Los Angeles Times

Logano: ‘Expect the unexpected’ with change

- By John Cherwa

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Joey Logano, a onetime Daytona 500 winner, is the defending NASCAR Cup champion, which in theory should give him an advantage this year. But everything is changing with the eliminatio­n of the restrictor plate and the introducti­on of thicker spacers to slow cars and make racing closer.

He finished fourth Sunday but is pragmatic about the learning curve everyone has to go thorough.

“You just take it as it comes,” Logano said. “It’s going to be different when we get to Atlanta [this week] than we’ve ever had before. We don’t really know. Expect the unexpected, I guess, just like we were for the Daytona 500. You just don’t know how those races are going to play out, and each track is going to be different.

“You’re going to have to give it some time to really understand if it’s better or not or what to like or dislike about it because as these teams evolve and start to figbit ure out this setup, you’re going to see the racing change again. What you see” the following week in Las Vegas, from testing to racing, “is probably going to be a little different.”

Race wouldn’t end

The official time of Sunday’s Daytona 500 was 3 hours 45 minutes 55 seconds. But, the two red flags of 25 and 15 minutes weren’t included in that stat. It can make for a long day, especially if you’re sitting in a car.

“I was looking at the time on the dash and looking at the scoreboard [before things got crazy] and thought at 6:15 we’re going to know the end of this race,” winner Denny Hamlin said. “[Then I thought] at 6:30 we’re going to know the end of the race. [Then I thought] at 6:50 we’re going to know the end of the race.

“It was crazy. The track was an absolute mess, especially in Turns 3 and 4. We were fortunate to be up front when those [wrecks] happened … lucky to be up front at the right time.”

Between all the cautions and overtime, the race went 207 laps or 517.5 miles.

Again for Almirola

Last year, Aric Almirola was about a mile away from winning the Daytona 500, but he got tangled with Austin Dillon on the last lap and crashed into the wall while Dillon went on to win. This year Almirola wasn’t as close but once again wrecked out, this time in the 21-car crash inside of 10 laps and finished 32nd.

“Last year, taking the white flag with the lead with emotions high and feeling like you have a great shot to win, was worse,” Almirola said.

“[Sunday] we were about 10th or 12th and with 10 laps to go a lot can play out, a lot can happen. It didn’t feel like we were as close but it’s still disappoint­ing.

“You never want to come down here and wreck out of the Daytona 500. You want a shot in the final closing laps. Unfortunat­ely, we weren’t in the right position.”

Wallace’s tough day

Bubba Wallace, last year’s second-place finisher, had any hopes of a repeat end in Lap 50 when he was bumped into Kurt Busch, badly damaging his car.

Busch was trying to drop low in Turn 2 in front of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. but his car started to go sideways. Wallace might have been able to avoid Busch but was tapped from behind by Tyler Reddick. Wallace couldn’t keep his car from slamming into Busch. Jamie McMurray then finished the job by hitting Wallace in the front.

Wallace was able to return to the race but never able to get enough horsepower out of his engine and languished at the back of the pack and finished 38th, 38 laps behind the leader.

 ?? Terry Renna Associated Press ?? JOEY LOGANO, NASCAR’s reigning Cup series champion, greets fans before the Daytona 500.
Terry Renna Associated Press JOEY LOGANO, NASCAR’s reigning Cup series champion, greets fans before the Daytona 500.

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