It seems NASCAR told Brad Keselowski to not race aggresively against the people in the chase.
Keselowski
IMO, that's wrong of NASCAR to tell a non-chaser that. He has every right to race around these people. I watched Sunday's race and Keselowski was racing clean around everyone. He did race hard which should be expected for a driver who's going to compete full time next season and is learning. Now, if he was bump drafting someone down the backstretch or if he made a daring move three wide to pass someone, then I could see a warning be issued here. But, in Keselowski's defense, he did nothing wrong.
Bill Kimm's arguement is hilarious and could easily be debated.

I think I'll take a crack it.
I've been a firm believer for years that rookies shouldn't make their Cup Series debut in the Chase, so I have no problem with NASCAR telling Brad Keselowski to cool his jets in the early part of the race at Kansas.
If rookies can't make their debut in the chase, then why should they make their debut in the regular season? Rookies could easily make a mistake and cost a driver a chance to make the chase. Also, I've seen plenty of vetran drivers make mistakes that cost other drivers at wins/championships.
Kind of ironic since the next race at Talladega, Edwards made an aggresive block on Keselowski and ended up wrecking.
To be fair, Keselowski isn't David Ragan in 2006, Juan Montoya in 2006 or Sam Hornish Jr. in 2007. He's made his fair share of Cup starts and has a win at Talladega to show for it.
It's still doesn't give NASCAR the right to tell him not to race hard. He has every right to race for a spot. Keselowski has 1 win, 1 top 5 and 3 top 10's this season. Martin Truex Jr, Jamie McMurray and Casey Mears have around the same stats, but with more starts. Nascar should warn these drivers also.
Twelve teams are racing for the championship -- and that shouldn't be derailed by some young guy with nothing to lose.
43 drivers are racing for a win -- and that shouldn't be derailed by NASCAR.
And that's exactly the situation with Keselowski. He has everything to gain and nothing to lose. If he crashes 50 laps in, so what -- does't affect him in any way. He can afford to take chances and be aggressive (read: foolish) because for him, points mean nothing.
Guys 13th in points on back don't have much to lose either.(other than making the top 35 in points) They can be aggresive on the track as well. The fact is, Keselowski wasn't doing anything wrong in this situation. He was racing drivers clean.
NASCAR has every right to tell him to turn it down a notch early in a race. Officials are trying to keep the sanctity of the Chase intact, and having a hot-shot rookie race Chase drivers too aggressively early on can lead to disastrous results
I've seen Joey Lagano race Juan Montoya hard this season and NASCAR hasn't said anything. He's a rookie this year. Where was NASCAR on that one?