Logano completes season sweep at Dover with win in "OneMain Financial 200" NASCAR Nationwide Series race
By Brian Smith
Cruise control is not an approved piece of
equipment in NASCAR. (Speedometers aren’t either, for that matter.) But
if it were, Joey Logano simply could have set his to “fast” at Dover
International Speedway on Saturday, speedometer not
necessary.
Logano led 184 of the 200 laps, just nine laps
short of the track record of 193 led by Ryan Newman in 2005, to win the
"OneMain Financial 200" NASCAR Nationwide Series race. He picked up his
seventh win of the NASCAR Nationwide Series season
and his second of the year at Dover, becoming the third driver in as
many years to sweep both races at the Monster Mile. Carl Edwards won
both a year ago, and Kyle Busch accomplished the feat in 2010.
Logano felt the team benefited from the fact that
Friday’s practice session saw changing track conditions, much the same
as Saturday’s race did. The team was able to make a plan for changes as
the track changed, and it fell into place as
expected.
“Once the track rubbered up, it went right to where
we thought it would,” Logano said. “We were able to just stay out front
most of the day after that.”
Justin Allgaier, who started second, drove away
with the lead on the green flag and held it for the first 13 laps. But
Logano caught him at that point and only yielded the top spot for three
laps during a scheduled competition caution on
lap 48.
There were only two cautions the rest of the race,
both for blown engines – one for Jeremy Clements on lap 117 and another
for Tim Andrews on lap 178. In the meantime, Logano’s main threats fell
off one by one, almost as if he had invisible
shields up. Allgaier was running second with 59 laps to go when
something broke in his front suspension. Later, Sam Hornish, Jr. had
closed to within two seconds, but blew a tire.
Paul Menard finished second, followed by Michael
Annett, who tied his career best finish in the series. Elliott Sadler
finished fourth, and in doing so was able to extend his points lead in
the Nationwide series. The order of drivers remained
the same, but most of the top-10 lost a little ground to Sadler. Ricky
Stenhouse, Jr. is now nine points back, and Austin Dillon slipped to 25
points behind Sadler.
Kyle Busch was fifth, while Cole Whitt, Brian Scott, Kasey Kahne, Stenhouse and Dillon rounded out the top 10.
The race ran at an average speed of 123.723 mph,
making it the fastest NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Dover since the
fall of 2003. Eighteen cars finished on the lead lap.
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