By David Morgan, Associate Editor
SPEEDWAY, Ind. – Ryan Blaney didn’t know whether to be mad or frustrated with the way Sunday’s Brickyard 400 ended for he and the No. 12 Team Penske team.
Blaney looked to be in the catbird seat as the laps were winding down on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval, chasing down Brad Keselowski with Kyle Larson in his rear-view.
Keselowski was iffy on even being able to make it to the end, while Blaney had hopefully saved enough to see him through to the finish and Larson was on kill behind them without having to worry about fuel – at least in regulation.
When a caution flag flew with three laps to go in regulation, sending the race into overtime, Keselowski’s fuel issues shifted into overdrive, as Blaney appeared to be the benefactor should his tank run dry.
Coming to the first overtime restart, Keselowski indeed ran dry, forcing him to peel off onto pit road, leaving Blaney as the control car on the front row. However, the vacancy on the front row was quickly filled by Larson who advanced from third to the inside of the front row for the restart, sending Blaney into a tirade on the radio.
“That’s f****** bullshit. No f****** way. There is no f****** way he gets to jump up a row and I get f****** screwed because someone ran out of gas. That’s f****** bullshit NASCAR and you f****** know it.”
Despite being outraged with Larson moving up to the front row and into the favorable line for the restart, there was still work to be done.
Blaney was able to hold his ground on the first overtime restart, staying even with Larson before the caution flag flew again to send the race into a second overtime.
After waiting out the red flag that came with the first overtime wreck, Blaney and Larson re-racked them and got set to go again for the second overtime restart. This time, Larson, as well as Tyler Reddick, were able to get the better of Blaney on the restart, which saw him fall to third place by the time the field got around to the backstretch.
A half a lap later, after Larson had taken the white flag, the caution was displayed again, this time for Ryan Preece’s stranded Ford ending the race as is.
Blaney would have to settle for a third-place result on a day when it seemed he just might have a chance to deliver Roger Penske a Brickyard 400 win at the track that he owns. Instead, he’s left wondering what might have been if things had played out differently in the closing…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Breaking News – Motorsports Tribune…