Logano caps spectacular race with Daytona 500 victory
Feb. 22, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla.—The record will reflect that Joey Logano won Sunday’s 57th
Daytona 500 under caution, when a multicar wreck on the backstretch
forced NASCAR to wave the
yellow flag as Logano led the field into the final corner on the second
lap of a green-white-checkered-flag finish.
But the
notation of that final caution does no justice to the memory of a race
that produced some of the most scintillating restrictor-plate racing in
the history of the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series.
From a
restart on Lap 182 of a scheduled 200, fans standing—not sitting—in a
packed front grandstand were treated to 16 straight laps of
close-quarters, three-wide racing that
saw the lead change from one lap to the next, as one line or another
would inch ahead. Indeed, NASCAR's loop data statistics said Sunday's
race set a Daytona record for green flag passes (12,677 in all).
The
final two-lap sprint, on the other hand, was no contest. Logano picked
the outside lane for the restart on Lap 202 and surged ahead of
second-place Jimmie Johnson when
the bottom lane didn’t move as quickly as expected.
Kevin
Harvick was second when NASCAR threw the final caution and froze the
field. Defending race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. charged from eighth to
third before the yellow. Denny
Hamlin ran fourth, followed by Johnson and Casey Mears.
But it
was Logano who earned the trip Victory Lane, continuing unabated from a
breakout 2014 season that saw him win five times in the Sprint Cup
Series and qualify for the
final round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup before finishing
fourth in the final standings.
If
Logano streaked away on the final restart, it was Clint Bowyer who
helped move him into position to win the race during the 16-lap
green-flag run that preceded the sixth
caution on Lap 198.
Logano
could barely contain himself when recalling the action of the closing
laps. With a shove from Bowyer, Logano took the lead from Jimmie Johnson
on Lap 191 and held it
until NASCAR called the caution for Justin Allgaier’s spin seven laps
later.
“I keep
looking at this trophy, and it’s amazing,” Logano said after climbing
from his No. 22 Team Penske Ford. “What a beauty. ... Now I lost my
train of thought. I’m sorry.
I’m so distracted right now.
“We got
the push that got us out front and that was just Clint pushing hard. He
wasn’t lifting before he got to my bumper, he was slamming into the
back bumper and that is
what we needed to get this Ford out front and here in Victory Lane.”
Logano’s
ninth win in the Cup series in all likelihood will mean a return trip
to the Chase. It’s also the second victory for team owner Roger Penske
in the Great American
Race, the first coming in the 50th edition of the event in 2008, with
driver Ryan Newman.
Logano’s
victory also extended a remarkable four-race streak for Ford, which won
the Rolex 24 Hours in January and swept the NASCAR weekend with
triumphs in the NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series on Friday (Tyler Reddick) and NASCAR XFINITY Series
on Saturday (Ryan Reed).
Earnhardt
felt he had the strongest car in the field, but a mistake on the Lap
182 restart shuffled him from third all the way out of the top 15. For
the balance of the race,
the driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet fought his way back toward the front
but wasn’t in position to make a play for the win at the end.
Earnhardt had planned to tuck in behind Johnson, his teammate, after the restart, but didn’t have room to make the move.
“Jimmie
was on the quarter panel ... he was in a great spot on the guy in front
of me,” Earnhardt said. “And I thought if I could get in behind him, he
was going to shoot past
to the lead, I could tuck on the quarter panel a little bit as soon as I
got on that right rear quarter panel.
“I
didn't think they were that close on the outside line. I thought we had a
couple car-lengths on the outside line, but they were right there. Just
one of them moves. You
make some good ones, you make some bad ones. I made a bad one too
late.”
Harvick, the defending series champion, was philosophical about the runner-up finish.
“Yeah,
definitely, for us it was a good, solid day to start the season,”
Harvick said. “Obviously, you want to try to win the race. But sometimes
you're just happy to keep
rolling and going out of here and head to Atlanta (next Sunday) with a
solid day.
“I
thought we were going to have at least a chance, back up to the 88
there, come up to the 22 coming off of Turn 4. But in the end, that
didn't all pan out with the caution.
Still, a good weekend for us.”
Polesitter
Jeff Gordon, racing in the Daytona 500 for the last time, was a victim
of the wreck that brought out the final caution. Gordon dominated early,
leading a race-high
87 laps, but the late wreck dropped him to 33rd at the finish.
“This
was an amazing week and an amazing day,” Gordon said. “I’m just in a
different place that is so foreign to me, but so incredible--to just be
taking it all in and enjoying
every moment.
“Yeah,
right now I’m a little bit sad this is my final Daytona 500, but I’m
more upset we didn’t have a shot at winning there at the end.”
Notes:
Regan Smith finished 16th in the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet in
relief of suspended driver Kurt Busch. ... Matt Crafton finished 19th
as an 11th-hour substitute
in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, after driver Kyle Busch was
sidelined with a broken leg in Saturday’s XFINITY Series race. ... A
blown engine relegated 2012 series champion Brad Keselowski to a
41st-place finish. ... Danica Patrick ran 21st in her fourth
Daytona 500 start.
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