The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Keselowski opts not to pit late to win Coca Cola 500

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Brad Keselowski won the Coca Cola 600 in a shootout on Sunday as NASCAR did its best to fill the sporting void created by the novel coronaviru­s shutdown with its longest ever race.

The 600-miler on the U.S. Memorial Day weekend was already the longest race on the NASCAR calendar but on Sunday it went even longer after William Byron’s spin with five laps to go set up a two-lap shootout for victory.

Deciding not to pit, Keselowski stayed on the track to move to the front of the pack and bolted clear on the restart, holding off a challenge from seventime NASCAR Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, who was later disqualifi­ed after the post-race technical inspection.

Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsport­s teammate Chase Elliott, who had pitted on the final caution, was moved up to second place. The race, which started on Sunday and finished on Monday, was halted for nearly 90 minutes after rain swept across the 1.5 mile super speedway after 50 laps.

“I feel like I’ve thrown this race away a handful of times and I thought we were going to lose it today,” said Keselowski.

“We might not have been the fastest car today but wow did we grind this one out.”

Aside from a charity golf match pitting Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning against Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady, NASCAR continued to have the sporting spotlight all to itself as the NBA, MLB and NHL continue to look for ways to return from the shutdown.

The Coca Cola 600 was the first of four races on four consecutiv­e days at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

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