This win by Joey Logano flips the
script and reduces the pressure for Team Penske
[May 06, 2025]
By STEPHEN HAWKINS
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Joey Logano quickly flipped the script for
Team Penske.
The focus after this win can be on, well, the first win this season
for NASCAR's reigning Cup Series champion. Not like last week
following Austin Cindric's victory at Talladega, when Logano had an
expletive-laden rant on the radio directed at his teammate during
that race and then afterward had what would have been a fifth-place
finish disqualified because of a missing nut and loose bolt on the
spoiler during the postrace inspection.
“It's nice to change the storyline,” Logano said.
Logano recovered from starting 27th at the 1 1/2-mile Texas Motor
Speedway on Sunday in the 11th Cup race of the season, and surged
ahead after the restart in overtime with teammate Ryan Blaney to his
outside.
“We paid the price from last week in qualifying, going out early,
and now you have a bad pit stall. OK, I just got to (get a) top 10,
top five and start clicking those off, getting some points, I need
that," Logano said. “Then just found ourselves in position to win.
Glad we capitalized on that. The goal was to get some momentum
rolling. I feel like just get some stuff going, juices flowing
again. Yeah, turned out well.”

All three Penske drivers led laps at Texas. Cindric was in front for
60 laps and won the first stage, but finished 25th after getting
caught up in a late-race crash.
Logano and Blaney were on the front row for the final restart after
the race's 12th caution. Logano was the control car for the
green-white-checkered finish, even though Blaney was actually shown
as the leader when they reached the line. Blaney finished third,
still his best of the season, after Logano and Ross Chastain both
got in front of him on the final run.
Walter Czarnecki, the team's vice chairman, dismissed the notion
that back-to-back wins brought a sigh of relief.
“Rather, it reduces the pressure. The fact that here we are ... 11th
race of the year, and we got two cars in already for the playoffs.
So it allows the team to, I won’t say freewheel, but to be able to
do some things that perhaps they might not have been otherwise to
do,” Czarnecki said. “Now, the mission is to get Ryan Blaney into
the playoffs.”
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Joey Logano, right, poses with a cow skull Wurth 400 trophy in
Victory Lane tafter winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Texas
Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday, May 4, 2025. (AP
Photo/Gareth Patterson)

Blaney is actually the team's highest-ranked driver
at seventh in the Cup standings after moving up a spot following his
best finish of the season. Logano is ninth and Cindric 14th.
“I’m really proud of this team. Team Penske has been bringing good,
competitive cars for the first 11 races. We’ve been in the hunt in
every one of them. We’ve qualified very well. Had a chance to win
some other races. Now, two in a row. Hope that’s a real momentum
builder for us,” Czarnecki said. “If we weren’t bringing good cars
or there were other issues, that’s one thing, but we’ve been there.
So Blaney’s time is coming, too.”
There are 15 points races left before the playoffs begin Aug. 31.
The Cup Series is at Kansas on Sunday, followed by the non-points
All-Star Race. Then comes Charlotte, where Blaney has won before.
There are also races left at Pocono and Iowa, other places he has
driven to Victory Lane.
“I think Blaney surely could have won multiple races,” Paul Wolfe,
Logano's crew chief, said after Sunday's race. “I really appreciate
that relationship we have amongst our team and specifically the 12.
We work very closely together, and it’s kind of ironic how the end
of the race we were racing the 12 for the win.
“The way the racing is with limited track time these days and things
like that, I think it’s very important the teamwork aspect and how
well we’re able to help one another to ultimately make us better on
race day and as the race goes on,” he said. "We continue to work
together.”
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