Anticipation for Charlotte grows after Kansas delivers
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[May 14, 2019]
NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway has garnered
rave reviews for its parity and competitiveness. Fords, Chevrolets
and Toyotas all led laps and played into the final outcome.
Brad Keselowski's Kansas victory -- his third win of the season --
means the sport has seen drivers from all three manufacturers hoist
trophies in the past three weeks -- Chevrolet at Talladega, Toyota
at Dover and Ford this past weekend.
It was a similar multi-manufacturer display directly atop the Kansas
scoring pylon with Keselowski's Ford leading Chevrolet's Alex Bowman
and Toyota's Erik Jones to the checkered flag.
There were 10 different race leaders -- eight of whom led
double-digit laps. Five of the drivers who finished in the top 15 at
Kansas started 30th or worse. It all speaks to the possibilities
that exist with this new technical package at the 1.5-mile tracks.
"With this package you have to be really scrappy and really fight
for every spot," said Joe Gibbs Racing driver Erik Jones. "They're
just really valuable and really tough to get."
And that kind of "fight" for every position, every lap, is what the
NASCAR sanctioning body has been intent to deliver.
The racing is more naturally like that on the superspeedways at
Talladega and Daytona, but judging by the race on Saturday night,
it's something to expect more of at the 1.5-mile tracks as the teams
figure out the technical package, and the drivers negotiate the
intense competition on every lap.
It's all a positive sign for the sport as it heads into the Monster
Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway this
weekend.
The popular $1 million-to-win All-Star event in NASCAR's North
Carolina backyard is followed a week later at the track by the
longest event on the schedule -- the Coca-Cola 600 -- all capping a
highly-anticipated Memorial Day race slate.
Last year's Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star race was essentially a
high-profile test ground for the new package that has since been
implemented full time in 2019. It produced a thrilling show that
included 38 green flag passes for the lead and ultimately a cool
million-dollar paycheck for winner Kevin Harvick.
Drivers fully expect to see a similarly competitive atmosphere in
Charlotte during the next two weeks.
"I think it's part package and part the way the race played out,"
Jones said of the Kansas weekend.
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NASCAR Cup
Series driver Brad Keselowski (2) celebrates after winning the
Digital Ally 400 at Kansas Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA
TODAY Sports
"The package tonight was the closest iteration that NASCAR is, what
I'm guessing, shooting for. We were very close to wide open and
there was definitely some pack-racing moments after the restarts and
stuff like that."
Not only did Keselowski's effort at Kansas tie him with Kyle Busch
for most wins (three) on the season, his Team Penske teammate,
reigning series champion Joey Logano, wrangled the championship
points lead away from Busch, too.
Logano now leads the 2015 champion (Busch) by nine points heading
into the non-points-paying All-Star weekend -- the first time in
nine weeks Busch isn't atop the series standings.
Perhaps more so than in years past, the always-anticipated Monster
Energy NASCAR All-Star Race will not only be an opportunity to
connect with fans and work toward a huge paycheck, it will be an
important check-up for the team's package heading into the 600-miler
at the track the following week.
Chip Ganassi Racing's Kurt Busch is the last driver to win both the
All-Star race and the Coca-Cola 600 in the same season (2010).
And with the 600's evening start time, Keselowski was pretty sure
Saturday's Kansas night-time thriller would also be a good indicator
of where things may stand for the Coca-Cola 600.
"I felt like going into this race that this would be a good --
especially with it being a night race and being cool temps, this
would be a strong showing for these rules and for the ability to
pass and do those things," Keselowski said. "And obviously I'm a
little biased because I won the race, but I felt like it was.
"I feel like you saw the cars run closer than they probably ever
have here and saw some pretty good battles throughout the day. And
that's definitely because the rules package. It has its strengths
and weaknesses, and if there's going to be a strength, it's going to
be races like this, and I feel like it delivered."
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media
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