Logano nabs third win of the season in Bristol night race
August 23, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL,
Tenn. – Joey Logano believes he has the car and Team Penske believes
they have the team to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship.
Logano
took the lead from Matt Kenseth with 44 laps remaining and scooted to
his third Sprint Cup victory of the season in Saturday’s IRWIN Tools
Night Race at Bristol Motor
Speedway.
“We can
win the championship. We’ve showed it at every kind of race track.
We’ve just got to keep doing it,” said Logano, 24, who held off his Team
Penske teammate Brad Keselowski
in the final laps.
“What a year we’re having. I’m having so much fun. The past six or seven races have been unbelievable.”
Logano
has finished no worse than sixth in any of the last five races but took
special pride in winning at the track known as the “World’s Fastest
Half-Mile.”
“It’s
just the baddest mamma jamma race track ever built,” said Logano, who
two years ago was struggling with a loss of confidence at Joe Gibbs
Racing.
“At
that point, I would never think I’d have a year like this,” he said.
“That’s why the mental side of this is just as important as the physical
side. But I’m happy I went
through all that. It’s made me what I am now and made me aware of how I
have to be, mentally, to win these things.”
It was a
big weekend for both Penske and Ford Racing with Keselowski winning the
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event in a truck he owns, Ryan Blaney
winning for Penske
in the NASCAR Nationwide Series race and Logano and Keselowski
finishing 1-2 in the main event.
“I
think we’re legitimate threats to win a championship this year and I’m
proud of that,” said Keselowski, the 2012 Sprint Cup champion and the
‘old man’ of the group at 30.
“To have all three drivers win races, I think that’s a testament to how
bright the future is. I think the results speak for themselves. We’ve
just got to keep rolling.”
It’s
also the first time that Ford Racing has swept a NASCAR weekend series
since 2006 when Mark Martin won in truck and Kenseth won both the
Nationwide and Sprint Cup races
at Bristol. Ford’s nine Sprint Cup victories this season are its most
since 2008 when it won 11 times.
Like Logano, Keselowski has three victories this season. The difference between the two drivers on Saturday was minimal.
“I
think our two cars were really, really equal,” Keselowski said. “Whoever
got out front and got the clean air first was going to win the race and
Joey was able to do that.
“The
last lap I just dive-bombed it in there on a prayer, kind of hoping it
would stick or he would slip or something would happen for me. It made
it look cool but it really
wasn’t that close.”
Team
Penske Executive Vice President Walt Czarnecki couldn’t be happier with
the way things are working out with his team in its second year with
Ford.
“When
Joey came on board, we told him, ‘There’s no No. 1. There’s no No. 2.
Everybody’s equal. We all contribute, we all have the came access to
information, the same access
to resources. I think it’s really been demonstrated in the performance
of the team this year with six wins.”
Saturday,
Logano had fresher tires than Kenseth, who elected not to pit under
caution when he took the lead from Jamie McMurray during the race’s
ninth caution which came
out on Lap 433 of 500.
McMurray,
who led a race-high 148 laps, said his car “got really tight” in the
final 100 laps and settled for eighth place. “As the track rubbered up,
it just didn’t suit
our car as much as it did the other guys,” he said.
McMurray
remains one of a handful of drivers who now need a victory at either
Atlanta or Richmond to have any realistic chance of making the Chase.
Clint
Bowyer (17th) and Greg Biffle (10th) remained on the positive side of
the points bubble for non-winners. Kyle Larson (12th) trails Biffle by
26 points and Kasey Kahne
is 33 points behind Biffle for the 16th and final Chase spot.
Kahne
Led 40 laps but suffered recurring issues with his right front wheel and
finished 35th on Saturday. Denny Hamlin, who ended up 40th, was as
upset as Kahne was disappointed.
Hamlin
was leading the race when Kevin Harvick sent him spinning on Lap 162.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. side-swiped Hamlin on the way by, putting both Hamlin
and Earnhardt (39th) behind
the wall and ending promising runs for both.
“It was
a misjudgment. He knows better. He made a mistake,” said Hamlin, who
fired a piece of his HANS device off the rear end of Harvick’s car as
the new leader circled the
track. “He thinks he knows everything. I just wish I had some kind of
car left to show him the favor back.”
Harvick
led the first 37 laps from the pole but finished 11th. Jeff Gordon,
shooting for a third consecutive victory, finished 16th while his
Hendrick Motorsports teammate
Jimmie Johnson overcame a pair of early-race speeding penalties to
finish fourth.
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