USA TODAY US Edition

Penske’s hopes for anniversar­y title ride on Logano

- Brant James @brantjames

Roger Penske reached the Verizon IndyCar Series final at Sonoma Raceway assured of a 14th open-wheel championsh­ip. Only points leader and eventual champion Simon Pagenaud and second-place Will Power were mathematic­ally viable, and they’re on his payroll.

Penske had no chance of the same security for the Sprint Cup culminatio­n at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where the top four drivers in the standings contest the title on the 1.5-mile oval. He already was comfortabl­e with that. But his forces were halved Sunday at Talladega Superspeed­way when 2012 champion Brad Keselowski was eliminated from the Chase for the Sprint Cup after his motor overheated as he controlled the race.

Joey Logano’s victory advanced the 26year-old from tied for eighth approachin­g the eight-driver cut to the third round beginning this weekend at Martinsvil­le Speedway. It gives his owner a chance of bookending the 50th anniversar­y of Team Penske with titles.

“Obviously, that’s in the back of my mind,” Penske said in victory lane. “But it was way back in my mind about 20 minutes ago. That could be a good opportunit­y for us. But certainly, you’ve got (Joe) Gibbs (Racing) and certainly the Hendrick cars and Kurt (Busch) and (Kevin Harvick of Stewart-Haas Racing). There’s some real strong competitor­s out there for sure.” FOUR-GONE CONCLUSION Four drivers lead the series with four wins. Half of them were eliminated from title contention when Keselowski’s Ford and Martin Truex Jr.’s Toyota suffered engine failures. Keselowski’s season was unwound when debris from the grandstand­s overheated his motor despite numerous attempts to dislodge it by using other cars in the draft. Logano was able to avoid the same pitfall when a timely caution loosened the flotsam on his nose piece. Penske said Keselowski’s engine at one point reached 20 degrees hotter than it could tolerate.

“It was a shame. Brad led 90 laps, really set the pace of the race all day long,” Penske said. “For me, you hate to run all season long as well as we have and not be able to make the next round.”

But Penske sees merit in the eliminatio­n-style playoff format. Logano’s win was his second this season after he claimed six in 2015, sweeping the third round but being eliminated after Matt Kenseth fouled his third round by intentiona­lly wrecking him off the lead at Martinsvil­le Speedway for a slight incurred at Kansas Speedway.

“From my perspectiv­e, it’s the same for everyone,” Penske said. “The pressure cooker just gets tighter and tighter as we go from 16 (title-eligibles) to 12 and now to eight, and I think that’s what the fans want. It’s never over, and it’s a shootout until the end. I think I like the format. I think it puts pressure on us. I don’t like it when I’m not able to go to Homestead and try to win.”

That the system doesn’t reflect the season doesn’t necessaril­y matter, JGR’s Carl Edwards said.

“It doesn’t represent the season by definition,” Edwards said. “There are five rounds. There are 26 (races), three, three, three and one. This is new territory in the sport, and everyone is trying to master it and figure out to make sure they’re there at the end. It’s really tough.” HALF-LIFE JGR’s defending series champion Kyle Busch, Edwards, Denny Hamlin and Kenseth make up half of the eight-driver third round of those still contesting the championsh­ip. Edwards thinks JGR, which won 11 of 26 regular-season races, can wedge its entire lineup into the final at Homestead.

“There’s no reason all four of these cars can’t be in the race at Homestead,” he said.

 ?? JASEN VINLOVE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “There’s some real strong competitor­s out there for sure,” Roger Penske says.
JASEN VINLOVE, USA TODAY SPORTS “There’s some real strong competitor­s out there for sure,” Roger Penske says.

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