Joey Logano celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro, N.C., May 19, 2024 |
A little prep work paid off for Joey Logano.
Logano dominated the short track at North Wilkesboro
Speedway leading all but one of 200 laps to win his second All-Star Race on
Sunday night and earn $1 million.
Logano started on the pole after posting the fastest time in
qualifying on Saturday and was never really challenged, setting a record by
leading more laps than any driver has in the race’s 40-year history.
“We were so fast,” Logano said. “We came here before for
testing and ran over 800 laps and really figured out what it was going to take
to win the race.”
Logano compared it to a scene in the movie “Miracle” about
the 1980 United States Olympic hockey team with crew chief Paul Wolfe making
him run lap after lap until he was completely exhausted.
“It’s like when the coach is making the team run the suicide
drills and he keeps saying, ‘Again! Again!,’” Logano said. “That was Paul Wolfe
to me with the testing. I ran 800 laps. I was sore and I had enough.”
Logano has not won a points race this season, so he said
this was a big boost for his team.
“The first thing that goes through your mind is gosh, I wish
this counted for points,” Logano said. “But let’s be honest, a million is a lot
of money and counts for something.”
He also won the All-Star Race in 2016.
Denny Hamlin finished second and Chris Buescher third in a
race that lacked drama for the second straight year at the renovated track.
Kyle Larson, who arrived about an hour before the race after
spending the afternoon qualifying fifth for the Indianapolis 500 and flying to
North Wilkesboro, finished fourth and came up short in the quest to tie Jimmie
Johnson for the most All-Star Race wins with four after starting at the back of
the field.
The newly paved track and different versions of soft tires
were supposed to create more passing. They didn’t.
Hamlin admitted afterward that he just couldn’t get the
lead.
“I would run to him, and then you couldn’t pass,” Hamlin
said. “I would lose a little bit of air there, and I would try to give my car a
break and then run to him again — just have to be so much faster to get
around.”
Said Logano: “If it wasn’t for the clean air (and being out
front) I would not have won.”
Team Penske president Michael Nelson called it a great day
for the organization after they swept the top three starting spots at
Indianapolis 500 earlier in the day.
“We have been close this year (in NASCAR) and to finally
make it happen on a day like today, if you had to wait this was the day to get
that done,” Nelson said. “A great day for Mr. Penske and the whole
organization.”
There only real fireworks came on the second lap when Kyle
Busch sent Ricky Stenhouse Jr. into the wall after Stenhouse tried to pass him
on the first lap. An upset Stenhouse pulled his wrecked car down pit lane and
parked in Busch’s pit stall, got out and climbed a ladder to yell at Busch’s
crew.
Afterward, Stenhouse confronted Busch in the pits, then
threw a punch at Busch igniting a scuffle that involved members of both crews.
Stenhouse said that he was tired of Busch “running his mouth talking about me”
after he had wrecked him at Daytona in the past.
“I know he is frustrated because he doesn’t run as well as
he used to,” Stenhouse said after the race.
Larson was the big story ahead of the race.
He arrived at North Wilkesboro Speedway about an hour before
the race following a busy afternoon
His plane landed at Wilkes County Airport and was then
transported via helicopter to the racetrack and then taken by golf cart to his
hauler to begin preparations for the 200-lap exhibition race.
Fans cheered his arrival into the track and he waved to them
along the way.
NASCAR and its broadcast partner FOX helped accommodate the
sport’s star attraction and points leader by moving the start of the race back
16 minutes to 8:30 p.m. to ensure he would arrive in time after shocking some
in the racing world by qualifying for the Fast 6 at Indianapolis.
Larson will have to do it again next weekend when he
attempts to run the double and finish the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola
600 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Another angle of the confrontation after the race. pic.twitter.com/JCgSZhEzwa
— NASCAR (@NASCAR) May 20, 2024
Seventeen drivers qualified for the race based on their past
accomplishments. All-Star Open winner Ty Gibbs and second place finisher Bubba
Wallace advanced into the race on Sunday, along with fan vote winner Noah
Gragson.
Hendrick Motorsports vice president of competition Chad
Knaus marveled at what Larson was able to do in his first qualifying runs in
Indianapolis in an open-wheel racecar against the best drivers in the world.
“We were watching him run and we were like, my gosh, I can’t believe this,” Knaus said. “I was like my goodness how did that happen? Very limited track time. Did a couple of tests. Was able to go up there and he holds a pretty good wheel as anybody I have seen. He is a phenomenal talent. He gets it. He is so emotionally stable. You can put him in just about any environment and he is going to excel.” AP