The Palm Beach Post

KESELOWSKI CLINCHES LAST SPOT IN FINAL AT HOMESTEAD

Kenseth going out with his first win of the 2017 season.

- By Jenna Fryer

AVONDALE, ARIZ. — Matt Kenseth may be going away, but he’s not going quietly.

Kenseth won for the first time this season in what might have been the second-to-last Cup race of his NASCAR career. Kenseth does not have a job lined up for next year and said he’ll take a break at the start of the season.

“Just got one race left and everybody dreams of going out a winner,” a tearful Kenseth said after climbing from his Toyota.

Kenseth passed Chase Elliott with 10 laps remaining to win Sunday at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway and deny Elliott the final berth in next week’s championsh­ip race. Had Elliott hung on for the win, he would have qualified for the championsh­ip finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Elliott finished second for the seventh time this season.

Brad Keselowski earned the final spot in the championsh­ip on points because a playoff-eligible driver did not win the race. Keselowski will race Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick for the championsh­ip next Sunday at Homestead. The field, two Toyota drivers and two Ford drivers, includes three former series champions and Truex, the most dominant driver of the season.

Kenseth had already been eliminated from the playoffs, so his victory was purely personal satisfacti­on. The 2003 NASCAR champion is a two-time Daytona 500 winner and consistent playoff driver, but he’s 45 and being replaced at Joe Gibbs Racing next season by Erik Jones.

Too expensive to land a competitiv­e ride for next season, Kenseth has decided to take time away rather than drive a car that can’t win races.

“He’s been really down and frustrated and trying to figure out this season and what it’s all about, to try to go out there and try to win in his final season, not on his own terms final season,” said teammate Busch, one of many drivers to congratula­te Kenseth. “I think it shows that there’s no reason why he couldn’t have gotten a job anywhere else.

The Kenseth win salvaged the day for Gibbs, which had a chance to get Denny Hamlin into the championsh­ip until his feud with Elliott cost him the chance.

The two were racing for position and Elliott gave Hamlin several taps as he tried to get past him for position, and when he finally was able to pull alongside Hamlin, the two cars made contact. Hamlin grazed the wall and immediatel­y began losing positions on the track.

Just a few laps later, his tire blew, Hamlin hit the wall and his race was over. Elliott admitted he raced Hamlin aggressive­ly, same as Hamlin did when he wrecked Elliott from the lead at Martinsvil­le.

“A wise man once told me that he’ll race guys how they race him with a smile on his face, so that’s what I did today,” Elliott said. “I raced him how he raced me, and that’s the way I saw it.”

Hamlin was racing to win, but could have beaten Keselowski into the finale on points had he not wrecked. He has maintained that he didn’t mean to wreck Elliott at Martinsvil­le, and the payback Sunday was redemption.

“It just proves to the people who thought I was a bad guy that he would do the exact same thing under the same circumstan­ces,” Hamlin said. “I got into him and he chose to retaliate.”

Jimmie Johnson also wrecked early in the race, ending his bid to make the championsh­ip. The eliminatio­n of the seven-time champion means NASCAR will not have a repeat winner.

Kyle Larson won the first stage of the race, and then his recent run of bad luck continued. His engine failed early in the second stage and Larson went to the garage with a last-place finish.

It’s the fourth straight race Larson has failed to finish dating to Kansas when an engine failure knocked him out of the playoffs. Larson was considered a strong contender to win the title.

“It’s a crappy way to end the season,” Larson said. “I haven’t blown up an engine since my first two Cup starts in 2013, now I’ve had three this season. It’s a little disappoint­ing.”

The Chip Ganassi Racing team gets its engines from Hendrick Motorsport­s.

 ?? JONATHAN FERREY / GETTY IMAGES ?? In what may be his next-to-last race in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, Matt Kenseth drives his
No. 20 Toyota to a victory in the Can-Am 500 at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway.
JONATHAN FERREY / GETTY IMAGES In what may be his next-to-last race in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, Matt Kenseth drives his No. 20 Toyota to a victory in the Can-Am 500 at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States