Joey Logano cruises to finish line
at heated All-Star Race
Send a link to a friend
[May 20, 2024]
Joey Logano provided the fireworks on the track in a dominant
performance Sunday night, but Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Kyle Busch had
a real flareup that closed the NASCAR All-Star Race weekend at North
Wilkesboro Speedway.
Polesitter Logano put his No. 22 Ford out front for a record-setting
199 of 200 laps and snared the $1 million purse, winning the Cup
Series' prized non-points race in North Wilkesboro, N.C.
Without another set of soft tires, Logano stayed out when NASCAR
threw its final planned caution with 50 laps left, while many in the
field took on new rubber.
The 2016 All-Star Race winner then stayed ahead of Denny Hamlin to
win the non-points race by 0.636 seconds.
"We came here and tested and ran over 800 laps at the tire test,"
said Logano. "I wish this one counted for points, but a million
bucks will work as well."
Chris Buescher, who was involved in two dramatic endings over the
past two weeks, came in third.
Following a day of qualifying for the Indianapolis 500, defending
All-Star Race winner Kyle Larson arrived at the speedway by
helicopter about 90 minutes before the green flag. He came home
fourth, while Ryan Blaney finished fifth.
After Busch was squeezed into the wall with Stenhouse just ahead of
him, Busch's No. 8 Chevrolet caught Stenhouse's No. 47 and turned it
into the Turn 2 wall on Lap 2 for the first caution.
An angry Stenhouse then parked his damaged Chevrolet in Busch's pits
and confronted Busch's crew chief Randall Burnett.
That carried over after the race.
With his car retired after two laps, Stenhouse was forced to stay at
the 0.625-mile speedway, which only has a back gate to exit the
infield and no tunnel. He vowed to see Busch afterward.
[to top of second column] |
The two got face-to-face at Busch's hauler and
aired their differences. Stenhouse then suddenly connected with a
right hook to the two-time Cup champion's left cheek, and a melee
broke out.
"I'm not sure why he was so mad," said Stenhouse. "He hit the fence
and came off the wall and ran into me. When I was talking to him, he
kept saying I wrecked him.
"It's built-up frustration with how he runs his mouth all the time
about (me). I know he's frustrated because he doesn't run as good as
he used to. I understand that."
Logano, Buescher, Blaney and Brad Keselowski -- all drivers who
stayed out on the soft tires after the Stenhouse caution -- paced
the field through 50 laps.
Logano's Ford stayed out front, but Bubba Wallace's No. 23 Toyota
fought door-to-door with Logano for 25 laps to stay on the lead, and
it did when the second yellow flag, a scheduled one, waved at the
halfway point for mandatory pit stops.
With the five cars on soft tires running equal or better times
compared to everyone else, teams opted for the softer tires during
the stop, just like they did to start the event's 40th running.
Logano and Christopher Bell ran side-by-side with 92 laps to go, but
Hamlin slipped into the mix and gained second behind Logano.
All-Star Open winner Ty Gibbs then spun for the third caution on Lap
119 after Busch tapped him.
--Field Level Media
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely
responsible for this content.
|