Ford
leads the way at Talladega
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[May 02, 2018]
TALLADEGA, Ala. -- In the waning
laps of Sunday's GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, it became
evident the only question of the finish was which Ford driver would
hoist the big trophy.
As they had for much of the race, the Ford entries appeared like a
high-speed train with alternate conductors. Thirteen times, and for
127 of the race's 188 laps, seven Ford drivers led the pack on the
Talladega high banks.
Penske Racing's Joey Logano collected his third Talladega win
holding off fellow Ford Fusion drivers. Six of the top seven
finishers drove a Ford, with Chevrolet's Chase Elliott (third place)
feeling very much the lone outsider.
Kurt Busch's runner-up finish was his best of the season. His
Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kevin Harvick was fourth, followed by
last year's race winner, Roush Fenway racing's Ricky Stenhouse Jr.,
in fifth. David Ragan and Aric Almirola finished sixth and seventh
-- Ragan scoring his best effort of the year for himself and his
Front Row Motorsports team.
"There at the end you work together as much as you can," Logano
acknowledged. "You just want to make sure a Ford wins, and you hope
it's you, but you try to do the right thing as well.
"I had some Stewart-Haas cars behind me which aren't necessarily
teammates, but with the Ford performance relationship, it's the
closest thing that I'm ever going to have to it. I was thankful to
have them behind me."
Logano's own Penske Racing teammates Brad Keselowski and Ryan Blaney
had also been part of the Ford train for most of the day but were
caught up in the Talladega "Big One" with 23 laps remaining.
Keselowski -- who led four times for 21 laps -- tied a season-low
finish of 33rd. Blaney was 18th -- his No. 12 Ford was not as
damaged as his teammate's and he was able to finish the race.
"The one thing that I do know is that the Fords were all really
fast, all of us were really fast," Almirola said.
Ford has now won the last six Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races
at Talladega, seven of the last eight and nine of the last 12. More
so than any other type of racing in the Cup series, restrictor plate
tracks involve some form of teamwork. Sometimes that's a matter of
opportunity and convenience, no matter what engine is powering the
car. But on Sunday, it looked very much like a coordinated effort.
Elliott would vouch for that.
"When its five to go, no one cares the shape of your hood or whose
got what manufacturer," Elliott said.
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"Last few laps was really trying to make a run and do something
there at the end. Those guys [the Ford drivers] were being awfully
patient with one another. I was very surprised. I mean, it was more
than obvious that they were not going to help me move forward."
The result was not only a good Sunday afternoon for Ford, but a
strong reinforcement in the season's points standings.
Six of the top 10 and five of the top six drivers in the
championship standings drive Fords. Logano remains in second place
but made up some definite ground on points leader Kyle Busch. The
victory helped cut the deficit from 56 to 30 points heading into
Dover International Speedway next week.
Three-time winner Harvick moved into third place but is still 81
points behind Busch. His SHR teammate Clint Bowyer dropped a spot to
fourth place. The day's biggest mover was Kurt Busch, who vaulted
four positions in the standings to fifth thanks to his runner-up
finish. Keselowski dropped a spot to sixth.
Ford has won five of the season's 10 races compared to Toyota (four)
and Chevrolet (one).
"You try to find those guys that have common interests and I would
say our relationship with Stewart-Haas and with Roush Fenway, we
have a common goal: we want Ford to be in Victory Lane," Logano's
crew chief Todd Gordon said. "We want our own Ford to be in Victory
Lane, but we all want Ford to be there.
"You look to work with the guys that you know have similar stuff to
you and have similar interests. That's a relationship that, as Ford
brought Stewart-Haas into the mix, they continue to push us to make
our stuff better. We see that. When Kevin outruns us, there's no
excuses. Same motor, same body spec. We have work to do.
"It's a great relationship where we can push each other to be
better."
And on Sunday, to be the best.
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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