Logano turns Kenseth, wins Kansas Chase race in overtime
Oct. 18, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Block me once, and I’ll cut you some slack.
Block me twice — and it’s “Gotcha.”
That,
in essence, was the conversation on Joey Logano’s team radio after
Logano spun race leader Matt Kenseth in Turn 1 with less than five laps
left in the Hollywood Casino
400 at Kansas Speedway.
Logano
went on to win the race after a green-white-checkered-flag restart that
sent the race two laps past its scheduled distance of 267 laps. The
driver of the No. 22 Team
Penske Ford has monopolized the Contender Round of the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup, having won back-to-back races at Charlotte and
Kansas.
The
victory was Logano’s second at the 1.5-mile track — the first coming in
last year’s Chase — his fifth of the season and the 13th of his career.
But it may have come at
the expense of the title hopes of the driver who replaced him in the
No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.
He
finished .491 seconds ahead of runner-up Denny Hamlin, who held off
Jimmie Johnson at the stripe to take the second spot. Johnson ran third,
followed by Kasey Kahne and
Kyle Busch.
Desperately
needing a victory to revive his chances to make the cut for the Chase’s
Eliminator 8 Round, Kenseth had grabbed the lead from Jimmie Johnson
after a restart on
Lap 248. Using all his skills to keep the faster car of Logano behind
him, Kenseth blocked Logano on the frontstretch as the duo ran up on
lapped cars near the start/finish line.
Kenseth moved up to block again as he entered Turn 1, but a tap from Logano’s Ford sent the No. 20 Camry spinning.
Kenseth
kept his car off the wall and finished 14th, but the result was far
more costly than a mere 13 positions. After finishing 42nd at Charlotte a
week earlier, Kenseth
could have salvaged his season with a victory and a guaranteed entry
into the Eliminator 8 Round.
Now Kenseth, who is 35 points out of the final transfer position (eighth place) likely must win at Talladega to advance.
Understandably upset by the outcome, Kenseth had a clear-cut view of the incident.
“It
was really cut and dry,” Kenseth said. “He (Logano) picked my rear
tires off the ground and wrecked me, so there’s no debate about that
one… He was a little bit tighter
on that short run than I was, and I couldn’t get away from him.
“All
day we had him pretty good. I still thought I was going to be able to
stay in front of him and saw those lapped cars coming and tried getting a
couple runs off the top
there and I was plenty clear, got up in front of him and he just
decided to take us out.”
To
Logano, it was merely a case of aggressive racing on the part of both
drivers. As Logano pursued Kenseth during the decisive run, Logano was
squeezed into the outside wall,
scraping the right side of his car.
“It
was good, hard racing,” Logano said. “We were racing each other really
hard, and I got in the fence twice on the straightaways. He raced me
hard, and I raced him hard back.
That’s the way I race. If I get raced like that, I’ll race the same
way.
“That’s
how I’ve always been, and it will always be that way. I really couldn’t
be more proud of this team. To be sitting in such a great position
going into Talladega makes
us feel really, really good.”
Asked
whether he thought turning Kenseth was a good move, Logano replied, “I
didn’t think it was a good move when I hit the wall. I’m sure we’ll talk
about it. I felt like,
‘Hey, I’ve got to race hard. I got in the fence twice,’ so I wasn’t
going to put up with it.”
Kenseth said he had no plans to discuss the incident with Logano.
“I’m
really disappointed,” Kenseth said. “I’ve probably been one of his
biggest supporters. It was an awkward thing, obviously, taking his ride,
and I was excited for him when
he started winning at Penske and when he got that ride and even found
him today and congratulated him about racing against each other for a
championship.
“I
was very disappointed that he would do that… Yeah, I was running the
lane he wanted to run in, but, my goodness, isn’t this racing?
Strategically, I don’t think it wasn’t
the smartest move on his part. He’ll probably sleep good tonight — I
hope he enjoys that one. It’s not what I would have done, but he had a
decision to make and that’s the one he made.”
Logano insisted he didn’t wreck Kenseth on purpose.
"We were just going for the same piece of real estate,” Logano said.
Kenseth believed otherwise. Asked whether he thought the wreck was intentional, Kenseth asserted, “Absolutely — 100 percent.”
Without
the magnitude of drama Kenseth experienced, Dale Earnhardt Jr. also
leaves Kansas in dire straits. A loose left rear tire forced Earnhardt
to pit road for an unscheduled
stop in Lap 165. The No. 88 Chevrolet finished 21st, two laps down.
Currently
11th in the standings, 31 points behind eighth-place Martin Truex Jr.,
Earnhardt, like Kenseth, enters next Sunday’s race at Talladega (2:30
p.m. ET on NBCSN) with
a win-or-bust mentality.
Other
than Logano, none of the other Chase drivers will be able to relax next
Sunday. Only 20 points separate second-place Hamlin from Ryan Newman in
10th — with seven spots
in the Eliminator 8 Round still up for grabs.
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