Joey Logano wins Enjoy Illinois 300 in overtime
Send a link to a friend
[June 06, 2022] Joey
Logano passed Kyle Busch on the final restart Sunday afternoon in
overtime to win the Enjoy Illinois 300 presented by TicketSmarter at
World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Illinois.
Following the 10th caution period for a wreck by Kevin Harvick with
four laps to go, Busch and Logano were paired on the front row as
the drivers entered NASCAR Overtime.
In the two-lap shootout, Logano -- from the inside lane -- pulled
ahead in Turn 1, and Busch's No. 18 Toyota moved beneath him down
the backstretch.
Holding the lead entering Turn 3, Busch's Camry got loose after
going high. Logano then shot his No. 22 up to the point and raced
away for his second win, the other coming at Darlington on May 8.
He also won the non-points Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum on Feb. 6 to open the 2022 campaign.
"It doesn't get much better than that, racing for the lead with
Kyle," said Logano, who started seventh. "He's one of the best, and
it's a lot of fun crossing each other back and forth. I knew it was
coming. I did it to him, so I knew he was going to do it to me. I
thought we'd be racing toward the bottom (today), but we were
running up at the top and crossing one another."
The win at the 1.25-mile speedway outside St. Louis was the 29th of
the 2018 Cup champion's career.
Kyle Busch ran well with and posted his sixth top-five finish this
season.
"It was not even close," Busch said. "Did you see me about wreck off
of (Turn) 4? At least we made some improvements and were able to
keep up and have a shot at the win. The car took too long to come
in, better on the long run, better up top. We stayed in the running
all day long and fought hard."
Kurt Busch finished third, followed by Ryan Blaney and Aric Almirola.
[to top of second column] |
NASCAR Cup Series driver Joey Logano (22) reacts after winning the
Enjoy Illinois 300 at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway.
Mandatory Credit: Joe Puetz-USA TODAY Sports
Chase Briscoe's No. 14 Ford was the fastest in
Saturday's qualifying session, and he led the field to the start of
the first ever visit to the track by NASCAR's top series.
The 240-lap, 300-mile event ran without incident through 28 laps
until Briscoe cut down a left rear tire. However, NASCAR didn't
throw a caution, putting Briscoe deep into the field and handing the
lead over to Austin Cindric in his No. 2 Ford.
The Daytona 500 winner went on to claim Stage 1 -- his first
stage-win this season -- but Stage 2 opened with the event's first
incident between two cars when Ross Chastain tapped Denny Hamlin's
Toyota on Lap 65, sending Hamlin's No. 11 into the wall.
After Blaney's Lap 94 spin in Turn 2, Michael McDowell stayed out
and led 34 laps. But a late-stage caution involving Bubba Wallace
and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. -- the race's fifth -- turned the lead over
to Kurt Busch.
The older Busch brother beat Martin Truex Jr. to earn the Stage 2
bonus points, but Busch pitted and turned over the top spot to Truex
-- one of 15 drivers who didn't pit.
With 40 circuits left, Stenhouse spun down the backstretch for the
eighth caution period, but the top 15 cars stayed out for track
position.
--Field Level Media
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|