Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

On top of the world

Logano captures an improbable first NASCAR crown

- Jenna Fryer

HOMESTEAD, Fla. – Joey Logano raced into NASCAR anointed as its next star. He was 18, dubbed “Sliced Bread” because of all the hype, and in way over his head.

It made Logano an easy target on and off the track and threatened his career. Logano was out of a job five years after he arrived but given a second chance by Roger Penske, the titans of motorsport­s.

Now he’s part of Penske’s storied history as NASCAR’s newest champion.

The underdog on paper but the favorite in his mind, Logano busted up The Big Three and won an improbable first NASCAR title by soundly beating a trio of former champions. Logano won the season-ending EcoBoost 400 Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway to grab the Cup title in a season in which he barely contended until the playoffs began.

The year was dominated by Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick and reigning series champion Martin Truex Jr., with Logano calling the championsh­ip field “The Big Three and Me.”

But Logano kicked it into another gear during the playoffs with two victories and eight top-10 finishes in the postseason. He led a race-high 80 laps but the title was slipping away in the waning laps until Team Penske teammate Brad Keselowski spun Busch

teammate Daniel Suarez for a racechangi­ng caution.

He was fourth on the restart with 15 laps remaining but powered his way alongside leader Truex, used a strong move in the outside lane three laps later to take over the top spot, and Logano pulled away to win for Penske.

“We were the favorite. We executed down the stretch like nobody’s business,” Logano said. “I knew we had a short-run car. I said it before the race started that if it was anything longer than 25 laps we were going to be in trouble. That showed all day. But it came down to the short run and we are champions. NASCAR champions.”

Logano won the title in his 10th season at NASCAR’s top level, six years after Penske rescued him from the unemployme­nt line.

He started with Joe Gibbs Racing as a teenager, made his debut days after his 18th birthday and was pushed into the Cup Series prematurel­y when Gibbs needed a replacemen­t driver for Tony Stewart.

When Logano didn’t deliver for Gibbs he was grabbed by Penske, who won got his first Cup title in 2012 with Keselowski, the driver who pushed for Logano to be hired as his new teammate.

“I think when it’s time to go, he’s the guy,” Penske said. “I couldn’t ask for a better result and a guy that delivers it for the whole team.”

Logano screamed so hard when he crossed the finish line that he later joked he thought he pulled a muscle. Then he explained how far he’s come from a kid in Connecticu­t who showed so much talent so young that Hall of Famer Mark Martin stamped him NASCAR’s next superstar when Logano was about 15 years old.

Now he’s 28, a 10-year veteran at NASCAR’s top level, and a champion in the second act of his career.

“I’m the kid who every single time I was asked what I wanted to be when I grew up I said ‘a NASCAR champion.’ I said it every single time,” Logano said. “Not a lot of kids in Connecticu­t say that.”

Truex finished second in his final race with Furniture Row Racing. The team is closing because it lost its primary sponsor midway through Truex’s championsh­ip reign.

“It’s a tough way to lose,” Truex said. “I had nothing for him at the end. That’s just the way it goes. I don’t know what else to say. It hurts a little.”

Harvick was third and Busch fourth as the title contenders followed each other across the finish line.

“We weren’t even close,” said Busch. “We were so bad tonight on the racetrack and on pit road that nothing was kind of going our way. So it was just not all there the way that we needed it to, and sometimes it all falls into place and falls your way, and other times you’ve got to be able to go out there and go earn it, and we didn’t have either.”

In fact, Busch’s crew had one of its worst races of the year on pit road as the front-tire changer had hiccups on two stops. It negated any advantage Busch gained when team owner Gibbs forced Denny Hamlin not to take the first pit stall and leave it open so Busch would have an easier exit back on the track. But he lost six positions during one stop, four in another, and his team had to gamble on strategy to stay in contention.

It was Busch who said losing the title would be most disappoint­ing if it went to Logano because Logano wasn’t in the same league as the Big Three all season.

“Lots of wins,” Busch said. “Forget about it now, move on.”

The title is redemption for Logano, who could have washed out of the sport when Gibbs cut him from the team. But he reinvented himself under Penske and became comfortabl­e as an aggressive driver, even when it cost him.

Logano was the favorite to win the 2015 title but missed the finale because a feud with Matt Kenseth cost him on the track. He was the championsh­ip runner-up in 2016, and a penalty kept his No. 22 out of last season’s playoffs.

Logano this season had to move Truex out of his way in the final turn at Martinsvil­le Speedway last month to earn his berth in the championsh­ip race. Logano was criticized for his aggressive­ness, and Truex promised he’d prevent Logano from winning the Cup, but Logano insisted he made the necessary move to win a championsh­ip.

And in the final 15-lap shootout to the finish, Logano simply drove around the outside of Truex and pulled away. If Truex had any intention of stopping Logano he had to catch him first; he couldn’t and finished 1.725 seconds behind.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Joey Logano celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Ford EcoBoost 400 and season championsh­ip on Sunday.
GETTY IMAGES Joey Logano celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Ford EcoBoost 400 and season championsh­ip on Sunday.

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