Kenseth maintains Chase pace at TMS
Nov. 3, 2013
By John Sturbin
Special to the NASCAR Wire Service
FORT
WORTH, Texas -- Greed momentarily got the best of Matt Kenseth on pit
road Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway, where Lap 173 of the
AAA Texas 500 may yet morph into the deciding moment of the 2013 Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Kenseth
was running second to title rival Jimmie Johnson on Lap 173 of the
scheduled 334-lapper when he hit pit road for a green-flag
stop. Exiting after a clean stop, Kenseth was detected for speeding --
an infraction that carries a pass-through penalty that was assessed on
Lap 175. Kenseth dropped to 16th, a massive 28.398 seconds behind
Johnson, who went on to score his sixth victory
of the season by a comfortable 4.390-seconds over Hendrick Motorsports
teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. Joey Logano of Penske Racing finished third
while Kenseth rallied to finish fourth.
Kenseth
began the day tied with Johnson with 2,294 points, although the
Wisconsin native owned the most wins tiebreaker, 7-5. That's
now down to 7-6 and Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Lowe's Chevrolet SS,
exited Texas with a seven-point lead (2,342-2,335) after Round 8 of the
10-race Chase.
"Qualified
good, had really good pit stops and my team did a great job," said
Kenseth, driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Let's Do This
Toyota Camry fielded by Joe Gibbs Racing. "I didn't do such a great
job. I was a little too aggressive on trying to get what we could on pit
road there and got away from us."
Pit
road speed limit was 45 mph. "Everybody tries to use the lines to your
advantage as much as you can," Kenseth said, "and I just
got out of my stall faster than I thought. So when we got to that next
segment I guess we were just going too fast. It was my bad. Even though I
didn't go past where we were supposed to go past, we just miscalculated
a little bit and should have backed that
down a little bit.
"After
they told me that I sped, there wasn't anything I could do about that
except for try to get back up there. Just came down pit
road, took our lumps and tried to keep adjusting on our car and try to
get all the positions that we could get. They came through with good
stops and they did all the right stuff. I just couldn't get up there any
farther."
Kenseth
made nine pit stops for total of five minutes and 3.631 seconds.
Johnson's team, led by crew chief Chad Knaus, stopped eight
times for a combined four minutes and 44.229 seconds.
"Had
some good adjustments, we just honestly never had the car to run with
the No. 48," Kenseth said. "I was a little off tonight --
just could never get the balance and get it driving exactly like we
hoped. Overall it was a good night and we're still in this thing."
Johnson
brought his A-game to TMS' high-banked, 1.5-mile quad-oval for a race
that began in the afternoon sun and finished at dusk.
A five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, Johnson led 255 laps --
second-highest total in TMS history to the 278 laps three-time champ
Tony Stewart paced on Nov. 5, 2006. The result was Johnson's first
victory of 2013 on one of NASCAR's many 1.5-mile/intermediate
tracks.
"Through
all the years I've raced with that group, I haven't seen them really
bad anywhere," said Kenseth, who led twice for three laps.
"Honestly,
the No. 48 had us from the time they unloaded until the time they put
it back on the truck," said Kenseth, who had topped
the points table for seven of the last nine weeks. "They were just
dominant all weekend. (Crew chief) Jason (Ratcliff) and this whole Home
Depot crew did a great job today of making adjustments and trying to get
it better. That speeding penalty got us behind
-- we definitely didn't need that. But really, I don't know that at the
end of the day if that really affected our finish much. We just didn't
have what we needed to get any farther forward."
Kenseth
was quite calm, even smiling, during an interview -- appropriately
enough -- on pit road. "I'm still confident," said Kenseth,
the 2003 NASCAR Sprint Cup champion with Roush Fenway Racing who is in
his first season with JGR. "I wish I was seven points ahead, but at the
end of the day it's in our hands. The math works out if you win the last
two races."
Round
9 will be run on the one-mile Phoenix International Raceway next
weekend. The season finale will take place at the 1.5-mile
Homestead-Miami
Speedway on Nov. 17.
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