Dayton Daily News

Keselowski looks to heat up market with 2nd Charlotte win

Driver hopes to make some noise in contract year amid pandemic.

- By Jenna Fryer

The caution that sent the Coca-Cola 600 to overtime both continued Chase Elliott’s bad week and gave Brad Keselowski a much-nee d ed break.

Keselowski is in a contract year during a season disrupted by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Business was closed for 10 weeks, meaning zero movement between Keselowski and Team Penske.

The first driver to give Roger Penske a NASCAR championsh­ip — first in the Xfinity Series and then, finally, in 2012, a Cup title — has been idling all year. Then a caution with two laps remaining at Charlotte Motor Speedway cluttered Elliott’s clear path to the win and gave Keselowski an opening.

Elliott pitted and Keselowski’s new crew chief Jeremy Bullins called for his driver to stay on track, cycle into the lead and try to out-muscle seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson in a twolap overtime sprint to the finish.

“We just committed to taking the front row and take a shot at the restart,” Bullins said. “Not many people I’d rather have in that situation than Brad.”

Keselowski got a terrific launch, cleared Johnson and pulled away for the Memorial Day victory. Indianapol­is 500 victories by Will Power and Simon Pagenaud in 2018 and 2019, paired with Keselowski’s steal in the 600, gave Penske three consecutiv­e Memorial Day weekend wins.

Now Keselowski returns to Charlotte Motor Speedway for a race tonight and a shot at consecutiv­e victories. Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin and then Keselowski have won the three Cup races since the season resumed.

Bullins is bringing a new Ford built by Team Penske. This is a big stretch for the No. 2 team to prove it should remain intact beyond this season. The financial losses during the pandemic will likely cause yet another driver salary reset and Keselowski, the only Cup champion available, is probably at the highest end of free agent salaries.

Roger Penske said the pandemic has prevented any meetings with Keselowski.

Keselowski believes he and Bullins are settling in well after four races to start the season, the shutdown, and now four races in 11 days.

A look at other hot topics headed into tonight at Charlotte:

Another chance for Elliott

Sooner or later, Elliott is going to get a break based solely on the way his Hendrick Motorsport­s team is performing.

Elliott was crashed by Kyle Busch on the final lap of last Wednesday night’s rain-shortened race at Darlington Raceway as he tried to seize the lead. Then he had the Coca-Cola 600 wrapped up until teammate William Byron brought out a caution with two laps remaining.

Even though the leader all night clearly benefited from clean air, Elliott not only pitted from the lead but took four tires for a lengthier pit stop. It dropped him to 11th on the restart with just two laps remaining and he worked his way to third. He was later scored second when teammate Johnson was disqualifi­ed because his car failed post-race inspection.

Elliott was terse after his second defeat in four days.

“You just make the best decision you can based on the informatio­n you have,” Elliott said. “When you are leading the race like that, people behind you are going to do the exact opposite of what you do. That was the situation we were put in.”

Hamlin takes a hit

Hamlin, winner last Wednesday night at Darlington, returns to Charlotte with three new crew members after a costly penalty to the Joe Gibbs Racing team. Tungsten fell off Hamlin’s car on a pace lap before the Coca-Cola 600, an infraction that draws an automatic four-race suspension for the crew chief, car chief and engineer.

The replacemen­t crew will be thrown into the fire. These return races are done in one-day shows without practice and qualifying was only held for the Coca-Cola 600. Tonight’s race is just 310 miles, a breeze compared to Sunday night.

“Obviously, you’ve got a shorter distance to accomplish what you need,” Hamlin said. “Tire and fuel mileage strategy will be different, and we’ll have shorter stages to work within. This one will be more of a sprint than a marathon.”

 ?? GERRY BROOME
/ ASSOCIATED
PRESS ?? Brad Keselowski returns to Charlotte Motor Speedway for a race tonight and a shot at consecutiv­e victories.
GERRY BROOME / ASSOCIATED PRESS Brad Keselowski returns to Charlotte Motor Speedway for a race tonight and a shot at consecutiv­e victories.

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