Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Familiarit­y could prove to be key at Kentucky oval

Kyle Busch, Keselowski, Truex Jr. all have it

- By Gary B. Graves

SPARTA, Ky. — The Kentucky Speedway winners’ club is exclusive — just five drivers have combined to win the first nine NASCAR Cup races.

All have championsh­ips, with the 400-mile race providing a springboar­d to the title for Las Vegas native Kyle Busch (2015), Brad Keselowski (2012) and Martin Truex Jr. (2017). That trio also has multiple Kentucky wins, which speaks volumes to their mastery of the 1.5-mile oval.

Sunday’s Quaker State 400 provides different hurdles, running in daylight for just the second time with drivers having to adjust on the fly without practice and qualifying because of concerns caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic. How well they adapt could determine whether club membership expands or remains the same.

For sure, plenty of drivers have been on the cusp of getting in.

“We’ve got a few top-five finishes,

■ Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick all 6-1 but just haven’t been able to close it out at the end of the race,” said Denny Hamlin, who finished fifth here last July. “With the way this team has been performing this year, I don’t see any reason why we can’t change that this weekend and get our first win at Kentucky.”

Hamlin is fifth in the standings but holds a one-point playoff edge over first-place Kevin Harvick, who’s coming off last Sunday’s Brickyard 400 triumph at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway that matched Hamlin’s series-best four wins this season. Harvick now carries momentum to a venue where he has six top-10s in his past seven starts.

Jimmie Johnson, meanwhile, simply seeks better luck at Kentucky following several subpar runs. Right now, the seven-time Cup champion is giddy just to race the No. 48 Chevy again after missing his first career race last week in Indianapol­is following a positive COVID-19 test. Johnson was cleared this week after two negative tests; NASCAR has reminded teams to follow coronaviru­s protocols.

“Yeah, I’m super excited and in my head of optimism,” said Johnson, who is scheduled to retire from full-time NASCAR racing after this season. “I’m like, what a comeback story. It could really be a special moment. I’ve always been highly motivated, but it would be really cool to have great success on Sunday.”

Especially with Kentucky’s little nuances.

The track is different from the four scheduled 1.5-mile tracks that comprise much of the NASCAR playoffs. The first two turns offer higher banking than the other two, and the afternoon start could make the repaved surface stickier compared to night racing.

Keselowski, a three-time winner here, looks forward to the intrigue.

“A lot of success instantly, and just a place I really was thrilled to go to and ran well,” said the Team Penske driver, who’s third in points with two victories this season.

“And then, of course, it got grippy. No good deed goes unpunished, and after the repave it’s been a bit of a struggle for me lately making a good run there. I’m hopeful this year that you think some of the things we’ve we learned from Pocono and apply them. If so, I think we’ll be really strong.”

 ?? Darron Cummings The Associated Press ?? Las Vegas’ NASCAR Cup Series driver Kyle Busch has won twice at Kentucky Speedway and is a 6-1 co-favorite to win there in Sunday’s Quaker State 400.
Darron Cummings The Associated Press Las Vegas’ NASCAR Cup Series driver Kyle Busch has won twice at Kentucky Speedway and is a 6-1 co-favorite to win there in Sunday’s Quaker State 400.

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