June 16, 2012 (EDITORS: Adds results/writethru)
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BROOKLYN,
Mich. -- The roll continued for Joey Logano, who fought off a
determined bid from James Buescher to win Saturday's Alliance Truck
Parts 250 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Michigan International
Speedway.
After
a restart with four laps left, Logano crossed the finish line .208
seconds ahead of runner-up Buescher to claim his fifth victory in 11
Nationwide starts this season and the 14th of his career. The win was
the first for Toyota in the Nationwide Series at Michigan.
Kurt Busch came home third, followed by Cole Whitt and pole-sitter Austin Dillon.
Buescher
chased Logano for three laps after the final restart and made his move
in Turn 1 on the white-flag lap, powering to the inside of Logano's No.
18 Joe Gibbs Racing Camry. But Buescher couldn't make the pass stick,
and Logano pulled away.
"Racing
there with James at the end was a lot of fun," Logano said. "I knew
exactly what he was doing the whole time, laying back there and trying
to make that run on the last lap. I knew he was going to slide it down
into 1, and I felt like, as long as I had position on him, I could pin
him down enough to get a big enough lead off the corner.
"He
did exactly what I thought he was going to do, and I was able to work
my game plan and come out ahead enough to win the race."
For Logano, the victory was yet another case of capitalizing on a chance to win and extending his remarkable success rate.
"I've
had a lot of confidence in myself lately, in my abilities, knowing what
I can do with the race car," Logano said. "I feel like I'm feeding my
crew chiefs the best information, and they're doing the best jobs they
can do to make the best race cars for me.
"There
hasn't been an opportunity we've let slip up yet. We've been in
position to win races, and we've capitalized every time we've been in
that position."
NASCAR
red-flagged the race on Lap 119 after the cars of Josh Richards and
Jamie Dick wrecked in Turn 3. Dick's car caught fire, but both drivers
escaped. So did Richards' car, which rolled driverless down the banking
and came to a stop in the infield grass.
After
a stoppage of eight minutes, 46 seconds, the field took the green flag
on Lap 122 of 125. Logano and Buescher quickly made it a two-driver
race. The win comes six days after Logano picked up his second career
Cup victory, at Pocono.
Danica
Patrick finished 18th in an up-and-down race that saw her involved in
three of the seven cautions. Series leader Elliott Sadler ran 11th, but
Ricky Stenhouse Jr., second in the standings entering the race, had a
miserable time with handling problems and came home 25th.
Dillon
moved into second place, eight points behind Sadler. Stenhouse, the
defending Nationwide champion, fell to third in points, 27 behind the
series leader.
No comments:
Post a Comment