Joey Logano’s 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season in review

Joey Logano had a down year with Team Penske in the NASCAR Cup Series. Here, you can check out Logano’s 2023 season in review!

[autotag]Joey Logano[/autotag] had a disappointing season with Team Penske and it is the only way to describe it. Logano ended the year with one win, 11 top-5 finishes, and 17 top-10 finishes. Unfortunately for the driver of the No. 22 car, he crashed at Bristol Motor Speedway in the Round of 16 and failed to defend his NASCAR Cup Series championship from 2022.

Logano won his only race at Atlanta Motor Speedway and had a 12th-place finish in the point standings, which is his worst since missing the playoffs during the 2017 NASCAR season. Logano ended the campaign with 308 laps led (10th best) and a 14.9 average finishing position (11th best); however, where did it all go wrong in 2023?

The Team Penske driver simply never showed the speed he needed to compete for a Cup Series championship. Logano led over 20 or more laps in only four races during the 2023 NASCAR season and almost half of his laps led came in his victory at Atlanta. Simply put, it was a very uncommon season for the driver of the No. 22 car.

Logano needs to figure out a way to create some momentum after his teammate Ryan Blaney won the 2023 Cup Series title. The narrative of Logano only making the Championship 4 in even years remains strong but he needs to improve his performances. If not, that streak will come to an abrupt end next year.

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Logano and Harvick enjoying move from feud to friendship

Joey Logano could barely get out the words without laughing. It’s the last day of August and NASCAR Cup Series playoff media day, and Logano has gone from stop to stop fulfilling his obligations. During one, Logano was given the task of asking the …

Joey Logano could barely get out the words without laughing.

It’s the last day of August and NASCAR Cup Series playoff media day, and Logano has gone from stop to stop fulfilling his obligations. During one, Logano was given the task of asking the retiring Kevin Harvick anything he wanted.

Logano went all in.

“So, I wrote down, ‘In Pocono, if we were to fight, how bad was I going to kick your ass?’” Logano said, referring to their 2010 feud. “We can joke about those moments now. We joked about the firesuit thing this time (around) in Pocono. So, it’s fun to have that relationship with Kevin.”

Harvick also found great amusement in the interaction, which he revealed after being informed Logano made it known what he wrote down. But Harvick also revealed he had a quick-witted answer for Logano.

“I told him, ‘You know the first thing I would have done is gone straight for your knees because that’s how they told us to break big people down,’” Harvick said. “From the bottom up.”

There were plenty more of these stories and memories for Harvick during his final season. At every turn, as Harvick’s been honored from racetrack to racetrack and reflected on his 23-year career, the industry has done the same. Harvick’s peers were either praising his accomplishments and legacy or sharing personal anecdotes.

Logano and Harvick famously “butted heads” in 2010, but their mutual anger was soon turned into a positive, opening the door to a better relationship. Motorsport Images

It’s only fair and humorous to remember the feuds and rivalries that Harvick had along the way. His run-in with Logano wasn’t the first or the last that Harvick had, but it was one of the most memorable.

Pocono Raceway in early June 2010 was the site of Logano’s now infamous “his wife [DeLana] wears the firesuit in the family” jab. Logano made the statement in his television interview, frustrated after Harvick spun him while racing for fifth place with two laps to go.

Harvick turned around and made shirts that sold for charity, which were then brought back this year. They were a popular item, and in the series annual visit to Pocono, Harvick presented Logano and his foundation with a $12,000 donation from the sale of those shirts. And the Loganos received their own shirts, which read, “I wear the firesuit in this family.”

“I’m glad we figured it all out because here’s the thing — sometimes you grow up in front of everybody,” Logano said. “Yeah, Kevin wrecked me that day, and I was mad about it, and I probably shouldn’t have brought his wife into the middle of it or made it that personal. But the fact they made a joke out of it … I still regret saying it, but at least some good things came out of it.

“They raised a bunch of money for their foundation, and they paid it forward to us. So that’s pretty special.”

Another clash between the two occurred in Daytona in 2015. Logano and Harvick traded shots coming down pit road — and then words outside their cars — after what was then known as the Sprint Unlimited. A disagreement over bump drafting etiquette was the cause.

Those are just two moments in time. Today, Logano and Harvick have nothing but great things to say about each other and have gone from foes to friends.

“Honestly, I know exactly when it happened,” Logano said of the change in their relationship. “It was when he started driving a Ford. Ford brought us together. How about that? The love of Mustangs.”

Harvick wasn’t as sure as Logano as to when the ice started to thaw but said it’s better for everyone to be a good human, put the past in the past, and get to know the people you spend 40 weeks a year competing (and living alongside) at the racetrack.

“That’s what’s been so much fun about this year and really, Joey and I have had a good relationship over the past several years,” Harvick said. “Who would have thought we’d go back and rehash that moment, right? To go back and rehash that moment and make something fun out of it, and show that we are human and we do move on, and you still can have relationships with people that you may have been enemies with or not liked at that particular time especially when you get to know them.

“Joey is one of those people that he’s all NASCAR and he’s all racer. He wants this sport to be great, and it’s just getting to know people and moving on and maturing. That’s one of those moments.”

So, why did the personalities of Logano and Harvick clash early on in their careers?

“They clashed because there are a lot of similarities there,” Logano said. “I’m not saying I’m Kevin Harvick or he’s me in any way — we both do our thing in our own way, but there are some similarities of the competitiveness and how it gets to that point. It’s just, eventually, we butted heads.

“Now, I think we respect that. We both have kids now, and life has changed a little bit. And now, we joke about it. Now it’s funny.”

And there were even more laughs from Logano when asked if he ever thought he and Harvick would get to this point — or have a relationship at all.

“Nope,” he said. “Nope. Never thought that I would get to the point where I’d even talk to him, and now I get along with Kevin as good as anybody else on the racetrack. Maybe better.”

Logano turning playoff elimination into development mode for 2024

Joey Logano’s visit to the media center Saturday at Charlotte Motor Speedway must have felt odd. Charlotte marks the second elimination race of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, which Logano was knocked out of a few weeks ago. It was the first time in …

Joey Logano’s visit to the media center Saturday at Charlotte Motor Speedway must have felt odd.

Charlotte marks the second elimination race of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, which Logano was knocked out of a few weeks ago. It was the first time in the elimination era that Logano and the No. 22 team didn’t advance past the first round. He has either been a Round of 8 driver or a championship contender in the finale.

The 2023 season hasn’t been kind to the reigning series champion. Being excluded from the hunt early in the postseason is not a feeling Logano is familiar with experiencing.

“Yeah, it burns, it stings, it’s frustrating,” he said. “But it is what it is. We’ve just been fighting away trying to make our cars better for next year at this point and trying to get as many points as we can. We can still finish up to fifth (in the championship standings), so there is still racing to be done and stuff that makes it worth it. But it hurts knowing you don’t have a chance to win the big trophy, which is always the goal when we start the season.”

Logano has one top-10 finish in the last five races — a fifth-place at Kansas Speedway. And yet the 14 top-10 finishes Logano has on the season is the fourth-most in the series (William Byron leads all drivers with 17).

The bad days, however, have been too much to overcome for Logano. It has been a down season for Ford with aerodynamic deficiencies that have hindered its teams, particularly on the downforce-sensitive intermediate tracks.

Logano earned a postseason berth with a victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the spring. He has not won since.

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The team has since begun thinking and working outside the box. Having the freedom to experiment or go down different paths to see what does or doesn’t work is the silver lining of being eliminated from the postseason.

“I can’t say it’s really worked yet, but we’re trying different things or at least answering questions that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to answer,” Logano said. “We’ll swing at it and try things that are out of our comfort zone. I think that part’s good, and maybe we’ll hit on something that helps us. If not, we got what we got.”

With the diverse set of racetracks still in the postseason, one would think Logano’s team will have a good notebook from their experiments. The problem is how quickly setups evolve in the series, and how each weekend requires something different.

“Each road course is different these days,” Logano said. “But really, what we need to make the most difference on now is not only on the road courses but the speedways, and Phoenix in particular as well. I think those places we can keep working on.”

Logano qualified seventh for Sunday’s race at Charlotte.

Ford will roll out an updated Mustang next season, which will coincide with a new production model. It’s great timing for Ford race teams, as the update could help their competitive pitfalls.

“I’ve seen some details on it; it looks cool,” Logano said of next season’s race car. “As long as it’s as fast as it looks, we’ll be all right.

“There are a lot of talks throughout our place and all of Ford teams, I’m sure. Hopefully we made the right decisions. We know which way wasn’t the right way, so we should know what way is the right way now.”

Logano’s title defense over after Bristol pileup

Joey Logano’s NASCAR Cup Series title defense is over after three races. A multi-car crash on lap 262 of Saturday night’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway ended his night. Logano piled in when Corey LaJoie spun on the backstretch, hit the inside wall, …

Joey Logano’s NASCAR Cup Series title defense is over after three races. A multi-car crash on lap 262 of Saturday night’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway ended his night.

Logano piled in when Corey LaJoie spun on the backstretch, hit the inside wall, and came back across the racetrack. But he had already been struggling with his No. 22 Team Penske Ford Mustang and was off the lead lap.

“I knew my situation and what I needed to do, but it’s Bristol, and there’s not really many things you do differently depending on your scenario,” Logano said. “There’s nothing I could have done there in that wreck. It’s just a product of being back there, and the way we raced or anything like that didn’t affect that. The only thing that affected that is we were back there, so that’s it.”

Logano entered Bristol only 12 points above the NASCAR Cup Series playoff grid cutline. He missed advancing by four points after finishing 34th, while Bubba Wallace, who earned the final spot in the next round, finished 14th.

In the three-race round, Logano’s average finish was 17th. A late caution at Kansas Speedway allowed the team to make a strategy call to stay on out for track position, which earned Logano a fifth-place finish after running 15th. It was his best finish of the round.

“Inconsistent, not fast enough, not scoring stage points,” Logano said of the season. “When you don’t score stage points that just says you’re not fast enough. We’ve been able to manufacture finishes like we did last week – Paul [Wolfe] does a great job of giving me a chance to finish good.

“If this was a few years ago and there wasn’t stage racing, we’d be sitting in a lot better shape because we would figure out a way to close races. But we don’t score the points during the race because we’re just not fast enough.”

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Logano did not earn stage points in three of the last five races (including Bristol). His stage point total through Bristol is 135.

A lone victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the spring earned Logano his postseason berth. However, Logano and his team have not been as dominant as shown in previous years, with 260 laps led through 29 races and five DNFs.

It’s been a season of struggle for Ford teams, particularly on high-speed, downforce racetracks. Logano felt optimistic his team was heading in the right direction as the postseason approached, but it wasn’t enough.

“I haven’t really felt like we’ve made any big gains that we need to and unfortunately, it seems like it’s at every track,” Logano said of the uphill battle. “Typically, you may say, ‘Oh, we’re off on a mile-and-a-half, but our short tracks are okay, or your road courses are okay.’ It just seems like we’re off everywhere right now, so we’ll see what happens here … and if we get knocked out, it gives us a few races to swing big and try to figure it out for next year.”

Joey Logano believes the NASCAR Cup Series has ‘too many road courses’

Team Penske driver Joey Logano believes the NASCAR Cup Series goes to “too many road courses” and labeled his preferred amount of tracks.

NASCAR just wrapped up its major road course stretch of the season at Watkins Glen International and there are several things to take away from it. One major takeaway is that NASCAR needs to fix the road course package before the start of the 2024 season. This stems from the lack of passing at Watkins Glen, which gave a very predictable finishing order.

If that doesn’t take place, the other suggestion is to remove some road courses from the schedule as the oval tracks have been better with the NextGen car. In fact, defending NASCAR Cup Series champion [autotag]Joey Logano[/autotag] believes this should be the path that the sport takes in a recent showing on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

“I think we have too many road courses if you ask me,” Logano said. “The one thing I thought is that if there is not enough cautions and the race is kinda like it was at Watkins Glen, I’m like, ‘No one is gonna want to go to them and we’ll go back to running more oval races like we should.’ My opinion!”

When asked about the perfect amount of road courses on the Cup Series schedule, Logano listed off three tracks: Sonoma, Watkins Glen, and the Chicago Street Course. The first two tracks have been in the sport for a long time; however, the Team Penske driver believes Chicago is a victory for everyone involved.

If the drivers get their way, the 2024 NASCAR schedule may not have as many road courses as some would have imagined. The easiest solution is to fix the road course package moving forward, which is the hope for several people.

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Logano facing a familiar task as the playoffs loom

A week away from the start of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, and the defending champion is hardly a thought. Joey Logano is that driver. He’s currently 13th in the championship standings with three stage wins and one race victory (spring Atlanta), …

A week away from the start of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, and the defending champion is hardly a thought.

Joey Logano is that driver. He’s currently 13th in the championship standings with three stage wins and one race victory (spring Atlanta), and finished the most recent race at Watkins Glen in 10th place.

“We’re not where we want to be, obviously,” Logano told RACER of his team with the postseason looming. “I don’t think we’re that far off. It doesn’t take much these days to get there and the playoffs change everything.

“We’ve been through it so many times where who looks like the favorite starting the playoffs and who wins it is usually different more times than not.”

When the regular season concludes on Saturday night at Daytona, the drivers in the top 10 in the championship standings will be awarded additional playoff points. Logano would need to leapfrog Tyler Reddick, Kyle Busch, and Kevin Harvick to have that opportunity. The eight playoff points Logano does have put him 10th on the playoff grid before the field is reseeded.

Logano entered the postseason last year seeded second and he had 25 playoff points to fall back on.

“We just have to go through the playoffs like we typically know how,” he said. “We’ve done it for years. Paul’s [Wolfe] done it for years. I’ve done it for years. We know how to just attack each round and just stay alive. If you stay alive long enough, the tide eventually turns and things change and all of a sudden, you’re in the right spot.

“As long as you’re still in the game, you have a chance. If you get knocked out early, it doesn’t even matter after that. We just have to stay in the game through the first couple of rounds and see what we’ve got.”

It is of no mind to Logano that the deck looks stacked against him with the stage points he’ll take in the postseason with him. Or that he likely isn’t on the list of favorites considering the consistent week-to-week performance of others like Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin and William Byron. Those are the top three drivers in the championship standings and have combined 10 victories.

Logano and crew chief Paul Wolfe have plenty of experience winning in the playoff format. Nigel Kinrade/Motorsport Images

The lowest seed a driver has won the championship from is seventh, which was done by Kevin Harvick (2014) and Logano (2018).

Logano is going to lean on the experience of winning two championships in the elimination format, as well as the experience that the No. 22 team has understanding the mindset they need to be in as the postseason shapes up.

“We’ve been through it,” Logano said. “In 2018, we weren’t the favorites. I’d argue 2022, by the numbers, we were close to the favorites but not quite maybe. We haven’t really been the lead (guy) into any of them and we’ve been in the hunt plenty of times. So, if we just do what we have to do, we’ll be fine.”

In the manufacturer’s performance pecking order, Ford is third and the struggles the company has had on downforce tracks are clear. They haven’t shied away from them either – it’s been a long year of trying to hit on every detail that will close the gap.

But for Logano, the gains have only done so much because a Ford team still needs to be absolutely perfect to be victorious. Ford went until the last weekend of July before picking up its third victory, which was the start of Chris Buescher and Michael McDowell giving Ford a three-race winning streak at Richmond Raceway, Michigan International Speedway and the Indianapolis road course.

Yet, Logano won’t say things have turned around in the Ford camp.

“I’m still skeptical for a few reasons,” he said. “I think Richmond masked a lot of our weaknesses and if I look at Michigan, the 19 (Truex) was the fastest car, and Buescher did a good job in both of those races. That team executed two perfect races to put themselves at the front and ultimately win both of them. So, the 17 team should get a lot of credit for that.

“Last week, McDowell is a good road racer, back against the wall type of situation, definitely brought a lot of speed which really no one else was able to.

“Until you see all of us up there at the same time, I’d say we’re not quite there yet. But it’s good to see that there is potential if we hit everything just right and we’re absolutely perfect, we can have a chance.”

And all Logano ever needs is a chance – as he will with another playoff appearance – to try and make something happen.

Lack of Cup stage breaks bringing unexpected physical challenges

Brad Keselowski went the entire race on the Indianapolis road course without touching his water bottle. Austin Cindric had to physically pull his arm back straight after climbing out of the car. Ross Chastain saw some of his fellow competitors in …

Brad Keselowski went the entire race on the Indianapolis road course without touching his water bottle. Austin Cindric had to physically pull his arm back straight after climbing out of the car. Ross Chastain saw some of his fellow competitors in much worse shape than he was on pit road after the checker.

NASCAR eliminated stage breaks during road course races this season in hopes of putting strategy back into the equation. It was a request of many within the industry who said road courses had become too predictable.

There is also the driver variable — without stage breaks, drivers lost two opportunities to catch their breath and reset. It’s the first time in seven years they’ve competed without breaks.

“Oh yeah, it’s a lot more challenging when you don’t have a break,” Keselowski said. “Your heart rate never gets the chance to drop. I went the whole race last weekend without drinking a sip of water because [I] couldn’t. There was no time to do it. It’s really easy to get dehydrated, and there’s fatigue that’s associated with that [which made it a] really grueling race. I expect something very similar [at Watkins Glen Sunday], and we’ll have to react and adapt accordingly.”

Indianapolis was the fourth road course race of six on the Cup Series schedule. There was only one natural caution during the race, which came on lap two. The race went 77 green flag laps until the end.

“Indy was definitely a different physical challenge, especially with how hot it was outside,” Cindric said. “For me, I get stuck inside the car. That’s my biggest physical challenge – I’m a big guy in a little car. My [left] arm never left the same position for how long that race was, so I had to get out of the car and pull my arm straight.

“Other than that, it’s what you train for, it’s what you’re supposed to be prepared for. I think we’ve had four very different road courses as far as stage breaks versus no stage breaks or whatever else. I think you’ll see a different result for that play at each track that we go to.”

A green flag run of 77 straight laps reaffirmed to Chastain the need to keep in a grind and keep pushing to be better physically and mentally. He also used the opportunity to have a race within a race last weekend.

“We didn’t have the speed to go run with the front group, but I also was better than a lot and I had 6s in front with a few laps to go and 6s behind,” he said. “I was just in my own little area, and it was a personal decision to try to catch that next group. I felt there was more speed in the car, and if I messed up, spun out, well, I’d probably only lose one or two spots and what the heck, let’s go for it. I caught up to them but wasn’t able to pass them.

“I felt good in the car, and getting out on pit road [I saw] that was not the case for everybody. There were some guys that were worn out. Proud of our processes that are making me stronger. I’m not the biggest guy, but I’m race fit, and I think there’s a lot to be said for that.”

Watkins Glen (Sunday, 3pm ET, USA) is the fifth of six road course races on the Cup Series schedule. Indianapolis and Watkins Glen are the only back-to-back ones on the schedule.

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Joey Logano still doesn’t have an opinion on having stage breaks versus not. As far as the physical toll on the driver, the two-time series champion hasn’t noticed a difference. What he specifically doesn’t like is when a caution comes out near the end of the stage, which extends the time under yellow.

“I’m kind of a fan of just a re-rack and let them go again, and you know what, if it puts the opportunity to run strategy and stay out and win a race versus guys flipping the stages, so be it,” Logano said. “That’s part of the race. Everyone says how it’s not authentic, it’s a manufactured caution. Well, everyone knows it’s going to be there. It’s still a race. We all know it’s going to be there, we can create a strategy around it.

“I didn’t understand why we did it in the first place; still don’t understand it, but it’s OK either way. I just drive the car.”

Ryan Blaney also doesn’t mind either way. A race with a stage break brings out the caution when the stage concludes with the top 10 drivers crossing the start/finish line, but without, it’s just a designated stage end lap with the field continuing to compete.

“I think a lot of people that watched the races didn’t like the stage breaks and then, when we did away with them, they didn’t like that it went green the whole time,” Blaney said. “It’s one of those things [where] you can’t please everyone. That was a tough race last week, honestly. It was hot running the whole race. That’s a tough racetrack, so [I] kind of bore down through it.

“You can have that, especially at that place where there’s a lot of runoffs and you can kind of spin and get going again. Here (at Watkins Glen), it’s a little bit tougher, I think, of having no cautions because there’s not as much run off. … I don’t really mind either way, but that was a long one last week.”

Sonoma is the race that stands out for Kyle Busch — where he felt the lack of cautions the most. On that day, June 11, there were two natural cautions on laps 51 and 93.

“Sonoma was a little long feeling but not too terrible,” Busch said. “Last weekend I only really ran half the race — my second half of the race was way off pace, so throw me out on that one. I heard Austin (Dillon) got a little bit smoked last week, though, so not sure if his [cool suit] didn’t work or what, but I think it’s fine. It’s OK.

“It lends itself to the strategy game. It lends itself to not being so hokey-pokey with guys running over each other, so I feel like there’s going to be pluses and minuses to it. But that’s the same to be said about oval racing as well…”

Circuit of The Americas on March 26 had eight natural cautions. The final four all came within the final 12 laps.

The inaugural Chicago street course on July 2 featured wet weather and single-file restarts. There were nine natural cautions.

“It’s just more physically demanding, for sure, and wrapping your head around it mentally took an adjustment,” Kyle Larson said. “I remember at COTA, I kind of forgot that we don’t have a caution and I’m racing really hard, and you’re getting your heart rate up and pushing to the end of that stage where typically you can relax. As soon as I crossed the start-finish line, I was like, ‘Oh [expletive] we still have to keep going?’ That was mentally tough trying to manage your race and your body. Indy was the same thing, but I was more ready to keep going. It was hot, but I enjoyed it. It’s more of a pure race.

“I know it’s probably super boring on TV with no cautions, but I think the strategy and the race playing out how it should is what racing is all about, especially road course racing. With the old way of how it was, it wasn’t ever fair. I felt like teams that ran around 20th or 30th could stay out and get stage points and take them from teams who were really fast. Now if your car is fast, you stay up front, you get the points you deserve and get a good finish.”

NASCAR’s towing operation ‘just doesn’t make any sense’ to Logano

Joey Logano wants NASCAR to find a better way of getting a car back to pit road when they are stuck on four flat tires as he was Sunday at Pocono Raceway. “It just doesn’t make any sense,” Logano said. “We’ve been fighting these cars for two years …

Joey Logano wants NASCAR to find a better way of getting a car back to pit road when they are stuck on four flat tires as he was Sunday at Pocono Raceway.

“It just doesn’t make any sense,” Logano said. “We’ve been fighting these cars for two years now with four flat tires when a car spins out and you get this long, horrible ride back. It’s rough. Your head is bouncing around in there.

“It’s stupid. It’s just really dumb that we can’t just put four tires on a truck.”

The incident happened on lap 36 when the field went into Turn 1 to start the second stage. Logano, who had won the first stage, was cycled to mid-pack as the field was split on strategy and the No. 22 team pitted after the stage. Logano was tagged from behind when he tried to take a run through the center.

He spun to the outside wall, hitting on the driver’s side. In the process, all four tires went flat and the safety crews initially tried to push Logano around the track. The Next Gen car, however, becomes stuck on the track with four flat tires, and Logano needed to be towed back to pit road and in the process, lost multiple laps.

It was when his Ford Mustang was drug from Turn 1 to pit road that Logano felt the most damage was done. He was forced to exit the race after not meeting the minimum speed.

“If we can put four tires on one of (the tow trucks) with a jack and an impact that can just change the tires and let us come back, instead of dragging the car two miles around the racetrack… It’s just stupid,” Logano said. “It’s not fun for anybody — the poor guy driving the tow truck, the poor driver getting his head knocked around for two miles, and the poor team that’s got to fix the underbodies of these things after they get dragged around…

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“It’s dumb. I don’t know. It is what it is, but it seems like it has a very easy fix. I’ve brought this up before, but I guess it doesn’t matter.”

Logano finished 35th, the second driver out of the race. He retired a few laps after Daniel Suarez was forced to do so after also being caught up in the same incident.

Even if Logano was able to get four new tires on his car to drive back to pit road, he doesn’t believe he would have stayed in the race. While being drug around didn’t help, the damage was already done from hitting the wall. Getting Logano off the track quicker would have saved the field from wasting laps and Logano getting rocked around in the car.

“Here’s the deal — I talked to someone today and they (the track crew) see a race car once a year,” Logano said. “That’s not fair to the people working out there on the racetrack that they don’t have a lot of experience. They may be doing it for years, so don’t put it in the context that these guys don’t know what they’re doing, but the experience level of doing something every single week versus seeing a race car once a year is tough.

“That’s really hard and we’re all in a position out there while I’m sitting there watching cars go by me with a chance of getting a good finish being left as I’m trying to communicate to somebody and they can’t hear me, or listen, or they’re trying to figure out what to do. They don’t know that you can’t push a car with four flat tires on it. The car doesn’t steer. I’m trying to tell them to hook it up and they kept trying to push me. We wasted a lap-and-a-half before they tried to hook it. There’s a better way to do it.”

ESPN confirms SRX announcing team

SRX and ESPN have unveiled the broadcast team for the 2023 Superstar Racing Experience (SRX) season. Allen Bestwick and Matt Yocum will return as lead announcer and pit reporter respectively, with a number of current and former drivers set to serve …

SRX and ESPN have unveiled the broadcast team for the 2023 Superstar Racing Experience (SRX) season. Allen Bestwick and Matt Yocum will return as lead announcer and pit reporter respectively, with a number of current and former drivers set to serve as analysts. SRX will air on six consecutive Thursday nights at 9pm ET on ESPN and the ESPN App, bringing back the iconic “ESPN Thursday Night Thunder” branding.

Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Joey Logano will serve as SRX’s lead analyst for three races — Stafford Motor Speedway on July 13, Berlin Raceway on August 3 and Eldora Speedway on August 10. Conor Daly will once again serve as a driver analyst for the series for two races — Motor Mile on July 27 and Lucas Oil on August 17. Retired NASCAR legend Darrell Waltrip will make his SRX commentary debut as an analyst at Thunder Road on July 20.

“We are thrilled to be on ESPN for season 3 of SRX and build off all of the success and growth we have had over the first two seasons,” said Pam Miller, SRX executive producer. “We are really excited about our broadcast team for 2023. We are thrilled to have Allen and Matt back with SRX, and couldn’t be more excited to have Joey Logano in the booth for three races this summer. Conor Daly will continue to provide the viewers unique insights given his experiencing racing across both NASCAR and IndyCar, and we are fired up to welcome Darrell Waltrip to the series and can’t wait for the fans to experience his passion, knowledge and love for racing.”

Additional talent may be announced before the start of the season.

2023 SRX schedule & broadcast teams (all times Eastern) 

Date 

Track 

Time 

Network 

July 13 

Stafford Motor Speedway (Stafford Springs, CT) 

Allen Bestwick, Matt Yocum, Joey Logano 

9 p.m. 

ESPN 

July 20 

Thunder Road Speedbowl (Barre, VT) 

Allen Bestwick, Matt Yocum, Darrell Waltrip 

9 p.m. 

ESPN 

July 27 

Motor Mile Speedway (Radford, VA) 

Allen Bestwick, Matt Yocum, Conor Daly 

9 p.m. 

ESPN 

Aug. 3 

Berlin Raceway (Grand Rapids, MI) 

Allen Bestwick, Matt Yocum, Joey Logano 

9 p.m. 

ESPN 

Aug. 10 

Eldora Speedway (New Weston, OH) 

Allen Bestwick, Matt Yocum, Joey Logano 

9 p.m. 

ESPN 

Aug. 17 

Lucas Oil Speedway (Wheatland, MO) 

Allen Bestwick, Matt Yocum, Conor Daly 

9 p.m. 

ESPN 

 

NASCAR drivers – We complain a lot, but the sky is not falling

If someone outside the NASCAR bubble wasn’t watching the racing but formed an opinion by social media chatter, they might think the sky is falling. Bad racing. Unsafe cars. NASCAR officials not listening to drivers. A lack of respect in the garage. …

If someone outside the NASCAR bubble wasn’t watching the racing but formed an opinion by social media chatter, they might think the sky is falling.

Bad racing. Unsafe cars. NASCAR officials not listening to drivers. A lack of respect in the garage. Penalties. The list goes on. It seems there is a lot of negativity floating around the current state of the sport.

But is there really?

“We have a way of making things sound a lot worse than they really are, and that’s just life in general,” Joey Logano said Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway. “People complain more than they give compliments, all day long. You turn on SiriusXM, what does every fan that calls in (say)? They don’t usually give compliments, do they? They usually come in and complain, and that’s just the nature of our society in general. We have negative attitudes.”

The drivers fan those flames, and they admit that.

Logano praised the communication and work between the garage and NASCAR to make things better — particularly the racing. The biggest talking point after last weekend’s race at Martinsville Speedway was the continued lackluster racing on short tracks, and drivers were blunt in their assessment of not being able to pass.

Those thoughts aren’t wrong. NASCAR and its drivers both agree something needs to be done, but it’s not as easy to pick one solution to make it better. Logano pointed out that sometimes drivers get out of the car and immediately start talking…and they give the wrong answers.

“We give you our feelings in the moment, but I think when you take a step back and look at where we are as a sport, as a whole, and the racing that we have, it isn’t that bad,” the two-time Cup Series champion said. “Yeah, we have cars that are very equally matched right now. Does that make it harder to pass? Yes. Obviously. Do we want more tire fall off? Obviously, we do.

“We’re trying to work on that. Goodyear has brought a tire that’s too much; it doesn’t fall off. That’s what you want on your street car but not on the race car. The good thing is everyone’s working together.”

Kevin Harvick said there are times he throws things out in the media just to see what happens. There are other drivers who use the media to get their thoughts out there before talking to NASCAR because it’s easier to say it in front of a microphone and hope it helps the cause.

“I would definitely tell you that the communication is better than it’s ever been,” Harvick said. “We’ve had productive meetings, and I think everybody wants to be able to have the cars do different things and have a different style of racing. The racing was good last year because everyone knew nothing about the car. You didn’t know how to drive it; you didn’t know how to work on it. Now it’s all kind of migrated to the same things – a car with all the same suppliers to everyone and eventually you migrate to a spot that everybody is running a very similar speed.

“It needs to be different. I don’t know what that means. But I can tell you, there is more dialogue over the course of the year than there has been in the past. I don’t know what that dialogue is — I’m not on the team side, but I am on the driver side — and I know the dialogue and conversations we have with NASCAR is probably more than I’ve probably had in 15 years.

“So I think some of those comments are a little bit … you can be as involved, and know as much as you want to know, (if) you want to take the time. I would urge the drivers that don’t feel like they know to go sit with NASCAR folks and ask any questions they want because they have been very open with any of the information you want to ask for.”

Harvick was openly critical of NASCAR last year — saying they didn’t listen to drivers when they express concerns and calling the Next Gen parts “crappy” after fire issues.

But the 2014 series champion said Saturday a new car is always going to bring new problems He also chuckled and said “no” when asked if it’s as bad as the comments would suggest, especially given how fans latch onto negative driver comments.

“I think we’ve made a lot of progress in a lot of things,” Harvick said. “From a safety side of things, we’ve done a lot of work inside the car to put the drivers in a more knowledgeable situation with the inspections and knowing what they’re sitting in and all the process that we went through during the winter. You wouldn’t believe the information we have with mouthpieces and driver biometrics. There’s a lot there.

“Yeah, we’d like the car to crash differently, and I think there is still work to do there, but we’re doing a lot of things inside the car to put ourselves in a better position to make up for the deficit of what the car does, and how it crashes.

“I think the cycle of information and news, it always cycles to the bad (being) more popular. The good stories never really get told as much as the bad stories. We have a lot of good things. Yeah, everyone wants the short-track racing to be better, but if you didn’t watch the race and looked at the metrics, they don’t look that much different.”

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William Byron doesn’t believe the racing is as bad as people think, but there aren’t as many incidents like blown tires and crashes occurring — things that used to fill out the race.

“It could always be better,” Byron said of the sport. “Could always be more consistent. So (we need to) get back to consistency between weeks with decisions and calls. That’s the biggest thing. I think they’ve been trying really hard, though.

“I think it’s just trying to get back to focusing on the best teams and drivers. When I watch other sports, that’s what I want to see.”

Erik Jones pointed out that there are 38 drivers qualifying and living their dream at Talladega Superspeedway and hundreds of individuals inside the sport who come to the racetrack each week. To him, that’s a good sign for where the sport is at.

“Obviously, that’s not everything, but I think there are a lot of things in the works with TV stuff going on right now that’ll be a big direction for us going forward over the next 10 years,” Jones said. “I don’t know anything about it, but I think things are OK. I’ve been getting to do what I love for seven years now and have another couple of years on the contract, so I think things are not as bad as people think sometimes.”

It’s also a different world now. While problems in the sport have always existed, Jones said it’s a more opinionated world, and everyone has a voice, good or bad, and there are more ways to get that voice heard.

“It’s easy to direct a narrative, and obviously we (the drivers) have a lot of direction on the narrative ourselves,” said Jones. “That directs a lot of the narrative, and that’s where fans get their influence from a lot of times. They also have their own opinions, so it’s not all ours, but if their favorite guy gets out and says, ‘Man, this sucks. The racing is terrible. You can’t pass. I don’t know what we’re doing,’ fans are going to say the same thing.

“You have to be honest as a driver, but fans are going to run off that momentum too. We’re paid complainers. All of us are going to complain unless we’re winning every race, so there’s always going to be something wrong.”

That doesn’t mean anyone wants the drivers to stop sharing their personalities and opinions — Harvick certainly doesn’t.

“I’m glad that everybody is giving their opinion,” he said. “I would never tell anybody to not voice their opinion because I think the opinions are what shape our future, and being able to have those opinions and have them talked about. You have to listen to everybody, and when there is somebody who doesn’t like the opinion, we have a group now who will go talk to that individual and say, ‘Hey, tell us more. We want to understand where you’re coming from,’ and it gives them a way to have a voice aside from in (the media center).

“You don’t have to do it in here. Yeah, this is effective if you can’t get very far, but there are other ways to get things accomplished in our garage today.”

NASCAR and the drivers continue to hold meetings during race weekends as needed. Those started last fall at the Charlotte Roval after weeks of drivers publicly complaining there needed to be better communication across the industry, as well updates on safety changes.

As an owner and a driver, Brad Keselowski found the “sky is falling” narrative interesting.

“We have a natural tendency as an industry, because of how small and tight-knit we are, (to) talk about things in such a manner that you could certainly come away with the perception that the sky is falling,” he said. “Whether that’s real or not…in most cases I think it’s probably not real.

“But it’s OK to have those conversations; we should continue to have conversations about where we are and where we want to be and healthy debates. That’s a very good thing for the sport in some ways. But we have to be careful to not get caught up too much in our own press clippings.”

There are significant business affairs facing NASCAR executives as the sport goes forward. Not only is the conversation ongoing around making the racing better, but the media rights package ends after 2024, as does the current charter agreement.

“I think the big question mark, really, for the health of the sport is revolving around the next TV deal,” Keselowski explained. That’s the biggest needle mover. And the relationship with the owners and NASCAR and if it can get to a solid footing to lead the industry for the next 10 years. I think there’s tremendous potential. Whether we can recognize that or not, we’re going to find out here pretty soon. Maybe I’m an optimist, but I’m caught up with the tremendous potential this sport has.”