Joey Logano makes late moves to win at Darlington

May 8, 2022; Darlington, South Carolina, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver Joey Logano (22) races NASCAR Cup Series driver Ross Chastain (1) during the Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

Joey Logano ran down William Byron and bumped him out of the way as they approached the white flag to win the Goodyear 400 NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday on Throwback Weekend at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, S.C.

On the race’s final restart, Byron stuck low on Logano off Turn 2, with Logano’s Ford scrubbing the wall and turning the lead over to Byron.

However, Logano’s No. 22 Ford caught Byron with two laps to go and shoved Byron’s Chevrolet in Turn 3, loosening him up and sending up the track, which allowed Logano to speed past the No. 24 car.

Logano went on to record his first win of 2022 over Tyler Reddick. Justin Haley, Kevin Harvick and Chase Elliott rounded out the top five in a race that featured nine cautions. Byron wound up in 13th.

Harvick set a Darlington record with his 13th consecutive top-10 finish, breaking a tie with Bill Elliott.

By running the fastest qualifying lap Saturday, Logano secured his 23rd career pole, which was also his first of the season and first at NASCAR’s oldest superspeedway.

He opened the 293-lap race around the 1.366-mile, egg-shaped track by watching Kyle Larson immediately take the lead and seeing the first caution fly after Brad Keselowski spun on Lap 2.

Larson paced the 90-lap first stage, but he slid off Turn 4 while trying to pass underneath Kyle Busch to bring out the third caution period on Lap 54. Larson later retired from the race with a last-place finish in 36th.

Logano found his way back to the front and held off Ross Chastain for his first stage win this season and first at the South Carolina track.

Martin Truex Jr. passed Logano for the lead and led most of the second stage, but Chastain took the lead on Lap 166 when Keselowski wrecked with Kyle Busch, forcing the latter driver’s No. 18 Toyota out of the race.

Chastain’s No. 1 Chevrolet held the point for a Stage 2 win, and he led Truex, Logano, Denny Hamlin and Byron to start the final 99-lap run to the checkers.

But Chastain’s day ended as he wrecked on the restart, and Hamlin positioned his No. 11 Toyota up front — only to be passed by Logano on the next restart.

With 33 laps to go, an eight-car melee occurred when Truex slid back on the restart and started a wreck off Turn 2 from sixth on back.

–Field Level Media

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