Cool-Down Lap
Keselowski’s rebound to championship form continues at Loudon
July 14, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Sometimes a driver needs a reality check.
Brad
Keselowski certainly got one in 2013 when he failed to qualify for the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup a year after winning the series
championship.
It’s
not that Keselowski didn’t have speed in his Team Penske Fords last
year. The problem was a lack of execution at key moments, a team-wide
failure to operate with the tenacity
and precision that had earned Keselowski his first title in NASCAR’s
premier series a year earlier.
You
could call it a post-championship hangover. You could say Keselowski and
his team as a whole approached the 2013 season with a complacency they
failed to back up on the
track and in the garage.
You
could apportion a share of the blame to the transition from Dodge to
Ford. No matter how seamless the change might appear, it’s never easy to
switch manufacturers. And
with that change, Team Penske began using engines supplied by Roush
Yates, rather than building its own.
That’s
not a knock on the quality of the Roush Yates product. It’s simply
pointing out that any significant change requires a period of
adjustment, and the No. 2 team didn’t
adjust quickly enough to things that were different from 2013 to 2014.
And the
bottom line was that Keselowski didn’t make the Chase, becoming only
the second driver in the Chase era (since 2004) to miss NASCAR’s 10-race
playoff after winning
the championship the year before.
But the
focus really shouldn’t be on the causes of last year’s shortcomings.
The focus belongs, appropriately, on the way Keselowski and his team are
reacting to a disappointing
2013 season.
From all appearances, it has elevated them, collectively, to a higher plane.
Two
weeks after a dominant victory at Kentucky Speedway, Keselowski led a
race-high 138 laps in winning on Sunday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
The
superiority of Keselowski’s car was obvious. Clearly, the team has found
something on the engineering side that’s allowing the No. 2 Ford to
rotate through the centers
of the corners.
Keselowski’s
car was so strong on Sunday that crew chief Paul Wolfe had the luxury
of making repeated four-tire stops, even though those decisions were
guaranteed to sacrifice
track position.
Just as often as Wolfe opted to change tires, Keselowski was able to drive right back to the front.
With
three victories, Keselowski shares the series lead with six-time
champion Jimmie Johnson, who was out of Sunday’s race early after
blowing a tire and clobbering the wall.
It’s not just the checkered flags, however, that Keselowski finds so
encouraging.
“It's
gratifying in a lot of ways,” Keselowski said. “I don't think it's just
that we have three wins. I think that it's that we're leading laps. I
think we were fast last
year at this time, but we weren't executing. This year we're executing,
which is really important as well, and we have a lot of momentum.
“And I
think we have a lot of potential still left in our team that we've got
to keep working to get to, because everybody is going to turn it up a
notch when the Chase comes,
and we know that, and we need to have another gear to grab to be able
to run for a championship here in 2014.
“I
think we're close, but I want to keep pushing, and I'm committed to
getting another championship. I know (team owner) Roger and Paul sitting
next to me are committed to
it, and we want to make it happen. It's a good feeling for sure.”
In fact, Keselowski thinks his 2014 effort may be superior to the one that won the title two years ago.
“I
think, in a lot of ways, we're stronger than that,” Keselowski said. “I
don't think we've had this much speed before. We had tremendous speed
today, and I think there's
potential left, like I said, with different things.
“So
that's all very encouraging to me. I feel like I'm in a really strong
rhythm right now. I think some of last year's struggles put me in a spot
to work harder and become
a better race car driver, and I think we're combining all those things,
and we're seeing the fruits of that labor with, like I said, more to
come.”
And, in
all honesty, Keselowski looks more like championship timber right now
than does Johnson, who continues to battle all-too-frequent racing
gremlins while Keselowski continues
to run up front.
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