Three wins
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Editor’s note: The following article was written by Team Penske driver Brad Keselowski.
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Before every race, Paige asks me a simple question: "What outfit do you think I should wear?" (This is one of those questions that every man dreads.) She'll usually follow that up with, "I've got this one, which is really comfy, and I've got this one, which would look really great if we win."
When Paige asks this particular question, it's a tough one, because what she's really asking is how confident I am about that day's race. Comfy, so we're clear, is my shorthand for saying, "We're not that good."
Believe me when I tell you that before the recent races at Darlington, Indianapolis and Las Vegas, I gave her the same answer each time. "Go with comfy."
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Going into every race, three things are going to determine how you finish: speed, execution and luck. You can get a little tell on speed before the race starts. You don't get a tell on luck, and you don't get much of a tell on execution.
The truth is that the way this season had gone to that point — aside from our win in the year's opening exhibition race — we just couldn't get it together. We'd been pretty spotty. We'd had ups and downs all year on pit road. We'd definitely had them with the decisions I'd made. And for whatever reason on the luck side, it seems like whatever strategy we picked, the other side would come out. If we short-pitted, the race would go long. If we went with a long pit, we would get hosed on a short caution.
So heading into Darlington, Indy and Vegas, I wasn't particularly optimistic. At all three of those races, we practiced somewhere around 10th to 15th. We qualified in the teens. I felt like we'd run OK, but I didn't think we would win any of them.
And then we won them all.
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images[/caption]
Once the race started, it was clear we were no better than a fifth-place car. But we had a pretty good strategy that played out for us luck-wise. We decided to long pit the race, which means we would stay out longer than everybody else and hope for a caution. And that happened.
We were running somewhere around sixth, and on the long pit we were second. Then as we pitted under yellow with the leader, Kyle Larson, we nailed the pit stop and came out in the lead. From there, we won the race. It really was that simple. It felt like redemption because in 2015, we led most of the race, and came out second in the last pit stop and lost.
It was a momentous win for a few reasons. Taking the checkered flag in a race like the Southern 500, with all its history and heritage — and to do it after winning the Xfinity race the day before — was about as special as it gets. It was also big for generating team confidence. After you win a race, everyone from me to Paul Wolfe to the engineers and mechanics that work on the cars want to work that much harder to find more speed.
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Finally, it was the first crown jewel I had ever won, and we had been trying really hard. We had been close to winning Darlington before. We've been close to winning the Coke 600. We've been close to winning Brickyard. And none of it would come together. It would always fall apart for us. Sometimes it was our fault. Sometimes it was just bad luck, and it is just so terribly frustrating to go through that.
But you keep the faith and you keep trying.
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images[/caption]
As far as the race went, we had no idea whether we had speed or not going in because the storm kept us from practicing. And once the race began, it was pretty clear we didn't have any. We didn't run all that well. Again, we probably had what was, at best, a fifth-place car.
So we were setting up to have kind of a frustrating day when we decided to run a really long race on pit road. Again, we’d stay out for long stretches — similar to what we did at Darlington — and hope to catch a yellow.
Sure enough, we caught one just as we were pitting late in the race, which cycled us out to about 8th with brand new tires, and just a few laps to go. We had an opportunity to drive through the field, as hard as that might be, and went for it.
As we were going through those closing laps, I honestly didn't think we’d be able to get through all the cars. Indy is such a tricky track to pass on. But we were so fast with the new tires that all of a sudden, we were able to make the pass on Denny Hamlin with one to go.
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I have to tell you: It was like a dream come true, and that feeling didn't fade. When it was time to kiss the bricks, it felt a little surreal. In my mind, I could see all the images of famous drivers having done it before: Dale Jarrett, Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Tony Stewart.
It’s still almost hard to believe that I did it too, and got to add my name to that legacy.
[caption id="attachment_147443" align="alignright" width="300"] Matt Sullivan | Getty Images[/caption]
Scarlett definitely didn’t feel the same way about kissing the bricks. When the team was setting up to do it, Paige told her, “Hey, we won! Now we get to kiss the bricks with Daddy!” Scarlett looked at her mom like Paige had three heads. Not happening.
I think she got some of that stubbornness from me.
The win was also a big one for Team Penske. Roger Penske had never won a Cup race at Indy before either, and because of the storm, he'd actually had to leave on Sunday.
So it broke my heart a little bit for him that he couldn't be there for it, but I was honored to get him that win.
Sam Wasson | Getty Images[/caption]