Saturday Chicagoland Notebook
Notebook items:
· Joey Logano has two important weapons—youth and experience
· Daytona 150-mile qualifiers get new sponsor
· Martin Truex Jr. makes statement
Sept. 19, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Joey Logano has two important weapons—youth and experience
JOLIET, Ill.—You can debate whether Joey Logano made the move to full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series racing too soon.
After
all, before he turned 19, Logano stepped into the No. 20 Joe Gibbs
Racing Toyota vacated by Tony Stewart. In his first three full-time
seasons, Logano won one race, a rain-shortened event at New Hampshire in
2009.
But
since moving to Team Penske in 2013, Logano has blossomed, posting
eight victories in his last 62 starts and establishing himself as a
championship contender. Logano made it to the Championship 4 of the 2014
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup at Homestead-Miami Speedway before a
late-race snafu on pit road cost him a chance at the title.
Now,
at 25, Logano already is a veteran driver—with a huge advantage over
the 20-somethings who have only recently graduated to NASCAR’s premier
series, which will kick off its 2015 playoff opener Sunday with the
MyAFibRisk.com 400 at Chicagoland Speedway (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
“When
I started, I was really young and really green and put in this whole
thing,” Logano said. “I wasn’t really sure what I was getting myself
into at the time. I look at a lot of rookies that come in, and it takes a
while to get going and understand what you need at each race track.
“Experience
at this level outweighs any advantage you have as a younger person with
reflexes and all that. The experience is much larger than that. What I
like about my position is that I am in my seventh year and still only
25. Hopefully I have both going for me and just have to keep growing. We
haven’t won a championship yet. We have to keep growing and doing what
we’re doing, but I like the position that I’m in.”
DAYTONA 150-MILE QUALIFIERS GET NEW SPONSOR
Roughly
12-hours after BRP’s Can-Am brand announced a major sponsorship deal
with a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race team, Daytona International
Speedway President Joie Chitwood III announced Can-Am also will lend its
name to February’s two 150-mile qualifying races for the Daytona 500,
collectively to be known at the Can-Am Duel at Daytona.
“We’re
pleased to announce that BRP, manufacturer of iconic brands like
Ski-Doo, Sea-Doo, Evinrude, Rotax and Can-Am, will serve as the title
sponsor of the 150-mile qualifying races at Daytona,” Chitwood said
during a Saturday morning press conference at Chicagoland Speedway.
“I
can’t think of a better time in terms of the opening of Daytona Rising
(the massive capital project currently nearing completion at Daytona)
for a new partner to jump on board with an iconic race of ours.”
Can-Am replaces Budweiser as the sponsor of the Duel.
On
Friday night in Nashville, Tenn., BRP revealed the Can-Am brand as
major sponsor of the Sprint Cup effort of GoFAS Racing, owned by Archie
St. Hilaire. Can-Am will sponsor the No. 32 Ford of Jeffrey Earnhardt
for 11 races next year and will take on an associate’s role for the
balance of the events.
In
addition, Can-Am will sponsor the car for two of 2000 premier series
champion Bobby Labonte’s four restrictor-plate races next year.
“To
be able to make this step into the Sprint Cup Series is a dream come
true,” said Earnhardt, Chase driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s nephew. “This
is what I’ve been working for my whole entire life, and now to actually
be here, it’s pretty unbelievable…
“With
Bobby being my mentor and co-driver of the No. 32 Can-Am car, it’s
going to help me a lot. He’s a champion, and he’s been in the sport for a
long time.”
MARTIN TRUEX JR. MAKES A STATEMENT
Martin
Truex Jr. may have but one victory to his credit entering the Chase
this year, but he certainly announced his presence as a contender at
Chicagoland Speedway, the venue for Sunday’s MyAFibRisk.com 400.
In
Saturday’s first practice session, Truex topped the speed chart at
183.312 mph, nearly a full mile-an-hour faster than second-place Denny
Hamlin at 182.389 mph. In cooler temperatures in the afternoon, Truex
ran 184.849 mph and was the only driver to top the 184-mph mark.
Truex,
who will start from the fourth position on Sunday, has no top fives in
nine starts at the 1.5-mile track, but from all indications so far,
that’s likely to change in the first Chase race.
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