Kenseth and Keselowski earns championship berth
AVONDALE, Ariz. — Matt Kenseth doesn’t get to end his career the way he hoped. He thinks he’s got a handful of good years left in him, and can win races and compete for championships.
But, the economics of the sport have made Kenseth a casualty of NASCAR’S new youth movement. He doesn’t have a job for next year.
So he’s going away. But he’s not going quietly.
Kenseth won for the first time this season, snapping a 51-race winless streak, to earn one final victory celebration.
“Just got one race left and everybody dreams of going out a winner,” www.recorderonline.com AP PHOTO BY a tearful Kenseth said after climbing from his Toyota.
“It’s just been quite a journey, and today was a really special day for me, to know that next week is almost for sure my last week behind the wheel.”
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 in his career.
Brad Keselowski earned the final spot in the championship on points because a playoff-eligible driver did PAGE 1B 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.
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