After a hard-fought and controversial third-place rally Monday at Pocono Raceway,
Brad Keselowski joined the NASCAR on NBC podcast and set the record straight on his team’s penalty.
“I would say that if I was NASCAR, I would have done something,” said
Keselowski, whose team was ruled to have made an improper body
modification on a pit stop. “To clear that up, I would say I would have
done something not because the damage was impactful, but because you
have to draw the line somewhere.
“I would kind of equate it to holding (in football). Did it impact
the play or the race? Absolutely not. Was it wrong? Yes. … The other
reason why I probably would draw an equivalence to holding is there’s
probably holding on every play. You have to draw the line somewhere. If
I’m NASCAR, I agree with them drawing the line. I, of course, hate that
it was us. But they have to set a line.”
In a wide-ranging conversation, the 2012 Sprint Cup champion also
offered perspective on joining the Sprint Cup Drivers Council this year.
“Every driver has a role of trying to make sure their sport stays
relevant beyond themselves,” he said. “When I think of the Drivers
Council, it doesn’t have a mission statement, but if I was to try to
create a mission statement, one of the first things I’d think of putting
in that mission statement is we are going to do things for the sport
that probably won’t help it in our time in it as drivers.
“And that’s so hard to do because we get caught up thinking small
term of ‘What can we do better tomorrow?’ But the big stuff is, ‘Where
are we going to be in 10 years?’ So the council gives us a format to
have these really big conversations to find solutions.”
Keselowski also discussed:
–The Team Penske philosophy of building speed through incremental
gains and how difficult it is to strike the balance between patience and
faith while trying to stay ahead of a playing surface that changes
every week;
–His view of journalism in NASCAR;
–Why Sprint Cup cars also could be considered Transformers.
–How he helped influence the Sprint All-Star Race format and his
surprise at some of his peers’ reaction (“There were a number of people
that didn’t embrace the format and ran like they didn’t embrace the
format, and that blew me out of the water”).
–His beginnings in the Greater Detroit area and how training in his
dad’s race shop taught him life lessons (“it’s inherent to that
community that your work ethic must be at a very high level.”).
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