Keselowski overcomes penalty to win at Las Vegas
March 6, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS
VEGAS – Overcoming a pit road speeding penalty with daring late-race
strategy, Brad Keselowski broke a 33-race drought with a victory in
Sunday’s Kobalt 400 at Las Vegas
Motor Speedway.
Keselowski
passed Las Vegas native Kyle Busch with five laps left to win for the
first time since the fifth race of 2015 at Auto Club Speedway in
Fontana, California. The 2012
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion beat Team Penske shopmate Joey Logano
to the finish line by .675 seconds, as Busch lost ground over the
closing laps.
Rain
delayed the start of the race, and high winds and a late-race dust
storm made visibility a challenge, but the bizarre conditions left
Keselowski undeterred. Nor did a
pit road speeding penalty under caution on Lap 180 prove catastrophic,
thanks to a series of astute pit calls by crew chief Paul Wolfe.
“This
is really, really great,” said Keselowski, who lauded the
lower-downforce aerodynamic package in place for the 2016 season. “It
seemed like there were plenty of challenges,
whether it was pit road or the weather or cautions.
“They
threw everything they had at us today but this Miller Lite Ford team
was too strong, and we were able to fight them off and get to victory
lane.”
Relative
to the field, Keselowski picked up speed toward the end of a run with a
car that was eminently maneuverable. Busch’s car took off early but
couldn’t maintain its pace
late in a fuel run.
“He
(Busch) had a really good short-run car, but it fell off on the long
run,” Keselowski said. “That’s part of this new package. Some are good
on short runs and some are good
on long runs, and we had a really good long-run car today.”
Six-time
series champion Jimmie Johnson beat Busch to the finish line by .018
seconds to secure third place. Austin Dillon ran fifth, and rookie Ryan
Blaney came home sixth,
posting a career-best finish on an open-motor race track.
The
victory was Keselowski’s second at LVMS and the 18th of his career, but
it wouldn’t have been possible if Wolfe hadn’t elected to keep the No. 2
Ford on the track on Lap
217 when all but Keselowski, Logano and Dillon pitted for tires and
fuel under the fifth caution of the race.
It
took 38 laps, however, for the benefits of the strategy to become
apparent — thanks to Busch’s remarkable restart on Lap 224. From the
sixth position, Busch powered his
No. 18 Toyota to the outside of Johnson’s Chevrolet, picked up huge
momentum off the second corner, dived to the inside and shot past both
Logano and Keselowski entering Turn 3.
One
lap later, a multi-car wreck in Turn 1 ended strong runs by Matt
Kenseth and rookie Chase Elliott, but the seven laps run under the
resulting sixth and final caution enabled
Keselowski, Logano and Dillon to stretch their fuel supplies to the end
of the race.
Busch
streaked away on the Lap 233 restart but developed a pronounced
vibration in the right front of this car, and the chase group of
Keselowski, Logano and Johnson closed
in. Keselowski passed Logano for the second spot on Lap 259 of 267 and
steaked past Busch three laps later.
“I
tried to hold him off as long as I could, but he showed how fast he was
getting by me and Kyle and checking out,” Logano said after the 1-2
finish. “Congratulations to Team
Penske. It’s something to be very proud of for our team.
“We
have a lot of second-place finishes already this year. I know we’re
only three races in, but I’m getting antsy. We have good speed in our
cars — we’ll be all right.”
The
call to stay out on Lap 217 proved decisive for the Penske Fords, but
the decision to sacrifice track position for four tires on Lap 199 (when
most others opted for right
sides only), made the strategy possible.
“The
way I look at it, if you're going to do two tires, you got to get that
clean air,” Wolfe said. “Otherwise, we'll take four all day long. It
gives you opportunities at
the end to do some different strategies to get that track position
back.
“Obviously
we knew when the caution fell there, we were still short on fuel. At
that point it was worth the risk to take the gamble and hope for the
cautions. Obviously, we
got those and were able to get to Victory Lane.”
Busch
retained the top spot in the series standings and leads Johnson and
seventh-place finisher Kevin Harvick by seven points. Logano is fourth,
11 points back.
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