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Joey Logano wins with fastest car at Atlanta — but not without clutch last-lap move

David Yeazell/David Yeazell-USA TODAY Sports

Joey Logano captured the win that has so long eluded him.

The driver of the No. 22 car and the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series champion earned his first win at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday. He’s a driver who has won virtually everything — but Sunday’s win still represented something special, he said.

“It’s so special to win at Atlanta for me,” Logano told the Fox broadcast, right before making a deserved trip to Victory Lane. “So many memories of me and my dad racing right here on the quarter-mile. This is a full-circle (moment) for us. So many memories grittin’ over there in the (US) Legends car, and racing, and having a (good) time — and dreaming of going straight at the quarter-mile and going onto the big track.

“That was always the dream. And to finally win here means so much to me personally.”

Logano had the fastest car on Sunday. He started on the pole, earned a Stage 1 win and could’ve just as easily taken the second stage. But the win still required a pass on Brad Keselowski on the final lap on the high side — a battle between two of the best superspeedway drivers in the Cup Series.

“This thing, this was an animal,” Logano said of his No. 22 car. “It was very, very fast and was able to lead a ton of laps, and race really hard there at the end, get a good push from the 20 (Christopher Bell) to clear myself, and then enough of a push to get all the way to the end. So huge victory. Nice to get one early in the season.”

Keselowski finished second. Bell finished third. Corey LaJoie finished fourth.

The first two stages on Sunday resembled a famous Henry David Thoreau quote. It wasn’t “simplify, simplify, simplify,” though — it was “single file, single file, single file.” Team Penske dominated early. Logano won the first stage, and his teammate, Austin Cindric, won the second.

Fords were fast in qualifying and were fast Sunday early on — and for the longest time, those Ford cars went unchallenged.

But that all changed in Stage 3.

The biggest splash came on Lap 190, when Kevin Harvick was running out front when Ross Chastain never touched him but got close enough to somehow jar the No. 4 car loose — and that created a wreck that took out a bunch of the field. Harvick later called the incident “weird” and “unfortunate.”

Then came Lap 208, when Aric Almirola saw a tire blow out. That caused the No. 10 car to lose control and hit Kyle Larson, totaling Larson’s No. 5 car and ending Larson’s day. The 2020 Cup champion gave a Groundhog Day-style interview after emerging from the infield care center — using a word he has used a lot the last three weeks: “frustrated.”

And then came 50 clean laps. And then came the thrilling end.

And then came Logano making celebratory spins at the start-finish line, his father giving him a big bear hug — a dream of his coming true.

A few more observations

Sunday’s race saw 20 lead changes and 13 different leaders. Logano led 140 laps. There were also only five cautions for 34 laps — a huge departure from the two caution-cluttered races fans saw on Saturday.

Keselowski told reporters on Saturday that he has been encouraged all year by his team’s performance, even if those performances didn’t yield wins. Sunday produced another great run. The one-time Cup Series champion is still looking for his first elusive win since becoming a part-owner at RFK Racing.

Official results from NASCAR Cup Race: Logano wins

Post-race inspection has been complete, per NASCAR. No issues. The results below are official.

POS

CAR

DRIVER

DELTA

LAST LAP

BEST SPEED

1

22

Joey Logano

--

30.043

185.847

2

6

Brad Keselowski

0.193

30.426

186.503

3

20

Christopher Bell

0.194

30.301

185.102

4

7

Corey LaJoie

0.297

30.278

188.251

5

45

Tyler Reddick

0.299

30.287

186.284

6

11

Denny Hamlin

0.39

30.277

186.059

7

12

Ryan Blaney

0.399

30.248

185.915

8

43

Erik Jones

0.489

29.875

185.959

9

54

Ty Gibbs #

0.557

30.361

188.232

10

8

Kyle Busch

0.575

30.304

187.045

11

2

Austin Cindric

0.583

30.356

185.965

12

42

Noah Gragson #

0.7

30.361

186.09

13

1

Ross Chastain

0.726

30.253

188.725

14

48

Alex Bowman

0.735

30.387

187.919

15

38

Todd Gilliland

0.804

30.357

186.717

16

16

AJ Allmendinger

0.832

30.284

188.636

17

47

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

0.893

30.296

188.2

18

9

Josh Berry(i)

0.925

30.098

187.665

19

19

Martin Truex Jr.

0.975

30.295

187.114

20

3

Austin Dillon

1.069

30.157

186.134

21

34

Michael McDowell

1.158

30.185

186.616

22

31

Justin Haley

1.351

30.29

186.103

23

77

Ty Dillon

1.488

30.182

186.209

24

14

Chase Briscoe

-1

31.59

186.391

25

51

Cody Ware

-2

31.806

186.265

26

15

JJ Yeley(i)

-2

31.888

185.362

27

23

Bubba Wallace

-5

32.61

185.524

28

41

Ryan Preece

-16

33.03

185.102

29

99

Daniel Suarez

-47

56.501

187.114

30

10

Aric Almirola

-52

30.385

186.34

31

5

Kyle Larson

-52

30.358

186.554

32

24

William Byron

-68

114.376

186.184

33

4

Kevin Harvick

-70

107.746

186.516

34

21

Harrison Burton

-70

526.534

185.548

35

17

Chris Buescher

-71

30.142

187.399

36

78

BJ McLeod

-71

29.826

185.878