LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - There were questions about the judgment of team owner Joe Gibbs when he decided to replace departing two-time NASCAR champion Tony Stewart with a 19-year-old rookie this season.Even a rookie considered a phenom.
The former NFL coach, head of Joe Gibbs Racing, admitted Sunday he tried not to put too many expectations on the talented, but woefully inexperienced Joey Logano.
"We were really looking for just constant improvement, and that's really what we've seen,'' Gibbs said after Logano became the youngest driver in the history of the Sprint Cup series to win a race, taking the rain-shortened Lenox Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
"The last seven, eight races we've battled back from some real tough things,'' Gibbs added.
Sunday was no exception as the precocious teenager overcame a crash and a lost lap, then saved just enough fuel to earn his first Cup victory in only his 20th start.
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Joey Logano, driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota, celebrates winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. Logano won the rain shortened race with 27 laps remaining. (Photo by Jerry Markland/Getty Images for NASCAR) *** Local Caption *** Joey Logano
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Joey Logano, driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota, celebrates winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. Logano won the rain shortened race with 27 laps remaining. (Photo by Drew Hallowell/Getty Images for NASCAR) *** Local Caption *** Joey Logano
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Joey Logano, driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota, leads a group of cars during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Joey Logano
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Joey Logano, driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota, speaks to the media after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. Logano won the rain shortened race with 27 laps remaining. (Photo by Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images for NASCAR) *** Local Caption *** Joey Logano
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Jamie McMurray crashes into the wall in the third turn during the NASCAR Lenox Industrial Tools 301 auto race in Loudon, N.H., Sunday, June 28, 2009. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot)
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Joey Logano drives past the yellow flag on a wet track near the end of the NASCAR Lenox Industrial Tools 301 auto race in Loudon, N.H., Sunday, June 28, 2009. Logano held on to the lead and the victory when the race was called due to rain. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot)
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Joey Logano spins after losing a back tire at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, N.H., Sunday, June 28, 2009. Logano won the rain-shortened race. (AP Photo/Mary Schwalm)
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Crew Chief Greg Zippadelli (L) and Joey Logano (C), driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota are congratulated by Tony Stewart (R), driver of the #14 Old Spice Chevrolet after being declared the winner due to rain during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Greg Zippadelli;Joey Logano;Tony Stewart
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Joey Logano, driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota, drives under caution due to rain during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. Logano won the rain shortened race with 27 laps remaining. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Joey Logano
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LOUDON, NH - JUNE 28: Joey Logano, driver of the #20 Home Depot Toyota talks with his Crew Chief Greg Zippadelli after coming to a stop under caution due to rain during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LENOX Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on June 28, 2009 in Loudon, New Hampshire. Logano won the rain shortened race with 27 laps remaining. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Joey Logano;Greg Zippadelli
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Logano, not even allowed to begin his NASCAR career until he turned 18 in May 2008, added his latest victory to three wins in the second tier Nationwide Series.
"Well, I figured out this sport is a rollercoaster,'' Logano said when asked how tough his learning curve has been. "I go up and down, up and down, up and down. ... One week you can win and the next week you can be 43rd.''
The youngster was among a group of drivers who moved to the front of the field after getting out of sequence on fuel stops. He took the lead when Ryan Newman, trying to stay on track as long as possible with rain threatening, ran out of gas on lap 264 in the event scheduled to go 301 laps.
Four-time Cup champion Jeff Gordon moved into second and was steadily cutting into the lead as Logano, with a nearly empty gas tank, conserved as much fuel as possible. But the rain began falling three laps later.
The competitors ran six slow laps under caution before NASCAR put out a red flag in hopes of drying the track. But the rain began falling harder and the race was called after 273 laps.
"I was, like, 'The day just went bad, just try to finish it off and get as best finish we can,' and we made the right move at the end,'' Logano said.
The youngster gave most of the credit to crew chief Greg Zipadelli, who worked with Stewart throughout the 10 years he spent at JGR and stayed with the team when Stewart left to become an owner-driver.
"He went for it and I was just lucky enough to be in the seat,'' Logano said. "He said to just stay out, rain's in the area. So we started saving a little bit of fuel ... It's a dream come true, that's for sure.''
Zipadelli, who guided Stewart to 33 Cup victories, seemed a little stunned by this win.
"It's crazy,'' he said. "Obviously, everything at the end of the day went our way. You can't control the weather. The only thing you can do is try to play it to our hand.''
Logano, 19 years, one month and four days old, broke the record set by Kyle Busch for the youngest winner. Busch, now 24, was 20 years, four months and two days when he won for the first time at California in Sept. 2005.
Logano was first spotted as a 15-year-old by NASCAR star Mark Martin, who predicted greatness for the youngster. He been on the fast track ever since, winning races at every level and beating some of NASCAR's top developmental drivers along the way.
To his embarrassment, Logano was dubbed "Sliced Bread,'' as in, "the greatest thing since ... "The kid has struggled at times this season, but he has shown flashes of the kind of talent that gave Gibbs the confidence to put him in the No. 20 Toyota.
"We know today we were fortunate,'' Gibbs said. "And we know there will probably be some tough days out there for us. But I'm absolutely thrilled for Joey and his family and for us, all of us at Joe Gibbs Racing. We figure we can keep this going, ride this thing for about 20 years.''
It was a virtual home victory for Logano, who was raised in Middletown, Conn., and who made his first Cup start on the same 1.058-mile oval last September, struggling throughout the race and finishing 32nd.
Gordon was disappointed with the second-place finish.
"I felt like we had the best car,'' Gordon said. "The guys got us out first on our last pit stop, but it just got us out ahead of the guys we were racing with.''
He said Zipadelli made "a gutsy call'' leaving Logano on track.
Kurt Busch, who won a rain-shortened event here last June, finished third, followed by David Reutimann and Stewart, the series leader by 69 points over Gordon.
The race was slowed by 11 caution flags for 47 laps. The ninth one was brought out when Logano spun in heavy traffic, hitting the wall in turn four on the 1.058-mile oval.
That cost Logano a lap, but he got it back on the next caution flag, earning the free pass as the first car a lap down.
Logano said Zipadelli told him he could probably have run about five more laps before he ran out of gas.
But the rain came and Logano won.
"Obviously, it's not the way you want to win your first race, in the rain,'' Logano said. "But 20 years down the road, when you look in the record books, no one will know the difference. A win is a win and I'll take them any way I can.''
Spoken like a veteran.
By MIKE HARRIS, AP Sports Writer
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
6-28-2009 @ 6:44PM
boxtop149 said...
this was a joke, NO way they should have won, Nascar needs to get its head out of its butt,,the race should have started earlier!!!! they knew it was a chance of rain!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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6-29-2009 @ 8:25AM
Ang and Gil said...
We have been to several Spring races at Talladega. We go down on a Thursday for the Sat and Sun races. Even being so we would not know to show up at the track an hour or two early. We show up a little before our ticket tells us to. You can't change the time on people. That's just crazy. We don't drive 400+ miles to miss any of it.
6-28-2009 @ 7:39PM
mitch said...
Easy there boxtop thousands of people paid to go see a race at a certain time.If it starts earlier how many people miss it due to travel time.That is alot of money way more than you spent on the twelve pack of beer smokes and cable TV.You cant just change something like that.Not to mention TV schedules.But,hey whatever it takes for your guy to win right.
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6-29-2009 @ 5:48AM
Laura said...
People show up for these races as early as the Friday before they race and others 3 to 4 hours earlier than the race begins. So moving the start time up one hour would not have hurt. Also there were a couple things that could have been cut from the pre-race show so that it could have started an hour early without affecting people's arrival time. (cutting a car in half wasn't really something that would have been missed if they hadn't done it!!)
6-28-2009 @ 7:42PM
sdh4194 said...
even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then. i'm glad i didn't pay money to see a 28th place driver win because of rain.
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6-28-2009 @ 7:59PM
shearyreal said...
Yeah Logano was luck today. But he is the real deal. He has steadily moved up the rankings over the past couple months to 24th place and has done very well with the nationwide car. His first legitimate win is right around the corner. Give the kid some credit.
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6-29-2009 @ 12:14PM
hannah said...
now I think Joey deserved it, he may have gotten some luck but he would have won it any time in the near future
6-28-2009 @ 8:36PM
kevin said...
A win is a win. Congrats to Logano. Wish it would have run longer, Jr was actually running well. I think, like Kyle Busch, Logano has talent. Hopefully it doesn't go to his head and turn a good driver into a moron.
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6-28-2009 @ 8:44PM
OINKJOHNSON2 said...
Well, the fastest car does not always win. The only solution I can think of is to equip them with rain tires, as they do in Formula 1, and let them splash through the puddles. Even then, I doubt that anyone would be satisfied. Gordon deserved the win, but I can recall at least one of his wins came as the result of rain when he did not have the car to win.
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6-29-2009 @ 11:39AM
patgallegher said...
I'm a Gordon fan, but you're right. Pocono, two years ago. Ryan Newman was the rightful winner, but Steve Letarte made a good call to keep Gordon out when the rain was coming. Not the only time, but the most recent.
6-28-2009 @ 8:53PM
Pete said...
Logano took no risk, absolutely ZERO. He could not break the top 20 today, brought out the caution before, and is absolutely no threat to make the chase. Far better and proven talent that could have used the bonus points for their chase push,( Gordan, Johnson, Stewart, Ku Busch) were robbed. Hire a meteorologist and schedule accordingly. Lots of states are nice and dry this time of year.
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6-28-2009 @ 9:10PM
themroptimist said...
TNT sucks. Kyle Petty should be given a huge raise to have to work with the drama queens Weber and Dallenbach!!! And is just me or is there more comercials than racing? I can't wait until TNT is gone and we can actually watch a race in peace without hearing those two yahoo's try to drum up drama and steal the real integrity of the race.
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6-28-2009 @ 10:26PM
Chris said...
my driver is truex i got so pissed when he wreckecd but im happy for logano im glad he won
sucks that gordon got number 2 spot
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6-28-2009 @ 10:39PM
SNOOKY said...
GUTSY?????? For them it was a no brainer , which fits that team perfect. Another looser in victory lane. Where is Ricky Craven when ya need him.
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6-29-2009 @ 6:15AM
karenbnsol said...
Oh...like this NEVER happened before??? Start counting how many others won who "shouldn't" have because of rain. GO JOEY! I'm so happy for you!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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6-29-2009 @ 6:32AM
Doug said...
Same playing field for all the drivers. They all raced in the same conditions and could have roled the dice if they chose.
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6-29-2009 @ 7:37AM
Carl said...
Congrads to Joey logano, another good young driver from the North East. Take the win's any way they come to you. The win was within the rules, and is the same at Nascar or your local dirt tracks. He's not the 1st to win a rain shortened race and won't be the last. And everyone know's he will be winning races at the end of many sunny days.
6-29-2009 @ 7:01AM
ahall378 said...
Congrats to Logano he won by the rules. He and his team did what it took. Wins on NASCAR are always lucky. Lucky, they weren't in a wreck, lucky their crew didn't make a mistake, lucky a mechanical part didn't break. The fastest car rarely wins and with the new cars the differences are caused by tire inflation, track bar, pit crew and a hundred other things. All of the drivers at this level are exceptional. Luck and strategy are as much a part of the sport. Give the young man and his crew a break. They deserve the win because they did what it takes on that day in those circumstances.
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6-29-2009 @ 7:22AM
cminzey said...
Please if Jr or gordon had won everybody would say they had a good plan,If I was Jr and Gordon's team owner those guys would be mowing my lawn after the race they both suck and Jr the most what a waste of life always a brides maid never a bride who does he blame now oh yeah the weather
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6-29-2009 @ 7:29AM
Keith said...
when was the last time any of you whinners drive a car over 80 mph ,,you all are just a bunch of couch potatoes crying in your beer because your boy didnt win
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