The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Ford, Keselowski, looking for success in Detroit backyard

- By Jenna Fryer

It all seemed so promising at the start of the NASCAR season for Ford and its teams, particular­ly Jack Roush’s rebranded organizati­on with new driver/ owner Brad Keselowski.

Joey Logano of Team Penske won the exhibition Busch Clash at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in January ahead of NASCAR’s shift to Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway and the start of the season.

It was there that Keselowski, who left Penske for an ownership stake with Roush, took the longtime NASCAR team owner back to victory lane for the first time since 2017. Keselowski drove the rebranded Ford for RFK Racing to a victory in a Daytona 500 qualifying race. About 90 minutes later, Chris Buescher took Roush back to victory lane with an RFK sweep of the two qualifying races.

Three days later, Penske rookie Austin Cindric won the Daytona 500 to give Ford wins in the first four Cup events of the year.

And now? With just a month remaining before NASCAR’s playoffs begin, Ford is bringing up the rear in the manufactur­er battle. Three drivers have combined for four Ford victories through 22 points races, and Logano has two of the wins. His victory in June in St. Louis was the last Ford win, and at fourth in the Cup standings, Logano is the highest-ranked Ford driver.

Cindric and Chase Briscoe for Stewart-Haas Racing have the only other two wins for the blue oval bunch as NASCAR shifts into their backyard at Michigan Internatio­nal Speedway.

“Four wins is not enough. It’s not acceptable,” said Mark Rushbrook, global director of Ford Performanc­e Motorsport­s. “We need to get more wins. We need to have drivers further up the standings and hopefully at least four if not more drivers into the playoffs.

“It’s certainly going to be hard with where we are with only four regular-season races left. It’s been a struggle with the new car, the new package with getting our head around it, and how to set it up properly going to the track and optimizing it.”

Chevrolet has been the dominant brand this season with 13 wins — Chase Elliott has a series-high four victories — and Toyota has five victories.

RFK OPTIMISM » Keselowski returns to his home track feeling confident about RFK’s recent progress. The native of Rochester Hills believes the team is on “a little bit of an upswing” and thought he and teammate Buescher were fast on the road course at Indianapol­is last week.

“We seem to be getting better every week, and the team’s starting to click and we’re starting to figure out some of the missing pieces,” Keselowski said. “We’re going to give it all we got. I’m in this for the long haul. I want to keep pushing as hard as I can to get this company to where RFK — both cars — can win races and contend for championsh­ips.”

Keselowski has been in a deep hole since March when the No. 6 team was slapped with a 100-point penalty for modifying a single-source part on the Next Gen. It was the harshest penalty on NASCAR’s new car until late last month, when NASCAR disqualifi­ed Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch following their 1-2 finish at Pocono Raceway, then docked 100 points from Michael McDowell for another infraction on the Next Gen.

The penalties were a relief to Keselowski because it showed him that NASCAR is treating all teams equally. But he wants more enforcemen­t.

“The reality is that the garage is going through a reset with respect to kind of cutting out the games, and that’s a good thing for us as a sport,” Keselowski said. “I personally think the sport needs more penalties, and that NASCAR needs to be handing them out like candy right now to get control of the garage.

“We’ve been playing a lot of games for a lot of years, and the games have to stop. The games cost a lot of money. The easiest way for NASCAR to stop those expenses is to stop the games.”

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