Wild race blows NASCAR championship open for Keselowski

BY JENNA FRYER Associated Press
Monday, November 12, 2012
11/12/12 at 5:41 AM


AVONDALE, Ariz. - When the fighting stopped, the oil had dried and the last of the wrecked cars had been towed away, Brad Keselowski found himself on the brink of a first Sprint Cup title for himself and team owner Roger Penske.

Only he wasn't in a celebratory mood.

He entered Sunday's race at Phoenix International Raceway trailing five-time champion Jimmie Johnson by seven points and had the better car all day. And moments after Keselowski raced his way into the lead, a blown tire caused Johnson to crash and take his battered car to the garage for repairs.

It helped Keselowski, who finished sixth, to a 20-point lead in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship heading into the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he'll clinch the title with a finish of 15th or better.

"I wanted to take the points lead by winning a race and not relying on a failure," he said.

Johnson's sudden misfortune was a dramatic and stunning turn in the most chaotic race of the year.

It proved to be just the warm-up act in a race that could go down as the one many fans will call the best of the season.

Probably for all the wrong reasons. And that's what had Keselowski so upset.

"I'm more just disappointed in the quality of racing that we saw," he said.

Kevin Harvick snapped a 44-race losing streak by beating Kyle Busch on a pair of late restarts, the ironic winner on the same weekend news leaked he's reportedly signed a deal to leave Richard Childress Racing to drive for Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014.

Harvick and Busch crossed the finish line ahead of a melee of crashing cars, a chain reaction caused in part because NASCAR failed to throw a caution when Danica Patrick was spun on the restart. Then others slid in oil, into Patrick's wrecked car, bounced all over the track, and even Keselowski was hit.

But the carnage was simply the final exclamation point in a sequence triggered by four-time champion Jeff Gordon. He intentionally wrecked Clint Bowyer, and that led to a full brawl in the garage and a red-flag of nearly 15 minutes for clean up on the track.

"The sport was made on fights. We should have more fights. I like fights," Harvick said after the race.

This one began as the field closed in on what should have been the final lap and Gordon slowed his car to wait for Bowyer so he could intentionally wreck him as retaliation for several weeks of on-track contact between the two.

After Gordon climbed from his car in the garage, he appeared to be jumped from behind by one of Bowyer's crew members. It led to a full brawl between the crews, with Bowyer sprinting from his car to join the fracas. Bowyer was held back by NASCAR officials from entering Gordon's hauler.

Both drivers and their crew chiefs were called to the NASCAR hauler for a meeting with series officials.

Gordon said he's had problems with Bowyer all season and had reached his limit.



NASCAR SPRINT CUP

Up next: Ford EcoBoost 400

At Homestead, Fla 2 p.m. Sunday

TV: ESPN-25

Original Print Headline: Harvick wins amid drama

Chase standings

DriverPointsBack
1. Brad Keselowski2,371 -
2. Jimmie Johnson2,351-20
3. Kasey Kahne2,321-50
4. Clint Bowyer2,319-52
5. Denny Hamlin2,309-62
6. Matt Kenseth2,297-74
7. Greg Biffle2,293-78
8. Kevin Harvick2,285-86
9. Tony Stewart 2,284-87
10. Jeff Gordon2,281-90
11. Martin Truex Jr.2,260-111
12. Dale Earnhardt Jr.2,211-160


Associated Images:

Image

Kevin Harvick celebrates with his pit crew in victory lane after his win at the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Phoenix International Raceway on Sunday in Avondale, Ariz. ROSS D. FRANKLIN / Associated Press



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