The Sentinel-Record

Blaney steps into leadership role

- JENNA FRYER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Ryan Blaney through 24 races was having an OK season with one victory and a spot in NASCAR’s playoffs locked down.

Fast forward to the final two weeks of the regular season and Blaney is suddenly the hottest driver in NASCAR with the momentum needed to perhaps challenge Kyle Larson for the Cup championsh­ip.

Blaney closed the regular season with consecutiv­e victories to give him a career-best three on the year and vault to third in the reset standings heading into Sunday night’s playoff opener at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina.

“I think Ryan is growing into a championsh­ip contender. I think we’ve got that ability in front of us in the next 10 races,” said crew chief Todd Gordon, who will retire at the end of the season. “I look forward taking this momentum we have going forward into the Southern 500.”

So does Team Penske, which invested in Blaney in 2012 when he was 18 and driving for Brad Keselowski in the Truck Series. Keselowski won Roger Penske his first Cup championsh­ip that season and had credibilit­y to vouch for drivers that came through his now-shuttered team.

Blaney was decent in Keselowski’s truck but seemed better suited in a stock car, and Roger Penske got the third-generation driver into a Cup seat in 2015 through a partnershi­p with Wood Brothers Racing. The storied NASCAR organizati­on had fallen on hard times and cut back to a partial season, and Penske felt an alliance would both boost the famed No. 21 Ford and give his larger organizati­on a spot to develop young talent.

Blaney drove 16 Cup races that first season with the Wood Brothers, along with 13 Xfinity Series races and two victories in a Penske car. The Wood Brothers’ program was boosted to a full schedule in 2016 and Blaney drove the No. 21 for two more seasons as Penske prepared to expand and pull the team’s young talent under the Team Penske banner.

After his Saturday night win at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway in the regular-season finale, Blaney said he and Roger Penske had recently reflected on his journey. The 27-year-old said the nine years since he signed to drive for Penske have flown by and his time spent working for his boss has provided valuable life lessons.

“Getting to know RP … it makes me better as a person, to know his work ethic, how he approaches things in life and profession­ally. It really helps me out as far as his drive and hunger and motivation,” Blaney said. “For someone who has that much motivation, he’s been doing it for so many years, he just won’t stop. He always has to keep going and going and finding new things, new ways to be more successful and things like that. It’s hard not to notice somebody like that.”

This peak couldn’t come at a better time for Blaney or the organizati­on. Keselowski is leaving Team Penske at the end of this year to become a driver with an ownership stake and competitio­n role at Roush Fenway Racing.

It will wrap 12 full seasons driving for Penske and create a leadership role that Blaney, long considered the junior driver to champions Keselowski and Joey Logano, appears ready to fill.

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