Brad Keselowski's crew chief, Roy McCauley, was headed to the prerace drivers meeting when Juan Pablo Montoya cut him off at the door.
"The next two weeks, you better bring your worst cars," Montoya told him
"Why's that?" McCauley asked.
"Because they are going to get wrecked," Montoya warned. "Somebody is going to wreck him, if Denny Hamlin doesn't do it first."
The banter was friendly, and Montoya smiled as he delivered the message. But he wasn't joking.
Keselowski, NASCAR's newest hotshot driver, is quickly racking up a long list of enemies who want to make his transition to the big leagues a rough one. First up is Hamlin, who is openly feuding with Keselowski over a series of incidents in Nationwide Series races that started last season.
What's not in dispute is that the two have rubbed fenders, pushed each other around on the track and at times changed lanes without notice. Each time, though, Hamlin made his point with finesse, and Keselowski moved on unscathed. Not so for Hamlin, who has five wrecked cars to show for the times Keselowski has pushed back.
Hamlin, now at his boiling point, is done being subtle. A late-race exchange at Phoenix International Raceway started with a bump from Hamlin, but ended with two shoves by Keselowski that sent Hamlin into the wall. Hamlin later promised to exact his revenge in Saturday's season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
"There's a lot of guys that owe him," he said. "There's a lot of guys that have a lot of chips that they're going to cash in. I'm just going to be the first to the pay window."
Revealing his intent might not have been Hamlin's smartest move. He now has a worried team wondering if they are spending good money on a driver who has already earmarked the car for the scrap heap.
Aware of the growing list of disgruntled drivers, top NASCAR officials called Keselowski in for a chat about aggressive driving before Sunday's Sprint Cup race. But when Keselowski emerged, it wasn't clear if he had heard the entire message.
"I've dug and clawed for everything I've got, and the only way to do that is by being aggressive," Keselowski said. "That's not to say I need to be aggressive every race. There's races where you need to play it cool and be smart."
There really is no reason for Keselowski to change his style. It's exciting and has created controversy. He has won six Nationwide races and has landed a Cup ride. He has been defended by current Nationwide team owners Rick Hendrick and Dale Earnhardt Jr., who insist that as long as he's in control of his car and not intentionally causing accidents, anything goes.
Others aren't so sure.
Keselowski's only Cup victory came in a last-lap crash at Talladega in April, when he hooked the rear of Carl Edwards' car to start an accident that sent Edwards sailing into the safety fence.
Keselowski seemed to have alienated most of the principal players at Hendrick two months after that win, when he tried to explain the best strategy to win at Daytona. Last check showed that the current Hendrick drivers have a combined 187 Cup victories, and probably don't need advice from a one-time winner.
Still, the groundswell of drivers turning against him stayed fairly quiet until his feud with Hamlin hit high gear in September. They played bumper-cars at Dover, and Hamlin ended up in the wall. They raced hard at California, and Hamlin ended up in the wall. Then came Phoenix, where NASCAR officials clearly believed Keselowski's second hit on Hamlin was intended to wreck him.
After the first two incidents, Earnhardt defended his driver and wondered if Keselowski maybe wasn't inside Hamlin's head. But he also said that Keselowski had no plans to back down.
"I think people underestimate Brad and how strong he is because I certainly did," Earnhardt said in October. "I'll be honest, I underestimated how mentally tough he is."
Hamlin might view it as stubbornness or arrogance and is convinced that Keselowski has hard lessons ahead.
"I'm racing for a Chase, and he's racing to make sure he stays in the seat," Hamlin said. "I'm just going to do my job, and if the opportunity arises, I'm going to handle the situation, the way I should. The way anybody else would."
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