Steinhouse said, "I think he (Keslowski) tried to ruin everyone on the field until he won "I think his second car won out which he left. So thank him."

Keselowski powered his No. 6 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford to a ninth-place result in Sunday’s Great American Race, his first official start as a driver/owner

Keselowski led more laps than any other driver (67), but it was a pair of spins instigated by Keselowski’s pushing that had his peers talking.

Stenhouse added, “you just can’t push on the exit of a corner. He did it off of Turn 2 to the 21 (of Burton) there and then off of (Turn) 4 for me. Just the wrong place.”

Keselowski restarted fourth on the green-white-checkered restart, lined up directly behind the No. 2 Ford he drove previously for 12 seasons.

He helped shove Cindric to the lead and, when Cindric jumped down to the bottom lane, Keselowski was the leader up top and running second.

Ryan Blaney stayed tight on Cindric’s bumper, though, and the No. 2 stayed on the point until the checkered flag.

Keselowski, meanwhile, dropped from third to ninth on the final push to the line when he was shuffled out of the top line and into the middle.

“Whenever somebody spins out obviously there’s somebody over-aggressive, but in the moment I didn’t,”

Keselowski said when asked if he felt like he was overly aggressive. “… I was just pushing. for more info visit Nascar.com News Reference : Nascar

We weren’t even all the way up to speed, so I feel like it was a crazy time to be pushing, but obviously, the results say different.