Rookie tries to be youngest title winner in NASCAR national series history

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Plenty of history remains up for grabs for Chase Elliott as the NASCAR Nationwide Series season winds down. That doesn’t mean he’s overthinking matters.

The 18-year-old phenom enters the year’s penultimate race with a 48-point edge over JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith. If Elliott loses no ground in the standings after Saturday’s DAV 200 Honoring America’s Heroes (4 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Phoenix International Raceway, he’ll be crowned champion with one race remaining.

If Elliott can cash in on his commanding lead — either in the desert or at the Homestead-Miami Speedway finale the following weekend — he’ll become the youngest title winner in any of NASCAR’s three national series and the first rookie champ since the series’ formative years. He’d also be the first to win the title and Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors in the same season. A championship would also put the Elliotts as the fourth father/son combo to win NASCAR national series championships as Bill Elliott, 2015 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee and Chase’s father, won NASCAR’s premier series championship in 1988.

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While the scenarios for clinching the crown are fairly straightforward, Elliott isn’t making the task ahead more complex that it needs to be. At the same time, the teenager said he grasps the importance of the potential accomplishment.

"It would be phenomenal. It would mean the world to me, and not just me, but our team and our sponsors, NAPA and everybody that makes it happen," Elliott said last weekend after adding six points to his lead at Texas Motor Speedway. "We’ll give it our best shot to do so. We’d still like to have another win or two before the year is out, so that’s our main goal. The biggest thing about the points, I think, is keeping it as simple as knowing you get the most points for finishing highest up at the end of the day. I think that’s about as simple and as much as you need to worry about it.

"So we’ll give it our best shot each week and hope for the best and wherever it unfolds, it unfolds."

While an Elliott championship isn’t a lock, a first Nationwide title for the JRM operation virtually is. Richard Childress Racing‘s Brian Scott ranks third, a distant 63 points off the top, meaning he’d need a monumental collapse from both Elliott and Smith in the next two races to overtake them for the crown.

Elliott Sadler, 68 points behind in his last year with Joe Gibbs Racing, and RCR’s Ty Dillon, 75 points off the lead, are the only other drivers with a mathematical chance at the championship.

On the team owners’ side of the Nationwide standings, the battle at the top tightened up after Kyle Busch‘s victory last weekend at Texas. The triumph helped the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 54 Toyota team move closer to Team Penske‘s No. 22 Ford, driven to a second-place finish in Fort Worth by Joey Logano.

With two races left, the Penske No. 22 leads by 26 points. Busch will again be behind the wheel at Phoenix, where he’s won three consecutive Nationwide races and seven times overall in the series. Brad Keselowski — a four-time winner in Nationwide competition this year but winless at Phoenix — will pilot the Penske No. 22 this weekend.

Last season, Penske’s No. 22 prevailed in the season-long team owner championship hunt by just one point over the Gibbs No. 54.

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Chat with fellow NASCAR fans during this week’s on-track activity

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Driver of the No. 4 ascends four spots. Agree? Disagree? Cast your vote

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No. 24 and No. 5 teams punished for post-Texas incident

MORE: Crew members, crew chiefs punished for post-race Texas fight

Daytona Beach, Fla. (Nov. 4, 2014) — NASCAR has assessed penalties to crew members from the No. 5 and No. 24 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams for their involvement in post-race incidents on Nov. 2 at Texas Motor Speedway. In addition, the crew chiefs from those two teams also have been penalized.

Jeremy Fuller, a crew member with the No. 5 team along with Dwayne Doucette and Jason Ingle, crew members with the No. 24 team, each have been fined $25,000 and suspended from NASCAR through the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. All three were found to be in violation of:

• Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing

• Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty – involved in a post-race physical altercation with a driver on pit road

Dean Mozingo, a crew member with the No. 24 team, has been fined $10,000 and suspended from NASCAR through the completion of the next three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. He was found to be in violation of:

• Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing

• Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty – involved in a post-race physical altercation with another crew member on pit road

Kenny Francis, crew chief of the No. 5 team, and Alan Gustafson, crew chief of the No. 24 team, have each been fined $50,000 and placed on NASCAR probation through the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. They were found to be in violation of:

• Section 9-4A: Crew chief assumes responsibility for the actions of his team members

• Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing

• Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty

"While the intensity and emotions are high as we continue through the final rounds of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, the actions that we saw from several crew members Sunday following the race at Texas are unacceptable," said Robin Pemberton, NASCAR senior vice president/competition and racing development. "We reviewed the content that was available to us of the post-race incident along pit road, and identified several crew members who crossed the line with their actions, specifically punching others."

"We therefore have penalized four crew members as well as their crew chiefs, as they ultimately are responsible for members of their team per the NASCAR rulebook," Pemberton continued. "A NASCAR championship is at stake, but we can’t allow behavior that crosses the line to go unchecked, particularly when it puts others in harm’s way."

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Team Penske driver looking to pull off the unthinkable for second time in four weeks

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We’re about to find out what Brad Keselowski does for an encore.

The scene on pit road Sunday night at Texas Motor Speedway was eerily familiar. It was the second race in the Eliminator Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, and Keselowski had made even-tempered Jeff Gordon angry enough to fight.

Wasn’t this roughly the same thing that happened three weeks ago at Charlotte, after the second race of the Chase’s Contender Round? There, Keselowski traded paint with Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin on the track and ran into Kenseth’s car on pit road.

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The typically mild-mannered Kenseth was sufficiently riled up to jump Keselowski between transporters, igniting a melee that made national headlines.

Keselowski was fined $50,000 for playing bumper cars on pit road at Charlotte. There was none of that after Sunday night’s AAA Texas 500, but the brawl was far worse.

It was a bar-room donnybrook worthy of the Old West, with fists flying and connecting. Crew members from teams not remotely involved in the incident that caused tempers to flare were flailing in the pileup, either settling old scores or simply joining the "fun."

For the record, Gordon took umbrage at Keselowski’s aggressiveness on the next-to-last restart, where Keselowski attempted to split the Chevrolets of Gordon and eventual race winner Jimmie Johnson, only to run into Gordon’s car and cut the left rear tire.

Gordon spun, finished 29th and saw his chances of qualifying for the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway slip from likely to tenuous.

After the race, Gordon drove to pit road, parked next to Keselowski (who had finished third), walked toward Keselowski’s car and waited for Keselowski to slide out of the driver’s-side window. With one of Keselowski’s crewmen separating the two drivers, Gordon began shouting at his adversary.

The argument didn’t come to blows, however, until race runner-up Kevin Harvick shoved Keselowski toward Gordon. That lit the fuse that set off the explosion and put Keselowski in a similar position to the one he faced after Charlotte — likely needing to win the next race to stay eligible for the series championship.

After the Charlotte incident, Keselowski beat the odds to win at Talladega Superspeedway, but his task may be even more difficult Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway (3 p.m. ET, ESPN). In the first place, Keselowski has never finished better than third at the 1-mile track in the Sonoran Desert, though he has finished in the top six in four of his last five starts there.

"I think most likely we’re going to have to win Phoenix, just like I felt we were going to have to win here today," Keselowski said after the Texas race. "I’m sure there’s going to be some contact along the way, across the board.

"Everybody is very desperate. The points are very, very, very close. Anybody can have a bad day and be out of it. And that’s just the reality."

Everything Keselowski said is true. The Chase standings indeed are close, with 18 points separating Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin (tied for first) from Kevin Harvick in eighth. Keselowski is seventh in points, 17 back of the leaders.

There are four spots available for the championship race at Homestead-Miami Speedway, and three drivers who control their own destiny (Logano and Hamlin advances with a finish of 11th or better at Phoenix; and Ryan Newman with a ninth or better).

So, there’s the very real possibility that Keselowski faces the same win-or-bust scenario that confronted him at Talladega.

It’s difficult enough to win a race at a track for the first time, especially with the season on the line. But Keselowski may face an even larger obstacle as he tries to repeat the Talladega miracle.

He goes to a track with his sole focus on winning — where he’ll race against a growing list of drivers eager to make sure he doesn’t.

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Four crew members, two crew chiefs from the organization penalized

MORE: Official NASCAR release | Penalities issued to crew members, crew chiefs
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Jeff Gordon was not penalized for his role in a post-race brawl involving Brad Keselowski and numerous crew members following the AAA Texas 500 at Texas Motor Speedway.

However, four Hendrick Motorsports crew members and two of the organization’s crew chiefs were penalized by NASCAR. The race team will not appeal the penalties, and the team members that have been penalized will not face additional sanctions from Hendrick Motorsports.

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Kenny Francis, crew chief of the No. 5 team, and Alan Gustafson, crew chief of the No. 24 team, have each been fined $50,000 and placed on NASCAR probation through the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. Both crew chiefs were found to be in violation of Section 9-4A: Crew chief assumes responsibility for the actions of his team members, Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing and Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty.

In addition, Jeremy Fuller, a crew member with the No. 5 team along with Dwayne Doucette and Jason Ingle, crew members with the No. 24 team, each have been fined $25,000 and suspended from NASCAR through the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. Dean Mozingo, a crew member with the No. 24 team, has been fined $10,000 and suspended from NASCAR through the completion of the next three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. They were found to be in violation of Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing and Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty – involved in a post-race physical altercation with another crew member on pit road.

"With NASCAR’s new Chase format, we’re seeing an unprecedented level of intensity every single week," said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports in a team release. "Emotions run high when you’re racing for a championship, and that’s exciting for our fans and everyone involved with the sport. But there’s a line the competitors need to be cognizant of, and we understand that.



"Jeff (Gordon) was rightfully fired up Sunday night, and it just reiterated to me how passionate he is and how much he wants to win. The No. 24 team is a group that works together and is loyal to one another. They have our full support as we go into these final two races."

In a Wednesday appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Hendrick Motorsports
General Manager Doug Duchardt said that the organization will be paying
the fines, which totaled $185,000.

"We will as a team incur that
and we won’t put that on the crew members," Duchardt said. "We just
have to pay the penalties and move on and hopefully we won’t find
ourselves in that situation again."

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NASCAR chairman and CEO: ‘There is a line’

MORE: Official NASCAR release | Penalities issued to crew members, crew chiefs
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NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France said Tuesday afternoon in an interview on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio that the sanctioning body was reviewing the tapes from a post-race fight Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway, and the sanctioning body was prepared to dole out some "harsh punishment."

By Tuesday evening, NASCAR had suspended three Hendrick Motorsports crew members for six championship points races and fined $25,000 apiece. A fourth crew member was docked $25,000 and suspended for three races. The crew chiefs for the No. 5 and No. 24 teams, Kenny Francis and Alan Gustafson, were each fined $50,000 and placed on probation for six races.

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Jeff Gordon approached Brad Keselowski on pit road following the AAA Texas 500 after the two made contact late in the race, which resulted in Gordon cutting a tire and led to a 29th-place finish. He was running in the top-five at the time of the incident.

Gordon removed his helmet and walked toward Keselowski as tensions and proximity among the teams’ crew members increased. Once Kevin Harvick pushed Keselowski closer to the fray, the pushing intensified and some punches were landed.

"In particular with the other participants in the sport, crew members or anyone else, … we don’t have dugouts or sidelines," France said. "The drivers often are parked in the garage, next to one another. … It’s not uncommon at all for someone to express how they feel, with a lot of emotion sometimes. We’re good with that, we understand that’s part of the game. But there is a line. When things escalate to the level that they did, or anything close to what happened Sunday, we will step in and deal with that very carefully."

France also noted that Keselowski’s late-race move was one of a veteran going all-out to get the win.

"Quite frankly, he did exactly what I would expect any driver with that much on the line to do," France said. "He was looking at an opportunity to shoot a gap, if you will. It was unfortunate they touched and Gordon’s tire obviously got cut, which was very unfortunate, but the idea is, that late in the race, things are going to happen when guys are legitimately trying to win races."

Keselowski’s move, and the emotions that it caused, were the product of a new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup in its first year of existence. As for the added drama to the sport?

"Welcome to big-time sports with big moments," France said.

With two races remaining in the 2014 season, eight drivers are still eligible to win this year’s championship. That includes the parties involved in Sunday’s incident — Gordon, Keselowski and Harvick — as well as Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman, Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth.

Following this Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 (3 p.m. ET, ESPN) four drivers will advance to the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway with a shot at the crown.

"I think on balance, we still have a lot of consistency," France said. "Points still matter a lot. … I think we struck the right balance. We like what we see. It’s elevating the racing, and that’s our No. 1 goal."

Newman and Kenseth remain in the title hunt despite both being winless this year. If either driver were to advance to Homestead and win the championship without winning a race, France said the sanctioning body would be "fine" with that outcome.

"That could happen in any format that we have," France said. "In any one we’ve ever had or might have, we may be in that situation. You can have teams in other sports with losing records in the regular season win the Super Bowl or World Series. It happens."

In 2010, France talked about the Chase capturing "the essence of Game 7s, eliminations," and with wins guaranteeing drivers a spot in NASCAR’s playoffs, those moments can happen in any of the 26 regular-season races.

"That’s what we’re trying to always have," France said. "Even when we’re not in the Chase, we want the Daytona 500, which obviously doesn’t fall in the Chase, to be the biggest, most important event it can be. Given that we don’t have hundreds and hundreds of races throughout our season — we only have 36 — they all ought to mean as much as possible. This Chase is certainly doing that."

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Gordon, Harvick and Keselowski not fined or punished

MORE: Official NASCAR release | Hamlin weighs in on post-Texas melee
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NASCAR handed down penalties Tuesday after Sunday’s post-race brawl at Texas Motor Speedway.

NASCAR officials did not fine drivers Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski for their involvement in a fight on pit road after the AAA Texas 500. Gordon’s crew chief Alan Gustafson was fined $50,000 and placed on probation through the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. Kenny Francis, the crew chief for Kasey Kahne (a fellow Hendrick Motorsports driver) received the same punishment as Gustafson. Both crew chiefs were found to be in violation of Section 9-4A: Crew chief assumes responsibility for the actions of his team members; Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing and Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty.

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Crew members from both the 24 (Gordon) and 5 (Kahne) teams also drew sanctions. Hendrick crewman Jeremy Fuller (No. 5 team) along with Dwayne Doucette and Jason Ingle (No. 24 team) were each fined $25,000 and suspended for the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. All three were found to be in violation of actions detrimental to stock car racing and a behavioral penalty for being involved in a post-race altercation with a driver on pit road.

Additionally, Dean Mozingo — a crewmember for the No. 24 team — was fined $10,000 and suspended through the next three Sprint Cup Series championship points races for the same violations.

"While the intensity and emotions are high as we continue through the final rounds of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, the actions that we saw from several crew members Sunday following the race at Texas are unacceptable," said Robin Pemberton, NASCAR senior vice president/competition and racing development in a release. "We reviewed the content that was available to us of the post-race incident along pit road, and identified several crew members who crossed the line with their actions, specifically punching others."

"We therefore have penalized four crew members as well as their crew chiefs, as they ultimately are responsible for members of their team per the NASCAR rulebook," Pemberton continued. "A NASCAR championship is at stake, but we can’t allow behavior that crosses the line to go unchecked, particularly when it puts others in harm’s way."

In a statement, Hendrick Motorsports announced it would not appeal the penalties. Team owner Rick Hendrick added that the affected crewmembers would not face additional internal discipline.

"With NASCAR’s new Chase format, we’re seeing an unprecedented level of intensity every single week," Hendrick said. "Emotions run high when you’re racing for a championship, and that’s exciting for our fans and everyone involved with the sport. But there’s a line the competitors need to be cognizant of, and we understand that. Jeff was rightfully fired up Sunday night, and it just reiterated to me how passionate he is and how much he wants to win. The No. 24 team is a group that works together and is loyal to one another. They have our full support as we go into these final two races."

In a Wednesday appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Hendrick Motorsports General Manager Doug Duchardt said that the organization will be paying the fines, which totaled $185,000.

"We will as a team incur that and we won’t put that on the crew members," Duchardt said. "We just have to pay the penalties and move on and hopefully we won’t find ourselves in that situation again."

Keselowski, at the center of the altercation after his late-race contact with Gordon’s car sparked the disagreement, was not punished. He remains under probation until Nov. 12 — after this Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 (3 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Phoenix International Raceway — for his post-race actions Oct. 11 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Earlier on Tuesday, before the penalties were announced, in an appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France said that the sanctioning body was prepared to dole out some "harsh punishment."

"People that were involved in the post-race altercation in terms of throwing punches and doing things that are over the line for us, we’ll be dealing with that with some harsh punishment," France said."

Gordon confronted Keselowski after contact between the two cut a tire on Gordon’s No. 24 Chevrolet during a late-race restart. Gordon, who had restarted as the race leader, continued after his spin caused the last of 13 caution periods, but wound up one lap down by the checkered flag.

Gordon removed his helmet and walked toward Keselowski as tensions and proximity among the teams’ crew members increased. Once Harvick pushed Keselowski closer to the fray, the pushing intensified and some punches landed.

Pemberton on Sunday said after the race that the on-track altercation was attributed to hard racing, adding that "this is a contact sport" and that this year’s new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff format has ratcheted up the pressure. He said Sunday that officials would take their time in reviewing footage of the pit-road incident before reaching a decision.

"You just look at it as a whole with the people that were involved," Pemberton said Sunday. "There’s a lot that went on with all the race teams over the past couple months of hard racing, so you have to look at everything out there post-race."

Keselowski finished third to better his standing in the middle leg of the three-race Eliminator Round, the last cut-off point before the Chase field is whittled from eight to four drivers. Gordon, who entered the Texas event as the points leader after the opening Eliminator Round race at Martinsville, sunk to fourth place among the eight as a result of his 29th-place finish.

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Network has big plans despite not having TV rights after ’14

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Although ESPN will not televise NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races beginning next season, officials said Tuesday the network expects to continue to provide timely content to fans for 2015 and beyond.

"I don’t think you’ll see much of a change," said Rich Feinberg, vice president, motorsports, production for the Bristol, Connecticut-based group. "We obviously won’t be doing the races, but in terms of serving the interests of fans with our news and information coverage, we’re full-steam ahead."

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ABC/ESPN ends an eight-year run of NASCAR race coverage at the close of 2014, during which time the company aired the second half of each season’s races.

FOX returns next year and will continue to air the first half of the season while NBC will replace ABC/ESPN. Races previously aired by TNT in the middle of the year will be split between FOX and NBC groups.

With ESPN not a part of the TV package going forward, many have wondered how the network would handle NASCAR news, or if it would abandon the sport altogether.

"I can assure those asking the question and all fans out there that we’re going to continue to cover NASCAR across all our news and information platforms in a very significant way," Feinberg said. "We don’t have rights agreements with many different sports out there, but SportsCenter has an obligation to their fans to cover all sports."

Feinberg said recent announcements that will keep former driver Ricky Craven, now an analyst, and reporter Marty Smith in-house is a clear indication that NASCAR remains relevant to the network.

"We obviously have a lot of outlets for all our content, both over the air, cable, digital, dot‑com, et cetera," he said. "Our plans are to fulfill the interests of NASCAR fans who watch all our news and information programming, and I can tell you I personally have already been involved in our planning for coverage for the Daytona 500 in 2015 next year."

ESPN will air the season’s last two races — this weekend’s event from Phoenix International Raceway that will determine the four drivers contending for the championship, as well as the Championship Round finale in Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 16.

"When we last left you Sunday night at Texas, all hell was breaking loose at the race track, and you know, no one knows what’s going to happen this week going into Phoenix," Feinberg said. "But with eight drivers separated by only 18 points and none of the finalists determined yet, tune in … because I think it’s going to be one heck of a show and one heck of a shootout. That’s our focus and we’re really, really looking forward to it."

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Co-points leader shares his thoughts on post-Texas brawl

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Denny Hamlin says he doesn’t know if he would have made the same move as Brad Keselowski at the conclusion of Sunday’s AAA Texas 500, but added that, "I would have to know that I’m not going to make it through that hole without having contact of some sort."

There was contact as Keselowski attempted to maneuver his Team Penske No. 2 Ford underneath Jeff Gordon on the first attempt at a green-white-checkered finish at Texas Motor Speedway. And a scuffle between the two teams on pit road afterward.

"That’s fine," Hamlin said of the on-track incident, "But … you’re going to have to respect retaliation, which I’m sure (Keselowski) did."

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How his peers view him in the garage is the bigger issue for Keselowski, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver said Tuesday during a national teleconference.

"I can’t speak for many other guys, but I mean … there’s a lot of animosity. And that’s all you can really say.

"You don’t have to run into people to be successful. And when I hear Brad say ‘this is the only way a person like me can make it,’ what do you mean ‘like you?’ I had to get here just on hard work, too. I didn’t have money behind me or anything else. What’s the difference?

"I hate that statement. (He) made it (this far) because people see potential in the way he drives and that he is fast and he does a great job and has already won a championship in a very short career. I believe that is a bad statement that he throws out there every time. But it’s his prerogative and he can do what he wants. He has a job and has an owner that loves him and he’s driving for a very fast crew chief.

"He’s got a lot of really good things working for him. In my opinion, and I want to stress my opinion … he just has got to work on the respect factor from his peers."

Keselowski and Hamlin are two of eight drivers vying for one of four spots in this year’s Championship Round in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup to be contested Nov. 16 at Homestead-Miami Speedway (3 p.m. ET, ESPN). Gordon, Joey Logano, Ryan Newman, Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick also remain in contention.

Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 at Phoenix International Raceway (ESPN, 3 p.m. ET) is the final race of the Eliminator Round and will determine the four finalists.

If Gordon, a four-time champion, attempts to make his life on the track any more difficult in the coming weeks, Keselowski said last week that it wouldn’t be a surprise. Nor would he be intimidated.

"Will those guys race me hard or harder than others?" Keselowski said following last week’s race. "Absolutely, I’m certain they will. But that’s just part of it; I can’t fault them for that.

"I just feel like I have to go for the gap if it’s there and I have to race the way I race or I won’t even be in NASCAR. I’d rather have enemies in NASCAR than have friends and be sitting at home."

Hamlin said he’d made more than his share of mistakes as well, but that he had learned from them and "I feel like I’ve gotten the respect of my competitors because of that."

It can make a huge difference late in a race when a driver can choose to either help another or make life hard, something he said he "learned the hard way."

"These guys can make your job really hard if they really want to," said Hamlin.

Former NASCAR champion and 2013 Hall of Fame inductee Rusty Wallace said Gordon "got the raw end (of the deal) because his left rear got bumped and he had a flat tire.

"But I don’t think there is a driver in the world that would not have tried to put their car in that hole and go for it," Wallace said.

A NASCAR analyst for ESPN, Wallace scored 37 of his 55 career wins while driving the No. 2 entry for the Penske organization. He said his relationship with the group has no bearing on how he viewed Sunday’s incident or what he thinks of Keselowski.

The driver’s aggressive nature on the track, he said, reminds him of seven-time Cup champion Dale Earnhardt.

"He wants to win, he’s going for it," Wallace said. "There are a lot of … people backing up Brad’s decision, that when Jeff Gordon took the high line going into Turn 1 on the restart and that hole opened up, I’m telling you what, as a competitor, with just a handful of laps to go, when you saw that hole and Brad went for it, he went for it."

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