Brad Keselowski Earns First NASCAR Truck Series Win At Bristol
Aug. 21, 2014
By Chris Knight
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL,
Tenn.—After 62 races—the last 20 of which were in his own
equipment—Brad Keselowski is finally a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
winner.
"We did
it," said Keselowski as he took the checkered flag in Thursday
morning's postponed UNOH 200 presented by ZLOOP at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor
Speedway.
Keselowski’s
joy may have been short lived. Following the race, NASCAR announced
that his No. 19 truck, as well as the trucks driven
by Cole Custer and
Ron Hornaday Jr. measured too high at the rear spoiler during post-race
inspection. More on these findings will be determined early next week.
Keselowski
took the lead from Keystone Pole Award winner Kyle Busch on Lap 124 and
never relinquished, despite repeated attempts by former NASCAR Drive
for Diversity graduate
Darrell Wallace Jr.
"It was
a good battle and Bristol has always been a special track," Keselowski
said. "(Crew chief) Doug Randolph and the team gave me a great truck.
This thing took off and
it was flying and I knew we had a shot at it right away from Lap 1.
It's (a) matter of putting it all together and not having any bad luck
and we didn’t and everything came together and the team did a great
job.”
Busch,
who scored his fourth pole of the season Wednesday afternoon, appeared
to be the class of the field and had his sixth win of the season in his
sights. But he found himself
out of the racing groove 76 laps from the finish, stalling his momentum
and allowing the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion to slip by and
control the remainder of the race.
After
persistent rain forced the 17th annual Bristol race to be rescheduled
for the next morning, Busch led the green shortly after 10 a.m.
Keselowski took advantage of lap
traffic to squeeze by Busch on Lap 12 and led through the competition
caution on Lap 50.
Stout
work by Busch’s team on pit road gave him the lead back for the restart
on Lap 53. Keselowski though wouldn’t let Busch escape as he retook
command briefly on Lap 59
before Busch rolled to the point on Lap 61 and led until his miscue 63
laps later.
The
final caution flag of the morning waived on Lap 147 for a four-truck
accident on the backstretch, which allowed an attempt by the lead lap
trucks to gang up and steal Keselowski’s
thunder, but he would have none of it.
On the
restart, Busch stalked Keselowski, but in their rearview mirrors, a
hard-charging Wallace Jr. appeared and took second from his boss and set
his sights on the Rochester
Hills, Mich., native.
The No.
54 ToyotaCare Tundra closed up to within a truck length of Keselowski's
No. 19 Ford F-150 coming to the white flag, but Keselowski was able to
fend off the former NASCAR
Next driver to earn his first triumph in 62 NCWTS races.
With
his win, Keselowski and father, Bob Keselowski, became the first father
and son duo to win NCWTS races. The senior Keselowski won at Richmond
(Va.) International Raceway
in 2007.
Furthermore,
the 2010 NASCAR Nationwide Series champion became the 25th driver to
win a race in all three of NASCAR’s national series. His first Sprint
Cup win came at Talladega
(Ala.) Superspeedway on April 26, 2009. His first Nationwide Series
victory occurred at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway on June 7, 2008.
“For
me, it’s a big day for me personally and professionally,” Keselowski
added. “Personally I think we dug into a lot of things with my family
and the commitment they’ve had
to the sport and specifically to this series for a long time. To race
and make a living for quite a while then to beyond that to give me an
opportunity to do the same in the latter stages of their involvement. It
was a tough road and quite honestly we didn’t
make it. It’s always a personal tragedy of sorts to go through that and
that’s why for one of the many reasons I’m still involved in this
series.”
Wallace
Jr., achieved his third runner-up finish of the season, but noted he
respected Keselowski too much to wreck him for potentially his third win
of the season.
“We had
a very fast ToyotaCare Tundra and it’s shown, I’m proud of my guys,”
said Wallace Jr. “Brad’s good and I really had to wreck him to get by
him, so I respect him and
we’ll build off this and go to Canada, that’s a whole different animal
in itself.”
Behind
Keselowski and Wallace Jr., Ron Hornaday Jr. was third followed by Matt
Crafton and Johnny Sauter. John Hunter Nemechek, Joey Coulter, Cole
Custer, Ben Rhodes and Corey
Lajoie comprised the top 10. Busch fell victim to a flat tire and
finished 24th.
Sauter continues to lead the series standings by eight points (487 to 479) over ThorSport Racing teammate Crafton.
The
Truck Series returns to the track on August 31 for a trip across the
border to Canadian Tire Motorsport Park for the running of the Chevrolet
Silverado 250 (1:30 p.m. ET
on FOX Sports 1) in Bowmanville, Ontario.
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