USA TODAY US Edition

Keselowski speeds to third victory in row

Wrecks fill NASCAR playoff opener in Las Vegas

- Martin Rogers

LAS VEGAS – On an afternoon of action that made little sense whatsoever and was wildly entertaini­ng because of it, it was left to the winner to somehow find a way to sum it all up neatly.

“Getting through the chaos,” said Brad Keselowski, the man who ultimately took the South Point 400 checkered flag after nearly 4 hours, 12 cautions, a two-lap overtime, carnage involving multiple favorites and a baking afternoon of over 100 degrees at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. “Taking advantage of opportunit­ies.”

Being able to make sense of and simplify a day of unthinkabl­e developmen­ts to begin NASCAR’s playoffs might also be why Keselowski was the last man standing, holding off Kyle Larson and defending series champion Martin Truex Jr. as one crash after another laid waste to any smattering of or-

der over the closing stages.

Time and again the caution flag came out, including a complete red-flag stoppage with two laps left, leaving the cars parked up on the track as the enthralled crowd sweltered in the stands.

“I knew it was going to be a heck of a battle,” Keselowski said. “We had to earn it.”

At the end of such an unpredicta­ble race, one that saw 12 of the 16 contenders in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series postseason involved in some kind of crash, perhaps there should have been an unlikely winner too. But that would have been too neat and tidy a plotline, wouldn’t it? No, this race was too contrary for that.

And amid it all it was Keselowski, winner of the final two races of the regular season and flush with momentum, who held firm through all the delays and doubt, all the restarts and the rare sight of the favorites being knocked around by poor form and shaky luck.

Keselowski rode his own fortune, a fact not lost on Truex.

“Brad clearly found a horseshoe,” Truex said. “Three races in a row he’s won and he hasn’t had the best car.”

Truex has a point, but he also missed one. It takes sturdy fortitude to win a choppy race like this, one where the reset button must be constantly hit, especially with things slowing to an organized crawl four times in the final 22 laps.

Keselowski handled it all better than anyone else, fighting off the challenge with speedy restarts, organized lines and rapid pit stops from his crew, one of which got him back ahead of Truex late on.

The Big Three of the regular season is now becoming a Big Four, and that sense will only grow if Keselowski is able to keep firing.

Kyle Busch didn’t look like the highest performer of the year, battling around the track with one issue after another, skidding onto the infield before sifting through the later incidents to ultimately place seventh.

Kevin Harvick wasn’t so lucky, and the seven-time 2018 winner wrecked on lap 147 when his tire blew and he slid into the wall, taking pole-sitter Erik Jones out of contention with him.

Harvick described the Goodyear tires as a driving version of “Russian roulette,” but that would have been an apt descriptio­n for the race in general.

Except that Keselowski, now guaranteed a spot in the next section of the playoffs due to this win, found a way to tame the unpredicta­bility that was creating havoc elsewhere.

 ?? MATT SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Brad Keselowski’s win Sunday ensures he’ll move on after playoff field is cut to 12.
MATT SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Brad Keselowski’s win Sunday ensures he’ll move on after playoff field is cut to 12.

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