Stewart goes upside-down at end

Kenseth wins after wild finish

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Matt Kenseth celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala. (AP)
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Stewart gamely waved to the crowd as he climbed from his battered car, while Jimmie Johnson sat on the ledge of Earnhardt’s window for a lift back to the garage. Everywhere they looked, they saw crumpled cars.

Five-time Talladega winner Earnhardt said enough is enough with the carnage. He was credited with a 20th-place finish that dropped him four spots in the standings to 11th.

“If this was what we did every week, I wouldn’t be doing it,” he said. “I’ll just put it to you that way. If this was how we raced every week, I’d find another job. That’s what the package is doing. It’s really not racing. It’s a little disappointing. It cost a lot of money right there.

“If this is how we’re going to continue to race and nothing is going to change, how about NASCAR build the cars? It’ll save us a lot of money.”

Of the 12 Chase drivers, only race winner Kenseth and second-place finisher Jeff Gordon avoided the final wreck and it pushed Gordon up four spots in the standings to sixth with six races remaining.

But there was little change beyond that as everyone else ended up with a sub-par finish.

“That was the craziest, craziest finish I’ve ever experienced at Talladega,” Gordon said. “It was just insane. I remember when coming to Talladega was fun, and I haven’t experienced that in a long time. That was bumper-cars at 200 mph. I don’t know anybody who likes that.”

It took NASCAR more than an hour to sort the final finishing order.

Keselowski considered himself lucky to be leaving with a 14-point lead over Johnson. Keselowski said he was holding on trying to stay in the bottom lane because he figured that would be his escape route when the inevitable accident happened.

He was credited with a seventh-place finish, but his Penske Racing team had a photo that showed Keselowski on the apron in fourth with the caution lights on – when the field should have been frozen. Both owner Roger Penske and team president Tim Cindric believed the driver wasn’t awarded the proper finish.

“That’s pretty big; I just feel lucky to survive Talladega,” Keselowski said. “Just a bunch of guys running four-wide. You know it’s a matter of time before they wreck. We all did.”

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