Keselowski works fuel mileage to win at Kentucky

Published 9:20 pm Saturday, July 9, 2016

Keselowski works fuel mileage to win at Kentucky
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Keselowski works fuel mileage to win at Kentucky
Brad Keselowski (2) crosses the finish line to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Kentucky Speedway on Saturday in Sparta, Ky. At right is Carl Edwards, who finished second. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)
TIMOTHY D. EASLEY / ASSOCIATED PRESS                                Brad Keselowski (2) crosses the finish line to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Kentucky Speedway on Saturday in Sparta, Ky. At right is Carl Edwards, who finished second.

By Alicia Wincze Hughes

Lexington Herald-Leader

SPARTA, Ky. — They can repave the surface. They can reconfigure the track.

What can’t be altered when it comes to Kentucky Speedway is the fact that whenever Brad Keselowski arrives in Sparta, he acts like he owns the place.

The 1.5-mile tri oval may be a different animal than in past seasons, but the sixth edition of the Quaker State 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup series yielded a result straight out of the same old, same old playbook.

For the third time in the race’s history, it was Keselowski heading to victory lane, having milked his No. 2 Miller Lite Ford and its empty gas tank across the finish line 0.175 seconds ahead of Carl Edwards.

In addition to winning the Quaker State 400 in 2012 and 2014, Keselowski has now won a major race in Sparta for six straight years.

In addition to his three Sprint Cup wins, he’s been victorious three times (2011, 2013 and 2015) in the Xfinity Series race.

It took a monster gamble and some tremendous back class for the former Cup Series champion to prove his mastery over the newly repaved Kentucky track.

When the field restarted with 67 laps to go after Landon Cassill brought out the 11th caution of the night, Keselowski worked the high side to pass Harvick on lap 201 before using the clean air to open up more than a three-second advantage. Harvick led 128 laps of the race.

He would need every inch of that lead as his tank dried up late.

With several drivers running short on fuel, including Matt Kenseth who pitted with just five laps to go, Keselowski held a nine second advantage in the final stages but had his team begging him to save whatever gas he could.

Keselowski radioed in that he was on fumes with two laps to go, but with Edwards seemingly ready to reel him on the white flag lap, Keselowski found that much extra to earn his season-high fourth win of 2016.

“We almost didn’t (make it), but you have to give credit to my guys,” Keselowski said.

“It became obvious we had to save fuel at the end, but it’s a testament to my guys to have the fuel mileage we did.”

Edwards held for second with Ryan Newman, Kurt Busch and Tony Stewart rounding out the top 5.

The fresh Kentucky surface was a key topic of conversation in the run up to Saturday’s race, and the new asphalt and reconfigured banking took its toll on numerous drivers throughout the 267-lap race.

The caution flag flew a record-tying 11 times during the night, and six-time NASCAR Cup champion Jimmie Johnson was a wreck victim in the early going when he got loose coming out of Turn 4 and wrecked on Lap 33.

Joey Logano was also sent to the garage early on Saturday when he smacked the wall on Lap 54.

Fire breaks out in parking lot

Firefighters have extinguished a fire that broke out in the parking lot behind the grandstand at Kentucky Speedway and sent thick, black smoke billowing into the Saturday night sky.

Track spokesman Tim Bray said firefighters at the facility and from Gallatin County put out the blaze in the speedway’s Platinum lot.

Bray said the fire began in the passenger compartment of a truck and damaged a second vehicle, with a third singed.

No one was injured.

The fire created a brief diversion from Saturday night’s 400-mile Sprint Cup Series race that featured numerous early accidents on the newly repaved and reconfigured track.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Jimmie Johnson, Joey Logano, A.J. Allmendinger and rookie Chase Elliott all were involved in wrecks.