Keselowski dominates Nationwide Series race at New Hampshire
July 12, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON,
N.H. – Taking a deep breath at the winner's podium, Brad Keselowski
took a second to savor his dominant Saturday at New Hampshire Motor
Speedway.
Keselowski
captured the pole, then led 152 of 200 laps to win the NASCAR
Nationwide Series Sta-Green 200. In addition, he posted the fastest
times in both NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series practice sessions in preparation for Sunday’s Camping World RV
Sales 301.
“One
helluva Saturday,” said Keselowski, who recorded a perfect driver rating
for the sixth time in his Nationwide career and has finished no worse
than third in any of his
six Nationwide Series starts this season. “Sometimes on these really
busy days you get so caught up in the action that you really can’t
appreciate all that’s transpired.
“We
have so much to be proud of there and, obviously, we’re looking forward
to tomorrow and the opportunity we have. Our Cup car was fast this
morning. Our Nationwide car in
qualifying had a lot of adversity but we fought through that and got
the pole. In the Nationwide race the car was really fast.”
In
addition, Keselowski’s Penske-prepared Hertz Mustang became the first
Nationwide Series car to win from the pole position in 17 races this
season. He also won the March
8 race at Las Vegas and now has 29 victories in 211 Nationwide races.
Kyle
Busch, the pole-sitter for Sunday’s Sprint Cup race, was Keselowski’s
primary competition and finished second ahead of Matt Kenseth, Kyle
Larson and rookie Chris Buescher.
“It was
a bit of a dogfight – one of the most challenging races I’ve ever ran,
knowing that you have Kyle Busch behind you and he’s just a tiny bit
faster,” said Keselowski,
whose only mistake was accidentally dropping the American flag during
his victory lap. “You have to fight through a line of cars and it seemed
like there was always something coming at us.”
Busch
pulled to within a car length of Keselowski’s rear bumper with 29 laps
to go, but got loose on Lap 173, slid up the track and dropped nearly a
second off the pace with
25 laps left. Taking advantage of lap traffic in the final 20 laps,
Keselowski’s eventual winning margin was 1.8 seconds.
“It was
actually very hard-fought there at the end,” Keselowski said. “He
(Busch) was really good at making adjustments. I didn’t think I was
going to be able to hold him off.”
Busch
led the first 34 laps but never led again in falling just short of his
fifth win in nine Nationwide Series starts at New Hampshire.
“We got
what we could out of our Monster Energy Camry,” Busch said. “We had the
best run there at the end but just not quite enough. We had to fight
hard to get by a few guys,
got to second but didn’t have quite enough to chase (Keselowski) down.
“If it
was clean and green all the way to the end I don’t know if I could have
got to him. I was hoping for a couple opportunities there in traffic.”
Keselowski
asserted his car as the one to beat, leading 66 of the first 100 laps.
By Lap 66, only Busch (2.88) and Kenseth (9.25) were within 10 seconds
of Keselowski’s yellow
No. 22 Mustang.
True to
its name, the Sta-Green 200 stayed caution-free for 76 laps prior to a
yellow flag for debris on Lap 93 that tightened the field.
Busch
struggled after the restart while Larson seized the opportunity and
tucked in second behind Keselowski. And he wasn’t second for long.
When
Brian Scott got into the back of third-place Elliott Sadler, it touched
off a spin that involved seven cars, enabling Larson to seize the lead.
Larson
led the race twice for 11 laps. But when things settled down after the
race’s fourth caution, Keselowski regained the top spot and went on to
dominate the final 56 laps.
Series
points leader Regan Smith didn’t have a top-five car but was the big
bonus winner, capturing the $100,000 payoff in the first of four Dash 4
Cash races courtesy of Nationwide
Insurance. Smith finished ahead of championship-eligible Nationwide
Series drivers Ryan Reed (11th), Ryan Sieg (18th) and Jeremy Clements
(20th), each of whom qualified for the Dash last week at Daytona
International Speedway.
Smith
was in control of the Dash for most of the race but had trouble during a
four-tire change in the pits with 55 laps left. Although Reed restarted
in seventh and Smith
ninth, Smith regained command on his fresh rubber and maintained his
advantage the rest of the way.
“The
race was difficult for us,” Smith said. “We didn’t have the speed I
thought we were going to have. The last pit stop we decided to go for
four (tires), had a little hiccup,
and it cost us some positions. At that point, you kind of know the
situation for the day and it’s 'OK, let’s take the silver lining and get
out of here with the money. This means a lot to our team.”
Smith,
Buescher, Sadler and Scott emerged as qualifiers for the second of four
Dash 4 Cash races next Saturday at Chicagoland Speedway. Smith also
became the only driver eligible
for a $600,000 bonus – which will translate to $1 million in total
prize money should he win the Dash 4 Cash at Chicagoland and
Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 26), then win the Aug. 2 race at Iowa
Speedway outright.
Smith
retained the series points lead by eight points over Sadler, who
finished sixth, and 13 over Chase Elliott, who finished eighth.
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