Special to the NASCAR Wire Service
TALLADEGA,
Ala. – At the end of what he called "an incredibly disappointing day"
in Sunday's Camping World RV Sales 500 at Talladega Superspeedway,
Matt Kenseth found himself with a good car but a bad finish.
The
result was Kenseth losing the Sprint Cup points lead for the first time
since the beginning of the Chase. Kenseth swapped point positions with
Jimmie Johnson, Johnson moving four points in front of Kenseth after
starting the day four behind.
Despite
leading 32 of the race's 188 laps and racing as high as sixth with 18
laps to go, Kenseth took the checkered flag 20th, his worst finish
in the past 10 races. Oddly, Johnson experienced a similar day, leading
a race-high 47 laps but finishing 13th. However, his finish position,
teamed with Kenseth's run, left Johnson first in points.
Kenseth
said the handling on his car went from good to bad in the second half
of the race, but he was more surprised, he said, by the fact that
there was little jousting for position over the closing miles.
The
top 12 drivers raced in single file approaching the finish, with every
competitor seemingly wary to try to make a move to the inside for fear
of dropping through the pack.
Asked
if drivers were thinking about moves, Kenseth said, "They must be still
thinking about it because nobody made one. They were all up on the
top [of the track] there. Once everybody got piled to the top with
about 15 to go, I don't know why, but if you had five or six cars to try
it, you could get it back to two wide, but just nobody tried it. I did,
and it was dumb on my part because I couldn't
get enough cars to do it and just fell backward."
Instead of a probable top 10, Kenseth fell to 20th.
"I
should have been smarter there and, I guess, paid attention to points,
but I'm not really wired like that," he said. "I want to go up and mix
it up and try to win the thing."
Although he now is the hunter and not the hunted in the Chase, Kenseth said he isn't concerned.
"I
think I have one of the greatest teams out here, obviously, and I feel
like we can go everywhere else and honestly we can race anybody when
we're
at our best," he said. "Hopefully, we'll be at our best the next four
weeks, and we'll give them a run for their money."
Kenseth said he was surprised that his car's handling suffered in the second half of the race.
"We
ran well in the beginning, and we just – for some reason – handling is
never really an issue here," he said. "We just got incredibly loose,
and I just couldn't control my car even hardly by myself, and I really
just had to go to the back and wait until we could fix it.
"It was really bizarre. Typically, handling is a non-issue here, and we just got so loose I couldn't even hang on to it."
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