INDIANAPOLIS — First, Brad Keselowski figured out the secret to restarting at the Brickyard 400.
Then, he safely and strategically bumped his way into the lead and sped to the finish line.
One year after settling for second in a chaotic, crash-marred race, Keselowski redeemed himself by earning his second straight major win and finally giving team owner Roger Penske the elusive Brickyard win.
The 2010 Cup champion got past race leader Denny Hamlin on the second-to-last lap and beat Erik Jones to the finish line by 0.904 seconds. Hamlin finished third.
“Last year, I lost this race almost the exact same way. To bring it home this way, after messing up last year, is just incredible,” Keselowski said. “We were hoping this would be No. 500 and the Brickyard, but that’s all right.”
Penske certainly won’t be complaining about getting win No. 499 on the same historic, 2.5-mile oval where he has won a record 17 Indianapolis 500 crowns.
His first win 25 Cup tries at his favorite racing venue came on one of the rare days he wasn’t actually attending in the pits for the rain-delayed race.
But Penske now joins Chip Ganassi as the only owners to win the Indy double in the same season. Will Power captured his first 500 win in May, while Dario Franchitti and Jamie McMurray both won at the Brickyard in 2010 for Ganassi.
The timing couldn’t be better for Keselowski. He heads into the first round of the playoffs with momentum following wins at the Southern 500 and the Brickyard.
And he earned this one the hard way.
He stayed close off the final restart with three laps to go, then quickly chased down Hamlin, running side by side with the race leader briefly on Lap 159. At one point, the cars touched, but both drivers maintained control, and Keselowski made the decisive move in the front straightaway just as the white flag started to come out.
Nobody got close again.
“Not having guys in the back wreck,” Hamlin said when asked what could have gone differently, referring to the late crash involving Landon Cassill and Jeffrey Earnhardt. “That allowed all the guys who take tires to come back up there at the end. It happens sometimes.”
Hamlin’s consolation prize will be joining Keselowski and Jones in the first round of the playoffs next week.
Seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson and Alex Bowman captured the final two open playoff spots in the 10-race sprint to the championship.
Setting the field
Fourteen drivers went into the race knowing they would compete for this year’s title, and now they know how they stack up.
Kurt Busch clinched the regular-season title with an eighth-place finish in the No. 18 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing. His teammates, Jones and Hamlin, are seeded 10th and 13th.
Keselowski, fourth, will be joined by Penske teammates Joey Logano, sixth, and Ryan Blaney, ninth. Stewart-Haas Racing drivers claimed four postseason spots — Kevin Harvick (second), Clint Bowyer (fifth), Kurt Busch (seventh) and Aric Almirola (14th).
Martin Truex Jr., of Furniture Row Racing, is seeded third even though he exited late in the first stage Monday.
The other drivers are: Hendrick Motorsports teammates Chase Elliott (eighth), Johnson (15th) and Bowman (16th), Austin Dillon of Richard Childress Racing and Kyle Larson of Chip Ganassi Racing. Dillon is seeded 11th and Larson is 12th.
Ford will have seven starters in the field, Chevrolet has five, and Toyota has four.
Cool and dry
Series officials and race organizers wanted the Brickyard moved out of the searing July heat in hopes of boosting attendance with cooler temperatures around the track.
That part certainly worked. The Xfinity Series race started with temperatures in the high 50s. A few hours later, the Cup race started with temperatures in the mid-60s.
What they didn’t expect was three solid days of heavy rain, forcing a postponement of all track activity until Monday. No drivers got to practice or qualify before the racing doubleheader began Monday, and the crowd remained sparse for the rare weekday race.
The winners
Bowyer won the first stage Monday by 0.285 seconds over Kurt Busch. Hamlin finished third in that stage, which was marred two competition cautions and the crash that knocked Truex out of the race.
Matt Kenseth took the second stage when several drivers in the lead pack decided to pit before the third and final stage. Elliott finished second, and Jones was third.
Keselowski also became the first Ford driver to win at Indy since Dale Jarrett in 1999.
Up next
The series shifts back west to Las Vegas, where the focus will be on the playoffs.