Joey Logano survives two-lap dash for Nationwide win at Bristol
Aug. 24, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL,
Tenn. -- Passing Kevin Harvick for the lead on Lap 216 of 250, Joey
Logano held on to win Friday night's Food City 250 NASCAR Nationwide
Series race at Bristol Motor
Speedway, notching his series-best sixth victory of the season.
Logano,
who posted his 15th career win and his first at the .533-mile short
track, outran runner-up Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and crossed the finish line
.503 seconds ahead of the defending
series champion.
Kyle
Busch ran third, followed by Austin Dillon and Nationwide points leader
Elliott Sadler, who was pushed aside by Stenhouse after a restart on
Lap 249 and lost three positions
over the final two laps.
"It's
about time," said Logano. "I think we've led the most laps in this race
about three or four times, and we've never been here in Victory Lane.
This is one of the coolest
race tracks you can win at. It means a lot to be up here."
Logano,
who led a race-high 81 laps, had no issues once he made the decisive
pass. The drama happened behind him, between Stenhouse and Sadler.
Those
two protagonists battled for the championship last year, with Stenhouse
prevailing, but Friday's incident may change the tenor of the campaign
this season. Sadler leaves
Bristol with a 19-point lead over second-place Stenhouse.
"I
feel bad getting into Elliott -- that's not what you want to do racing
for a championship," said Stenhouse, who conceded he could have given
Sadler more room.
To Sadler, however, the contact was a game-changer.
"He
said he didn't mean to hit us," Sadler said, "I told him I'd always
been careful around him last year and this year, because we've always
raced each other with a lot of respect.
I'm glad he didn't wreck us. He pushed us out of the way, but it could
have been ugly -- not the finish we deserved tonight.
"He just opened it up to where we can race each other a lot differently the last 10 races."
Harvick
took the lead for the first time on Lap 118 with a two-tire stop under
the sixth caution, for Fain Skinner's spin off Turn 2. On left-side
tires that were mounted on his
Chevrolet on Lap 47, Harvick kept Logano in his mirror until Benny
Gordon's spin in Turn 4 on Lap 171 caused the seventh yellow.
Logano,
on fresher rubber, harried Harvick after the ensuing restart on Lap
181, but it took Logano 35 more laps to make the winning pass.
Ultimately, Logano used the lapped car
of Jeremy Clements as a pick, trapped Harvick to the outside and sailed
past in the low groove.
When
John Wes Townley's Toyota slammed into the Turn 4 wall on Lap 225,
Harvick had to give up the second position and pit for fuel, dropping
the No. 33 from contention.
With
eight laps left, Dillon's Chevrolet collided with the Ford of
pole-sitter Trevor Bayne, causing the ninth and final caution of the
race. That set up the two-lap dash to the
finish, with Logano clearing Sadler through the first two corners.
Despite
a penalty for speeding while exiting pit road under caution on Lap 175,
Danica Patrick worked her way up to a ninth-place from the 34th
starting position.
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