The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Logano says ‘honest mistake’ led to incident at Las Vegas

- By Bob Baum

AVONDALE, ARIZ. >> The first faceto-face meeting between Kyle Busch and Joey Logano since last week’s post-race scuffle in Las Vegas is over.

Whether the drivers feel any better about things headed into Sunday’s race at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway is as open question.

The two were summoned to a 15-minute session Friday with NASCAR officials as everyone involved tried to put the pit road brawl to bed. Busch attempted to turn the attention to this weekend’s racing at Phoenix, saying almost nothing as he emerged from the meeting. He answered every question by repeating, “Everything’s great.”

Logano initiated a phone conversati­on with Busch on Tuesday. He said after Friday’s meeting it was good to sit with his former teammate and explain the on-track incident at Las Vegas was “an honest mistake.” Are the two OK? “I guess time will tell. We’ll see,” Logano said. “I hope he’s able to see that and know that I was sincere about it but time will tell.”

The two were racing for position Sunday at Las Vegas and Busch spun because of Logano’s hard racing. Busch stormed down pit road and threw a punch at Logano before crews intervened. Team Penske was not penalized for tackling Busch, even though he sustained a gash to his forehead in the scrum.

Logano said he has tried to persuade Busch with evidence he says shows he didn’t cause the wreck intentiona­lly on the final lap.

“I really just tried to explain that I made a mistake underneath him,” Logano said. “That’s basically what it was. He asked for some data. I was able to show him that. It was pretty clear in my opinion what happened so that’s that.”

NASCAR senior executive Steve O’Donnell was in the meeting.

“The beginning of it was really to let the drivers talk about what happened, which they did,” he said. “Then we were very clear about our expectatio­ns, what we expect going forward.”

NASCAR chose not to penalize either driver for the post-race confrontat­ion.

“It’s an emotional sport,” O’Donnell said. “We still view that as true racing hard for position. If that escalates beyond to something intentiona­l on the race track, we were very clear that we’ll react.”

Busch repeated his “everything’s great” comment to five separate questions. It was far different from what he said Sunday, when he was led away from the fracas by NASCAR officials as blood from his forehead trickled down his nose.

“I got dumped,” he said then. “He flat out just drove in the corner and wrecked me. That’s how Joey races so he’s going to get it.”

The Busch vs. Logano subplot adds heat to what already promised to be a sweaty race, with temperatur­es expected to reach the mid-90s at the track carved into the desert hills southwest of downtown Phoenix.

Logano appeared at a regularly scheduled news conference later Friday and called Busch’s violent reaction to the crash “a little bit of a surprise but understand­able.” He said he and Busch never had a problem before Sunday and if he could take back his driving mistake he’d “do it in a heartbeat.”

But Logano said he would never change his aggressive driving style despite the risks.

“When you’re on the edge of out of control all the time,” he said, “it doesn’t take much to step over it.”

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