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The penalties continue a NASCAR trend to take a stronger stance on cheating.
NASCAR took away 150 driver points from Martin Truex Jr., and crew chief Kevin "Bono" Manion was fined $100,000 and suspended six races for bringing an illegal car to Daytona in July.
NASCAR on Wednesday also fined Sprint Cup driver Reed Sorenson's crew chief Donnie Wingo $25,000 after the car was found to have an improperly attached weight in Sunday's race at Michigan.
While NASCAR has increased the penalties, JGR had rarely come under scrutiny from NASCAR. Before last weekend, the last time a JGR car came under suspicion was in 2003 when Stewart's car was impounded after failing inspection before it hit the track at Texas Motor Speedway.
The point deductions Wednesday mean little to Stewart, who was racing in his final Nationwide race for JGR, and Logano, who has run a partial schedule since turning 18 earlier this year. Gibbs said he didn't agree with placing the drivers on probation, claiming they had no knowledge of the cheating.
Wally Brown will serve as Logano's crew chief Friday in the No. 20 at Bristol Motor Speedway, while Doug Hewitt will be the No. 18 crew chief with Kyle Busch as the driver. JGR was busy Wednesday night assigning new duties to other crew members.
And while the penalties come in the Nationwide Series and not the top series, Sprint Cup, NASCAR officials are hoping they'll make another crew member think twice when they're considering tweaking the car.
"A poor decision was made by some key members of our organization," Gibbs said. "And 100 percent of the blame rests with us."
[Associated Press;
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