Brad Keselowski reveals blueprint for beating Jimmie Johnson
Nov. 8, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz. -- Is there a game plan for defeating Jimmie Johnson in a
head-to-head battle for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup title?
Brad Keselowski seems to think so. And he should know, having outlasted Johnson for the title in last year's Chase.
Forget
race day. The way Keselowski sees it, the time to start putting
pressure on Johnson is the moment the cars hit the track for their first
practice session, typically on Friday before a Sunday race.
That's
what Keselowski said he did last year at Phoenix International Raceway,
site of Sunday's AdvoCare 500, the next-to-last race in the Chase.
"There
were some practice sessions where I got by him and ran him really hard
and had a lot of fun with it," Keselowski said Thursday night at the
Penske Racing Museum in Scottsdale after the induction of his 2012
championship car. "And in the race, he drove the car too hard until it
blew out a tire.
"You
can look at it and say, 'Oh, it was a tire failure,' or whatever, but
those in the garage who know how the tires work know that it was
reaching
too hard and a failure that was caused from that. I feel quite
confident in that."
Johnson's
tire problem at Phoenix turned the Chase race upside-down. The
five-time champion had entered the race with a seven-point lead over
Keselowski,
the same margin he holds over Kenseth with two races left this year.
Keselowski's advice to Kenseth? Race Johnson as hard as you can.
"For
them (Johnson's No. 48 team), I wouldn't want to have to race somebody
that's going to race me hard, because that's not their wheelhouse,"
Keselowski said. "I think that was one of our strengths last year. If I
was going to give Matt a piece of advice, I'd say 'Use the (crap) out
of him.'
"Run him hard, because that's his weakness."
Before opening NASCAR Sprint Cup practice at PIR on Friday, Johnson took issues with Keselowski's comments.
"I
guess we need to ask Jeff Gordon, Mark Martin, Denny Hamlin, Carl
Edwards -- Who else have I raced for a championship -- how we race,"
Johnson
said. "We race hard. That's not a weakness of ours, by any stretch."
Johnson, however, did acknowledge that he learned something from last year's Phoenix race.
"Last
year here, they (Keselowski) were better than us, for sure," Johnson
said. "We worked real hard to play catch-up through the course of the
weekend. Sure, we had a tire failure, and yes, we overworked the tire.
We created an issue for ourselves. We were lacking some speed.
"The
No. 2 had us covered the entire time here, and that particular run
where the tire blew, I look back on it and think, 'Man, if I would have
preserved my tire a little bit more and didn't overwork my equipment
and didn't speed up that tire blowing and create that issue, we would go
to Homestead with a much smaller deficit and have a much better chance
of racing (for the championship).
"So that's the lesson I take from last year's race here."
NO WORRIES FOR KENSETH
Jimmie
Johnson built his seven-point advantage with a dominating performance
last Sunday at Texas, where he scored the maximum 48 points to
fourth-place
finisher Kenseth's 41.
Though Kenseth would prefer to be the Chase leader, he's not one to worry about it.
"I
don't sit and worry about the next race track coming up, because
worrying is just a waste of energy, a waste of time," Kenseth said.
"Certainly,
I try to be as prepared as I can when we come to the track … try to
look at what you've done in the past, what you can do better coming back
and try to improve on the things you did good, try to improve on the
things you did bad and try to be better at that.
"Kind
of go over a plan for what we're looking for, what we want to
accomplish, that type of thing. I wouldn't say 'worry' is the right
word. I
haven't worried at all, really. Just trying to be as prepared as we can
and as ready as we can when we get here."
Kenseth
has reason for optimism. In his first open-motor event with Joe Gibbs
Racing, on March 3 at Phoenix, Kenseth finished seventh, his best
result at the one-mile track since 2010.
"We
had a good run here in the spring," Kenseth said. "It was my first race
with the team, really, besides plate racing. We had a really
competitive
car, and we've been good at these kinds of tracks.
"I'm looking forward to the weekend."
HELPING OUR HEROES
With
a donation of $50,000, NASCAR Chairman & CEO Brian France and wife
Amy France helped raise nearly $1 million in support of
the families of military service men and women wounded in action.
The
Frances attended the "Stand Up For Heroes" benefit Wednesday at Madison
Square Garden in New York City, an event presented
by the Bob Woodruff Foundation and the New York Comedy Festival to
raise money for post-9/11 service members and their families.
"Brian
and I were honored to make this donation to support our military
servicemen and women and their families, who make incredible
sacrifices each and every day to help protect our nation," Amy France
said.
Renowned musicians Bruce Springsteen and Roger Waters performed at the benefit, as did iconic comedians Jerry Seinfeld and Bill
Cosby.
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