Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Logano wins, lands spot in Cup finale

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Joey Logano spent the final 40-plus laps at Kansas Speedway keeping an eye on Kevin Harvick in his rearview mirror.

Now, he can look ahead to the NASCAR Cup Series finale at Phoenix.

Using every bit of the track Sunday to hold off the winningest driver this season, Logano took the checkered flag on a cold, blustery Sunday to secure a spot in the championsh­ip round of the playoffs. Harvick was followed across by Alex Bowman and Brad Keselowski as postseason contenders swept the top four spots in the opener of the round of eight.

“It’s on your mind every lap. You come into this race knowing if you win this thing you have an amazing advantage,” said Logano, who experience­d the same perk on his way to the 2018 title. “I can’t believe it, especially the way the beginning of the race was going, running back there around 10th and not scoring any stage points.”

Harvick, who already has won nine times this season, kept pulling up to Logano’s bumper after the final restart for a caution. But he simply couldn’t make a pass stick as Logano moved all over the track to block him while taking advantage of lapped traffic that kept Harvick from making a clear run.

“We just needed to get off pit road first. It came down to controllin­g that restart,” Harvick said. “All our guys did a great job. Wehad a fast car. We moved all over the track. We weren’t the best behind somebody but I had a lot of options.”

Just none of them worked to get around Logano, who picked up his third win of the season and first since the COVID-19 pandemic, which reduced the capacity to about 10,000 fans at Kansas Speedway.

Oh, and one of his other wins this season? Phoenix, where Logano will now race for a title.

“I spent more time looking in the mirror than I did looking in the windshield there,” Logano said of his late-race duel with Harvick. “I thought if I could hold him off the first 15 laps, Iwould have a chance.”

Kyle Busch was fifth and Chase Elliott, who won the opening stage, wound up sixth after dealing with radio problems that at one point caused him to mistakenly pit. Elliott tried using a backup radio and even resorted to hand signs with his team on pit road to convey what he wanted done with the car.

Ryan Blaney, William Byron, playoff driver Martin Truex Jr. and Christophe­r Bell rounded out the top 10. Kansas native Clint Bowyer, who’s retiring after the season, finished 26th in what could be his final race at his home track.

Harvick’s second-place run was good for his own title hopes. He now has a 41-point cushion over the cut line with two races left before the championsh­ip, while Denny Hamlin is 20 points above it after a mistake caused him to brush the wall and he wound up 15th. Keselowski is eight points above Elliott, the first driver belowthe cut line.

Bowmanis 27 points below, Truex is 31 points behind and Kurt Busch is 73 points back after blowing his engine Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States