Cool-Down Lap
Joey Logano defied the odds with career renaissance at Penske
Aug. 24, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
For every Kyle Busch, there’s a Casey Atwood.
For every Kyle Larson, there’s a Todd Kluever.
For
every young talent who shows enough in his first moments in the
limelight to tell you he’s a certain star, there’s a young talent who
fades quickly into obscurity, retaining
a connection to the sport only as the answer to a “What ever happened
to...?” question.
And then there’s Joey Logano.
It’s
not Logano’s 'overnight’ success at Team Penske that’s remarkable.
Logano’s third NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory of the season on
Saturday night at Bristol Motor Speedway
is simply an affirmation of talent that was always there.
Logano was an adolescent when Mark Martin began touting his prospects.
“Joey Logano, in my opinion, will be a Cup champion,” Martin said back in 2008, after Logano turned 18.
Martin
has a great eye for talent, and he may well be right. Now 24, Logano has
begun to realize the promise he showed as a teenager.
After a
difficult tenure at Joe Gibbs Racing, Logano is starting to harness the
ability that compelled Penske teammate Brad Keselowski to lobby
aggressively for Logano as the
full-time driver of the No. 22 Ford to start the 2013 season.
In his
two seasons with Team Penske—the current one less than two-thirds
complete--Logano has recorded four of his six career victories and 21 of
his 37 career top-five finishes.
No,
Logano’s current run is not remarkable. What is indeed remarkable is
that Logano remained at the highest level of NASCAR racing long enough
to achieve it.
“He’s a
huge part of our future,” team owner Joe Gibbs said that same year,
even before Logano was announced as the full-time successor to Tony
Stewart in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs
Racing Toyota.
But
Gibbs’ endorsement was hardly prophecy. It’s fair to say that, at the
time, Logano lacked the experience and maturity to live up to the
moniker “Sliced Bread,” a nickname
that earned him more derision than respect when Logano faltered early
in his career.
Gibbs
paired Logano with veteran crew chief Greg Zipadelli for his 2009 debut
season, but Zipadelli was accustomed to working with a veteran champion
in Stewart, not a raw
rookie. To call the relationship between Logano and Zipadelli strained
is to understate the reality.
And
with Stewart leaving in 2009 to form his own team, there was always the
sense, rightly or wrongly, that Zipadelli had one foot out the door at
JGR before he made the move
to Stewart-Haas Racing as competition director after the 2011 season.
Gibbs
retained Home Depot as the primary sponsor for Logano, another awkward
fit for an 19-year-old who didn’t have a home of his own at the time.
Those weren’t the only distractions. As far as job security was concerned, Logano was always on the precipice.
During
the 2011 season, Gibbs made a strong run at Carl Edwards, fueling
speculation that Edwards would be in the No. 20 Camry and Logano out of a
job. Edwards opted to re-sign
with Roush Fenway Racing for three more years, and Logano was back,
with Jason Ratcliffe as his crew chief.
Earlier,
Gibbs had courted Juan Pablo Montoya as a possible candidate for a
fourth car. Had a deal come to fruition, Logano would have lost another
spot in the pecking order,
as he already played third fiddle behind Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin.
And,
ultimately, the signing of Matt Kenseth for the 2013 season spelled the
end of Logano’s stint at Joe Gibbs Racing. With Home Depot taking a
reduced sponsorship role, and
with Dollar General preferring Kenseth, a former series champion, there
was no money to support Logano’s efforts at the Sprint Cup level.
In
several respects, though, Logano was lucky. The recipient of enormous
marketing hype, Logano made his first start in the Sprint Cup Series in a
relative vacuum of young
talent in stock car racing. In 2008 and 2009, there were no Kyle
Larsons, Chase Elliotts, Ryan Blaneys or Darrell Wallaces clamoring for
the glamor rides.
That contributed to Logano’s longevity.
He was
also fortunate that Edwards deferred his move to JGR for three years.
Had Edwards signed with Gibbs—and it was close—Logano would have been
out of a ride a year earlier,
in a different landscape of available Cup rides.
Logano
also made his own luck by continuing to win in the Nationwide Series. He
posted nine victories in 2012 alone and now has 21, tied for 13th on
the all-time list with
Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Harry Gant.
As
Logano struggled in Cup, his frequent visits to Victory Lane in the
Nationwide Series kept reminding us of his talent and suggested that a
breakthrough in NASCAR’s premier
series was inevitable.
In
confirming the departure of Logano, Joe Gibbs acknowledged that team
owner Roger Penske might well pick the fruit that JGR had cultivated.
That’s exactly what has happened.
And in that respect, Gibbs was prophetic indeed.
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