Bold late-race move sets up Keselowski's win in first Chase event
Sept. 14, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET,
Ill.—For Brad Keselowski, this year's Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup
started the same way it did in 2012—with a victory at Chicagoland
Speedway.
Clearly, Keselowski would love to see the Chase end the same way it did two years ago—with a series championship.
Needing
an extra pit stop to tighten a loose wheel under caution on Lap 183 of
267 in Sunday’s MyAFibStory.com 400 at the 1.5-mile track, Keselowski
restarted 16th on Lap 187,
mired in traffic behind a gaggle of lapped cars.
But
with a determined charge through the field and a couple of opportune
cautions in the final 35 laps, Keselowski regained lost track position
and put himself in position
to make a dramatic race-winning move after a restart on Lap 250.
With
third-place finisher Kyle Larson battling Kevin Harvick for the lead on
Lap 252, Keselowski powered between the two cars off Turn 2 and grabbed
the lead.
“I just saw a hole, and I went for it,” Keselowski said.
He held
the top spot for a restart on Lap 262, after an accident involving the
cars of Danica Patrick and Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and pulled away to win
his fifth race of the
year and the 15th of his career by 1.759 seconds over Jeff Gordon, who
passed Larson for the second spot in the closing laps.
Joey Logano ran fourth and Harvick fifth, as Chase drivers took eight of the top 10 finishing positions.
With
his second victory at Chicagoland, Keselowski ensured he would advance
to the next round of the Chase under a new format that features a trio
of three-race elimination
rounds and a final race at Homestead to settle the championship between
the last four eligible drivers.
With
the starting order set according to speeds in opening Sprint Cup
practice because of a qualifying rainout, Keselowski started 25th and
worked his way to the front, only
to fall back again when he brought the No. 2 Team Penske Ford to pit
road to have the loose wheel tightened.
“I’m
not really sure what to say,” said Keselowski, who can race for the next
two weeks without fear of falling out of the Chase. “I don’t really
know what happened. I just
know we got to the lead. There was traffic and I was just digging and
in the zone. The recorder was turned off, so I don’t remember what
happened.
“I had
my head down doing all I could do. We had a great Miller Lite Ford
Fusion that I knew from the start would be good, but, man, it was really
awesome the last few runs.
We really dialed it in and the 2 crew did an excellent job. What a day!
Man, I am still pumped!”
Larson,
driving a backup car after a brush with the outside wall in Saturday
morning practice, appeared headed for the first victory of his fledgling
Cup career, before Carl
Edwards’ cut tire brought out the fourth caution on Lap 231. That
yellow, which interrupted a cycle of green-flag pit stops, leap-frogged
Keselowski to the fourth spot for a restart on Lap 238.
Seven
laps later, caution for Clint Bowyer’s contact with the Turn 1 wall set
up Keselowski’s opportunity to make the winning move.
“Man, I
was so close,” a rueful Larson said of his lost opportunity. “I didn’t
need that caution there. I was just cruising out front, and then we got
that yellow, and I had
to battle Harvick really hard then. That allowed Brad to get by both of
us. It really ended our shot at a win there. We had one more shot there
at the last restart, but just didn’t have enough for Brad.
“He was
really good around the bottom. He was about the only car that I thought
could get around the bottom all race long. I had a lot of fun gripping
the wall. I ran inches
off of it the whole race and finally got into it there battling Jeff.
Man, for a back-up car, that was amazing… I just hate it that we came up
short.”
If
Larson had speed, Chase drivers Carl Edwards, AJ Allmendinger and Greg
Biffle did not. None of the three drivers was quick enough to stay on
the lead lap, and with respective
finishes of 20th, 22nd and 23rd, all are in jeopardy of elimination
after the third race of the Chase at Dover.
The
real casualty of Sunday’s race, however, was Aric Almirola, who was
running sixth just before the engine in his No. 43 Richard Petty
Motorsports Ford failed as he was coming
to pit road for a green-flag stop on Lap 231.
Almirola finished 41st and is in grave danger of missing the cut two races hence.
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