Dayton Daily News

Logano needed to fight to finish — so he did

Nothing bad about bump with Truex to earn spot in final.

- By Jenna Fryer

Take a CHARLOTTE, N.C. — deep breath and rewatch “Days of Thunder” to put some perspectiv­e on Joey Logano’s latest dust-up with another driver.

Logano sparked a storm of controvers­y at Martinsvil­le Speedway when he bumped reigning series champion Martin Truex Jr. out of the lead to claim victory. It wasn’t any old win, either; it qualified Logano for NASCAR’s championsh­ip-deciding race at the end of the season.

At this stage, a victory is a ticket to Homestead-Miami Speedway’s winnertake-all finale. There are eight drivers vying for four spots — and one was dangling in front of Truex and Logano on Sunday.

Logano maybe wasn’t expected to make the final four, not this season. His only other win was at Talladega and Team Penske has been overshadow­ed on the track by Ford partner Stewart-Haas Racing. The regular season was so dominated by Truex, Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick it has just been assumed the so-called “Big 3” would gobble up three of the four championsh­ip berths.

So for Logano to make it to the finale, he needed to be perfect for three races or in position to win one.

There he was at Martinsvil­le, out front for a racehigh 309 of the 500 laps. He had a door-to-door battle going with Truex for much of the final 10 laps. The racing was clean and Truex was an on-track gentleman, a sportsman worthy to be called champion, in taking the lead from Logano.

But Logano had to have that win. It was his best and perhaps only chance to qualify for the finale, and that chance came on the final lap.

He pulled a bump-andrun and figured he’d let the chips fall as they may. The move worked. An infuriated Truex must try again.

The bump was a throwback move to when drivers used their race cars as muscle, and they created racing that captivated its audience. It was the jaw-dropping, white-knuckled bumping and banging that made “Days of Thunder” a pop culture sensation. It’s quintessen­tial NASCAR, not all that different from what Logano did to Matt Kenseth to win a playoff race at Kansas three years ago.

In this latest instance, Logano knocked Truex out of the way, slipped past him and straighten­ed out his wiggling car enough to cross the finish line in first. Truex’s car went sideways and Denny Hamlin stole second place.

The consequenc­es were immediate. Logano was booed, Truex joined the jeering from pit road and the crew chiefs exchanged angry words. Truex vowed to prevent Logano from stealing his crown: “He may have won the battle, but he ain’t winning the damn war.”

Logano car owner Roger Penske wasn’t pleased to learn Truex called the bump-and-run a “cheap shot” and he was unusually feisty in his rebuttal. “He’s a racer and should know better than to say that,” Penske said. “That’s as clean a shot as you can have in a race like this.”

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