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Keselowski: Standard to reach NASCAR Cup Series "lowered significantly"

Brad Keselowski says negotiations over his future at Team Penske have been altered as the "bar" to reach the NASCAR Cup Series has "lowered significantly"

After earning his third victory of the 2020 season at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Keselowski appears to be in great position to re-sign with his current team beyond this season, should he want to.

The 2012 Cup Series champion has already qualified for the playoffs and his team has proven to be just as strong as those of Kevin Harvick (Stewart-Haas Racing) and Denny Hamlin (Joe Gibbs Racing), who have dominated the series thus far with nine wins between them from the 20 races to date.

In recent weeks Keselowski has been "making progress" in his contract negotiations but his name has also been linked with job openings at other organisations, notably Hendrick Motorsports and Chip Ganassi Racing.

Asked about his "silly season" experience this year, Keselowski noted some different perspectives.

"It's certainly been much different than years previous in my career," Keselowski said.

"Nobody likes it. There's nobody really winning, I can tell you that.

"I still have a great job, a lot of people don't have a job at all.

"I don't think what they want to do is hear me whine about mine.

"But then again, I do recognise if my contract had fallen differently, I would probably be in a much better place with respect to when it ran out time wise."

Keselowski added that talent and results have a lesser part to play in dictating a drivers' future than when he became a Cup Series regular in 2009.

"The landscape is very strange, not just because of the virus, but I think one of the things that really stands out that's changed the landscape is the threshold or the bar, so to speak, you have to pass as a driver to be eligible for the Cup Series," he said.

"It's been lowered significantly since I've been a part of the sport.

"That's starting to bring a wave of kind of paid drivers, so to speak, drivers that pay for their ride.

"That really does a lot of damage to the contract market when there's drivers out there that are willing to pay for your ride, let alone you getting paid."

Just two weeks ago, Keselowski raised the idea that NASCAR should consider a system where drivers are demoted from the Cup Series when they have repeated on-track issues.

Keselowski clarified this idea saying: "I'm a professional race car driver that's worked my entire career to get here.

"Had to jump through a lot of hoops to make it and would like to think that those efforts have created a spot for me in this series to be joined with peers of similar talent levels."

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