Joey Logano
Joey Logano was born in Middletown, Connecticut, United States on May 24th, 1990 and is the Race Car Driver. At the age of 34, Joey Logano biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 34 years old, Joey Logano has this physical status:
Joseph Thomas Logano (born May 24, 1990) nicknamed "Sliced Bread", is an American professional stock car racing driver.
He currently competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, driving the No. 22 Ford Mustang GT for Team Penske, and part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 22 Ford Mustang GT for the same team.
Logano was the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion.
He previously drove the No. 20 Toyota Camry for Joe Gibbs Racing from 2008 to 2012, collecting 2 wins, 16 Top-5 finishes and 41 Top 10 finishes.
Logano's first major NASCAR win came during the Meijer 300 at Kentucky Speedway in just his third start in the 2008 Nationwide Series.
He became the youngest driver to win a Nationwide Series race at 18 years, 21 days old.
The previous youngest was Casey Atwood in 1999 at 18 years, 313 days.
Logano became the youngest winner in Cup Series history when he won the 2009 Lenox Industrial Tools 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway at 19 years, 35 days.
The previous youngest was Kyle Busch in 2005 at 20 years, 125 days.
Logano is now the youngest winner in two of NASCAR's three top divisions.
Logano was also the first NASCAR driver born in the 1990s that has competed in NASCAR's three major divisions.
In 2015, he became the second-youngest Daytona 500 winner behind Trevor Bayne.
Early life
Logano was born in Middletown, Connecticut, the son of Deborah B. and Thomas J. Logano. His father is of Italian ancestry. As a child, he also played ice hockey in addition to racing.
Personal life
Born in Middletown, Connecticut and raised over the river in Portland, Logano moved to Georgia where his father, Tom grew his racing career. As he started his career he earned the nickname “sliced bread” because he won a lot as a young racer. On November 13, 2013, Logano announced his engagement to childhood sweetheart Brittany Baca. He announced, via Twitter, that their wedding date was set for December 2014, during the NASCAR off-season. Logano and Baca were married on December 13, 2014. The couple announced the birth of their first child, a son named Hudson Joseph Logano, in January 2018. Their second child, a son named Jameson Jett Logano, was born on May 7, 2020. Their third child, and first daughter, was born in February 2022. Her name is Emilia Love Logano.
In September 2019, Logano was diagnosed with Alopecia areata, an autoimmune disorder that attacks hair follicles. While the disease does not cause any health risks or physical effects, it does lead to patches of thinning hair or baldness, which Logano has often joked about.
Racing career
Logano began racing in 1996 as a 6-year-old quarter midget racer living in Connecticut. He captured his first Eastern Grand National Championship in the Jr. Stock Car Division in 1997. In 1998, he won the Jr. Honda Division Championship, while in 1999, a Lt. Mod. Mod. The Division Championship is an annual event that takes place in the United States. Logano also won three New England Regional Championships in Sr. Stock, Lt. in 1999. Mod., Lt. B. divisions.
He competed in several variations of Late Model racing.
Logano is "the real deal"; Martin, a veteran nextel Cup Series racer, says Logano is "the best thing"; at the time, Logano was "I am 100% positive"; he can be one of the best NASCAR racers ever raced; I'm optimistic. There's no doubt in mind." Logano was also known as "sliced bread" (as in the best thing since) by two-time Busch Series champion Randy LaJoie.
He competed in one FASCAR Pro Truck Series race at the New Smyrna Speedway in 2005, starting first and finishing second. He competed in the USAR Hooters Pro Cup Series seven times in the Northern Division, winning once at Mansfield, two Southern Division races, and five Championship Series races. He continued to compete in the USAR Hooters Pro Cup Series over the next season. He competed in twelve Southern Division races, winning twice at South Georgia Motorsports Park and USA International Speedway. He appeared in one USAR Hooters Pro Cup Series, Northern Division field championship, and six Championship Series races.
A new NASCAR rule allowed drivers aged 16 and up to participate in the Grand National Division in 2007, allowing Logano to participate in the series for the first time. He started the 2007 Grand National Championship Series with 13 appearances, three poles, ten Top 5's, and ten Top 10's, as well as winning the championship with victories at Greenville-Pickens Speedway, Iowa Speedway, and Adirondack International Speedway. He also started second and won in the No. 2 NASCAR West Series, where he also got his first NASCAR West Series start at Phoenix International Raceway, where he started second and won in the No. 66. Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota is a young guy. Logano won the Toyota All-Star Showdown at Irwindale Speedway on October 20, 2007, leading 87 laps and avoiding Peyton Sellers for the victory.
Logano won the Carolina 500 with Venturini Motorsports on May 4, 2008, in the ARCA RE/MAX Series's return to Rockingham Speedway. Logano made his NASC Craftsman Truck Series debut in the Mountain Dew 250, beginning sixth and placing 26th, finishing fifth. Logano attempted to defend his Toyota All-Star Showdown title won in the 2007 season by racing in the final lap in an unsportsmanlike manner in an attempt to win the contest. Logano was disqualified not only because he was disqualified but also because he had run none of the laps of the competition in zero laps.
Logano made his NASCAR Nationwide Series debut at the Dover International Speedway in 2008. 200.
Logano won his first major NASCAR series race at the 2008 Meijer 300 in only his third appearance, according to Casey Atwood, the previous holder of the achievement. Logano won the Dollar General 300 on July 10, 2009, after she decided not to pit unlike his coworker Kyle Busch, who took four tires with twelve laps to go. The fresh air made it possible to overtake Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch by five car lengths, making it the first time he had won at the racetrack in Chicago. After a late-race victory over teammate Kyle Busch, he won his fifth series at the Kansas Speedway. At the Auto Club Speedway, he won his sixth Nationwide Series victory. Logano won the NASC Worldwide Series race in Nashville in April 2009. He took the Subway Jalapeo 250 at Daytona International Speedway on July 1, 2011, avoiding a last-second crash. Logano made a cameo appearance in the A&E series The Glades' episode "Moonlighting" as himself in mid-2011.
In 2012, he won nine times in the Nationwide Series. After dominating the Trans-Lux Camry, he was crowned champion at Auto Club Speedway. After a push from Kyle Busch and holding off Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Cole Whitt, he won his second race of the year at Talladega Superspeedway. His third victory of the year came on a late start. Points leader Elliott Sadler was ousted by him and carried on to win. After being held back in lapped traffic, Ryan Truex won his fourth round at Dover International Speedway. After losing James Buescher on the final restart, he won his fifth race at Michigan International Speedway. Logano took the lead from Kevin Harvick in pits in August, but he won his first game at Bristol in his career. He started the year off with a complete sweep of the nationwide races at Dover, and he captured his eighth race of the year at Charlotte in October. He took the Nationwide Challenge at Phoenix in November. Logano will win Logano's last race victory in a Joe Gibbs Racing vehicle. The Joe Gibbs Racing No. 0 is the No. 1 in the Joe Gibbs Racing Series. The 2012 NASCAR Nationwide Owners Championship was won by 18 nations around the world, mainly due to Logano's success in the car during the 2012 season.
For the third and fourth time in the Nationwide series, Logano won both the NNS races in 2013 and fourth consecutively. This made him the first driver to win four straight races at Dover in a series, as well as the all-time champion in the Nationwide Series. During a cup series off week in July, he won Dover in addition to his victories at Dover. No. 1 of the Penske No. 1 team. Logano's 22 cars captured the Nationwide Series owners title in 2013, a feat Logano has now three times in his career, first at Penske and twice at JGR. Team Penske's 2013 Nationwide Series owners title was the first for the team.
Kyle Busch won the spring race at the track in Dover, Logano, bringing his four-race winning streak to an end. Logano seemed to be on to win for the fourth time at the track, but Matt Kenseth kept him back for more than 60 laps, leaving Busch unreachable. He was forced to settle for a third-place finish. Logano was leading with four laps to go and was on his way to his first victory of the season, but he was relegated to a 16th-place finish after suffering with a blown tire.
Logano began his 2015 Xfinity Series debut at Atlanta by winning the pole and finishing second. Logano won lane in the Xfinity Series at Phoenix International Raceway in his second race of the season on March 14, 2015. He came off the pole and led 176 of 200 laps. By dominating the competition, he also earned his 2nd career outstanding driver rating. After starting second on April 18, 2015, Logano led every lap of the Drive to Stop Diabetes 300 in Bristol. As a result, he won his second Bristol victory in the series and his third in the series and third in career best driver ratings.
Logano, a team from Brad Keselowski Racing, started on pole, topped 150 of the 258 laps, and won his first Camping World Truck Series race in the Kroger 250 at Martinsville on March 28, 2015. He became the first different driver to win in all three major series, the first since his colleague and truck owner Brad Keselowski did it when he won the UNOH 200 Truck race in Bristol in August 2014. In his seventh career start, he won his first pole and win in the series. Logano's season opener in Daytona was a good start to the 2016 Xfinity Series, finishing second behind Chase Elliott in close second. The Penske No.22 car however lost the speed in the upcoming races, having been only able to finish ninth at Bristol and seventh at Dover, and eighth at Dover. Logano had been in contention for a victory at Talladega up until he was dropped to the 27th position in between these two races. The finishers of third, fifth, and sixth respectively, in Charlotte, Pocono, and Michigan. Logano will have to wait until Watkins Glen wins his first game of the season while a secondary Penske entry number 12 at Watkins Glen, the majority of the race was a close match between Logano and Keselowski, who would later have issues and retire, allowing Logano to win his 26th career title. Logano struggled with a lack of energy, propelling the 22 to a seventh-place finish in Chicagoland. Logano will win the Drive for Cure 300 in Charlotte for his 27th career appearance, defeating a tenacious Kyle Larson for his second and final victory of the year. His Xfinity Series campaign ended in a respectable fourth at Kansas, but he was unable to bring the flagship 22 vehicle to victory lane in 2016.
Logano returned to the Truck Series in 2022, piloting the David Gilliland Racing No. 007. At the Bristol dirt race, 54 people finished in sixth place for their sixth finish.
Joe Gibbs Racing held a press conference on August 25, 2008, announcing that Logano will be the No. cylinder. In the 2009 Sprint Cup Series, 20 Home Depot sponsored Toyota Camry. Logano traded Tony Stewart, who left JGR to drive for his own team, Stewart-Haas Racing. Logano was also a nominee for the 2008 Rookie of the Year award, and he was supposed to start his Sprint Cup journey in the No. 1st. At Richmond, the 02 Home Depot-sponsored vehicle, but did not qualify for the competition.
Logano will run five races in the No. 28 championships on August 28, 2008. 96 cars were built during the 2008 Sprint Cup Series Championships in Chicago. His official debut was at the 2008 Sylvania 300 in New Hampshire on September 14, 2008. By starting the race, he became the first NASCAR racer born in the 1990s to run a Cup Series event. Logano made his first appearance in a Sprint Cup car at Richmond International Raceway in the two-hour Friday session for the Chevy Rock & Roll 400. Qualifying was postponed due to Tropical Storm Hanna. According to a NASCAR rule, the Top 43 drivers in owners points are then scheduled for the race when qualifying is postponed. Logano did not make it to his debut because he was not in the Top 43 in owner points, so he didn't get to that debut.
Logano is the youngest modern-era racer to compete full time in NASCAR's top division (records show drivers as young as 15 competing in NASCAR's top division, but those records will not be honored due to age constraints).
Logano finished 4th in his first Gatorade Duel in 2009, and he would become the youngest driver to start the Daytona 500, but he would crash midway through the race and finish dead last. Logano's first three appearances in the Sprint Cup Series saw three finishers finish in 30th place or worse. Las Vegas was his sixth appearance in the Sprint Cup Series, finishing 13th. Logano finished ninth in his first Top 10 finish at Talladega in April, but he came last in the race and finished ninth; later this month, he led 19 laps late in the season and placed ninth. Logano won the fan vote in the 2009 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, finishing eighth in eighth place.
Logano defeated Lenox Industrial Tools 301 in Loudon, New Hampshire, beating Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart, the youngest Sprint Cup Series champion ever at 19 years, one month, and four days old.
Logano was named official 2009 Sprint Cup Series Raybestos Rookie of the Year on November 22, 2009, beating out other rookies Scott Speed and Max Papis.
Logano received his first Coors Light Pole Award at Bristol Motor Speedway on March 19, 2010. Despite going winless, he scored seven Top 5's and 16 Top 10's en route to a then-best 16th-place finish in the final points standings.
Logano struggled through the 2011 season, with just four Top 5's, six Top 10's, and two pole positions en route to a career-best 24th-place finish in the final points standings.
Greg Zipadelli, the No. 2 in crew, was thrown out of office by crew chief Greg Zipadelli. Stewart-Haas Racing's 20 crew joined the 2011 season to serve as the competition director. Starting with the 2012 season, Jason Ratcliff was named Logano's new crew chief.
Logano won his second Sprint Cup Series race at Pocono Raceway in 2012, beating Mark Martin by four laps to go and leaving off Martin and Tony Stewart. Logano became the first driver to win a race from pole position in 30 races. It was also the first time Logano had won a race that had passed by the scheduled distance (as his 2009 victory was in a rain-shortened event). En route to a 17th-place finish in the final points standings, he earned one other Top 5 and 11 others. He also closed his Nationwide series at Joe Gibbs Racing on a high note by winning a series of nine races in a row.
Following an announcement that Matt Kenseth would drive the No. 905, it was revealed on September 4, 2012 that Logano would abandon Joe Gibbs Racing and head to Penske Racing in 2013. 20 Toyota.
Logano has risen to the No. 1 spot in the World Cup. Penske's 22 Shell/pennzoil-sponsored Ford finishing 17th at Bristol after losing control after dealing with Denny Hamlin. Logano passed Hamlin late in the race, but both teams had trouble; Hamlin finished 23rd; Logano said that his ex teammate intentionally killed him.
Logano was a breakout race at Auto Club Speedway next week, leading 41 laps. Both Hamlin and Logano were involved in a thrilling dogfight on the final laps; on the last lap, both Logano and Hamlin were driving hard side by side down the straightaway, but Kyle Busch slipped past and claimed the win. Hamlin fractured his vertebra in the crash, and Logano was approached by Tony Stewart, who dropped back to 22nd after Logano blocked him on the final restart. Stewart chastised Logano, who responded by throwing a water bottle at him. Logano was ranked in third place in the 3rd place.
Both Penske Racing cars driven by Logano and Keselowski failed pre-race inspection due to a problem with the vehicles' rear-end housings, just before the start of the NRA 500 at Texas Motor Speedway. Logano was compelled to start from the rear of the field because his car wasn't on the starting grid until after the command was released, but he pushed for a fifth-place finish. The infraction was fined by NASCAR three days later. Logano and Keselowski were each docked 25 points in the drivers' championship standings; Logano's crew chief, Todd Gordon, was suspended for six weeks after being fined $100,000 and suspended for six weeks. Both car designer Raymond Fox and team engineer Samuel Stanley were banned for the same length of time. Any of the individuals on Keselowski's staff were also dealt with identical sanctions. Penske Racing released a statement claiming that the organization intended to appeal the fines, but the NASCAR Appeals Panel unanimously upheld the sentences on May 1. Roger Penske, the team's chairman, has announced that he would appeal the decision to NASCAR Chief Appellate Officer John Middlebrook.
Meanwhile, Logano's fifth-place finish at Texas was on a low weekend at Kansas when he collided with a spinning Kyle Busch on lap 105, destroying the front ends of both cars and ending their days. Logano will finish in 39th place, which will relegate him to 39th place in the shortest order. With a third-place finish at Richmond the following week. After 143 laps, Logano finished 35th with an engine failure. He had trouble with his car's handling and ended second, two laps down, at Darlington.
Logano, who raced at Darlington, climbed to finish in the top 11 in a six-race streak, including fifth at Charlotte, seventh at Dover, ninth at Sonoma, 11th at Sonoma, and fourth at Kentucky.
Logano, who was returning to Daytona for the Coke Zero 400, was a good time until he cut a tire and crashed the outside wall on lap 71, leaving him in 40th place. After being involved in a crash early in the season, he claimed his 40th-place finish at New Hampshire the following week.
Logano resurfaced with six straight Top 10 finishes, eighth at Indianapolis and seventh at both Pocono and Watkins Glen, after a two-race streak of poor luck.
Logano won his sixth pole position in NASCAR history, and the fastest since Bill Elliott's qualifying run at Talladega in 1987. He went on to win the Pure Michigan 400, his first victory with Penske Racing. With that victory and two more Top 5's at both Bristol and Atlanta (where he led 78 laps and almost won), he climbed to eighth in the standings for the first time in his career. He struggled with an ill-handling racecar to his 22nd-place finish, but it was good enough to move him to eighth place in the points and his first-ever appearance in the Chase, to Jeff Gordon (who finished eighth). And if he had dropped to 11th, he would have had the second wildcard due to being ahead of Martin Truex Jr. and Ryan Newman in points (Kasey Kahne had already secured the first Wildcard with victories at Bristol and Pocono). Logano was also seeded sixth in the Cup standings after it was reset, thanks to the win.
Logano started his Chase run by qualifying on pole in the GEICO 400 at Chicagoland, with a new track qualifying speed record of 189.414 mph. However, he came in 37th in the championship owing to an engine failure late in the season. At New Hampshire, a 14th-place finish was followed by a 14th-place finish. Logano was back-to-back top-fives at Dover and fourth at Kansas, with a 3rd-place finish at Dover and fourth at Kansas. Three Top 20 finishes were followed by three others — 18th at Talladega and 14th at Martinsville, and 18th at Martinsville — where they were ranked 18th. He had three straight Top ten finishes, third at Texas, ninth at Phoenix, and eighth at Homestead-Miami, leading to his third-place finish and his highest eighth-place finish in the final standings.
Logano finished 11th in the 2014 Daytona 500, followed by a fourth-place finish in Phoenix. At Las Vegas, he won his first pole of the year, finishing fourth in fourth place.
Logano, a Texas boy, won his first victory of the season after leading the most laps (108) and getting a last-lap pass on Jeff Gordon during a green-checkered finish. With this victory, he was able to join the 2014 Chase.
Logano led late and pulled a Ron Bouchard-style move during a shuffle between Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski, and Matt Kenseth in the last nine laps, despite losing by a snailing in his brief career. Logano's first season as a result of multiple career victories marked the victory in 2014.
Logano made his 200th cup series appearance at Kentucky Speedway on June 28 at the age of 24.
Logano was second in second place to Keselowski when he was involved in an accident with Morgan Shepherd's lap-down truck. In an interview, Logano said that Shepherd should not have been able to be on the track running at those high speeds, but that NASCAR confirmed that Shepherd maintained minimum speeds.
Logano won his third game of the season at Bristol in the Irwin Tools Night Race. Keselowski came in second place in the same event, marking Team Penske's second 1–2 finish in the event, the other in the 2008 Daytona 500.
Logano debuted fifth in the Chase. He came in fourth place in the Challenger Round opener at Chicagoland Speedway, advancing him to 3rd in points.
Logano will win in New Hampshire and put him into the Contender Round. On lap 247, he took four tires, while the other front-runners were on older tires, giving Logano the upper hand. He went from 16th to second in 11 laps, which was remarkable. After a green-checkered finish, he took the lead with 27 points and won the race with 27 to go and win the race. With his victory, he climbed to second place in the points standings, just one point behind Keselowski. Penske's third victory in a row and fourth in five races were based on this win.
Logano had signed a multi-year contract extension with Team Penske on September 25, 2014. This was a complete season before his deal came to an end at the end of the 2015 season. Logano's contract with Team Penske runs until at least 2018.
Logano will finish fourth in all three categories of the competition round at Dover, making him the only driver to finish in top five finishes. He would finish second in points in the round.
Logano won at Kansas in the Contender Round to begin. For the first time in his career, he led the way in point standings. With the victory, he became the first driver to advance to the Eliminator Round in the Sprint Cup. Logano finished fourth at Charlotte with a fourth-place finish. This was his fifth straight top-five finish, making him the first Chase driver to open the Chase with five consecutive top-five finishes, beating Juan Pablo Montoya's record of four sets in 2009.
Logano finished 11th after assisting Keselowski in the final resurrection. To advance to the next round of the Chase, Keselowski needed a victory, and he was able to do so in part thanks to Logano.
Logano started as the points leader in the Eliminator Round, beginning with a fifth-place finish at Martinsville. He recovered from pit road tire issues that resulted in a spin-out and finished 12th in Texas. Logano was tied for 1st in points going into the Eliminator round, with a 13-point advantage over the final transfer spot. Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman, and Kevin Harvick will all finish sixth at Phoenix, comfortably progressing to the Championship round.
In the final round, he came in last place out of the final four drivers. Any mistakes made by his pit crew's nefarious results, relegating him to a 16th-place finish.
Logano and his coworker, Keselowski, were both dominant in the 2014 knockout-style qualifying round. Logano had one pole, eight Top 2 starts, and had a chance to finish in the Top ten in 26 of 36 races. In just five of the 36 races, he missed the final round of qualifying, a series record. In 2014, Logano was consistently at the top of the top five most popular statistical groups, including laps led, average finish, average finish, and average driver rating. He was one of just seven drivers to win multiple races in 2014 (the others being Keselowski, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Carl Edwards).
Logano's season started with an incident involving Kevin Harvick during the Sprint Unlimited. Harvick, who doubted a late-race encounter with Logano, exchanged tense words with Logano.
Logano defeated the Daytona 500 last week after Harvick dominated the Daytona 500. Logano was also the second youngest winner of the Daytona 500 (Second only to Trevor Bayne) and earned team owner Roger Penske his second victory in the series, his first appearance since being with Ryan Newman in 2008. He won the pole at Atlanta Motor Speedway and finished in fourth place next week.
He qualified second and led early but he eventually fell to finish 10th after receiving two pit-road speeding penalties. Jeremy started on the front row for the third week in a row and led laps early this week, despite finishing eighth.
Logano started 13th and spent the majority of the day in the Top 5, but he was pushed back into the field after finishing seventh in a controversial late-race pit road infringement; however, he quickly recovered to finish seventh. Logano set the most consecutive finishes on the lead lap with 22 points (extending the record to 24 races) when he finished fourth on the lead lap at Auto Club. Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. held the previous record of 21 people, with 21 each.
He became the 26th driver (after teammate Brad Keselowski) to win in each of the Top 3 series by winning the Kroger 250 from the pole last week, his first appearance in the Truck Series to date. He also won his second Cup pole of the season, led the second-most laps and finished third, after the series. He started sixth, led 19 laps, and finished fourth in Texas.
Logano, Logano, and Keselowski all crashed early, snaping Logano's streak of finishes on the lead lap. Logano won the pole and finished fifth at Richmond. Logano was trapped in a multicar accident on the back straightaway on lap 47 and ended 33rd. After the event, he went from second to fourth in the points standings. Logano did much better at Kansas than he did. For the fourth time, he won the pole for the fourth time and finished fifth.
Logano ran out of fuel while leading the final laps at Pocono in August. Logano, a native of Watkins Glen, started 16th and went on to win the title, but Harvick ran out of fuel before the final two turns. The victory over Logano marked a complete sweep of the weekend after winning the Xfinity series.
Logano finished seventh in the Pure Michigan 400, earning a seventh-place finish. With a victory in the Irwin Tools Night Race in Bristol, he claimed his third victory of the year. He dominated Charlotte, leaping Matt Kenseth by deliberately spinning him out with five laps remaining to win at Kansas and a dramatic victory over Dale Earnhardt Jr. that knocked him out of the Chase by one point. He became Kyle Busch's second driver in 2015 after defeating three consecutive races.
Logano's main car in the race was the Sasso next week. However, Matt Kenseth, who was spinning him out a few weeks earlier, deliberately crashed Logano with fewer than 50 laps to go; a reaction that was met with mixed emotions from drivers but not by the fans. Kenseth was suspended for the next two races and put on probation until December 31.
Logano didn't do well at Texas, cutting a tire and spinning out, winding up 40th. Logano needed a victory in order to advance to the final round after heading to Phoenix. He failed as he placed 3rd and was suspended from the Chase at Phoenix International Raceway after a turbulent finish where Dale Earnhardt Jr. gained the race thanks to a storm in the area. Logano finished fourth in the season finale and sixth in the final point standings.
Logano had a rough start in 2016 compared to 2015. Logano captured his third straight pole at Martinsville, but the rest of the field would be rocky until finishing 11th. Logano recovered from crashes in Kansas and Talladega. Logano won his first Sprint Cup All-Star Race after losing by two laps. After a good final revival, he retained the FireKeepers Casino 400. He won the race from the pole for the second time at Michigan, his second time winning from the pole. Sonoma's third-place finish and fourth place at Daytona were followed by a fourth-place finish.
Logano had an early exit on lap 54 after cutting a right-front tire and finishing 39th. Logano recovered from a third-place finish at New Hampshire and a seventh-place finish at Indianapolis.
Logano was racing Ryan Newman to his outside and Denny Hamlin to his inside when Chase Elliott got to his inside, leapt into Logano, and spit both of them into the wall at Pocono on lap 115. Logano came in 37th place. Logano finished in 11th place at Watkins Glen, 10th place at Bristol and Michigan, fifth place at Darlington, fourth place in New Hampshire, 11th place at Dover, and fifth place at Dover.
Logano's day in the Round of 12, with a sequence of tire blowouts, left him with a 36th-place finish. At Kansas, a third-place finish was followed by a third-place finish. Logano was suspended early because his car was left pit road dragging the jack during the first round of green-flag pit stops, but he went on to win the competition in overtime and clinched a spot in Round 8. After Keselowski's earlier victories at Talladega and Daytona, the victory was the third straight restrictor-plate victory for Team Penske. Logano was guaranteed a spot in the final four at Homestead after a win at Phoenix.
Logano rode 45 laps at Homestead and had a great chance to win his first Cup series championship. Logano revived under newcomer Carl Edwards and Edwards, but the 19 of Edwards turned into the inside wall, resulting in a DNF for the 19 and some injury to the 22. Logano's car was too old to continue any further, and Logano finished fourth in the standings, finishing second in second place after a 30-minute red flag.
Logano had a rough year compared to previous years at Penske. He started the year off right by winning the Advance Auto Parts Clash after sneaking past Brad Keselowski and Denny Hamlin's last lap collision. Logano's 2017 season began with a sixth-place finish in the Daytona 500. Logano collided with Kyle Busch in the Kobalt 400 at Las Vegas, as the two teams battled for a top-five finish on the final lap. Logano came in fourth, while Busch dropped to 22nd after being spun out and onto pit road. Busch confronted Logano on pit road, threatening to punch him as their pit crews became involved. In the ensuing brawl, Busch suffered a bloody forehead, but no one was disciplined for the fight. Logano's tire blew with five laps to bring out the caution when Busch was in contention to win in a strange twist at the upcoming race in Phoenix next week. As a result, Ryan Newman was held out for the final restart and went on to win. Logano made his 300th cup appearance at Richmond. Despite qualifying fifth, he will start from the 37th position due to a transmission change. Logano would slowly progress to the front before winning his second time in Richmond. Logano was the sixth driver to win in his 300th race in his career. Logano's car was discovered to have a rear suspension problem, causing NASCAR to declare his victory a "encumbered" victory; as a result, his win did not entitle him to claim a spot in the playoffs; but it did not encumbered" victory.
Logano came in sixth on points at Kansas on May 13. He had a rough run, going from second in second to mid-pack. Logano suffered with setbacks including a speeding ticket and a punctured tire, which caused him to finish third in his run. Logano was driving his car towards the top of the charts when his brakes broke, causing him to crash Danica Patrick and result in a fiery accident. Aric Almirola was wounded in the attack and airlifted to a local hospital for examination. In a post-race interview, Logano was notably shaken. His hopes of making it to the playoffs vanished straight away. Richmond came in third third place at Michigan and his fourth-place finish at Indianapolis, and he had his best finishes since Richmond finished third.
Logano missed the playoffs by a single spot after finishing second at Richmond after placing second. Logano is the first time he has missed the playoffs since being with Joe Gibbs Racing in 2012. Logano's hopes of a championship ended with his runner-up finish after Darlington, but he was in a must-win situation because Logano was more than 60 points away and points didn't matter anymore to make the playoffs. Matt Kenseth, who barely made the playoffs by just over 100 points over Logano, kept Logano out of the playoffs, reminiscent of their 2015-2016 feud. He had consistent finishes, including his seventh at Chicagoland Speedway and fourth at Talladega. At Homestead-Miami Speedway, he finished the season with a 6th-place finish. In the points standings, he ranked 17th in the season.
Logano's 2018 was a slow but fruitful year. Logano's season began with a second-place finish in the Clash. He topped off his duel with a second-place finish, losing to teammate Ryan Blaney. Logano had his ups and downs at the 2018 Daytona 500, including a tire scratch and a pit penalty, but he bounced back to finish fourth after escaping a wreck with two laps remaining. Kurt Busch won the contest and locked him in the Playoffs at the 2018 GEICO 500.
Logano was quietly and patiently delivering one of his best-ever seasons as the "Big Three" were making all the noise. He had participated in every sport up until the second Daytona marathon, where he was involved in one of Ricky Stenhouse Jr.'s pile-ups. He died last for the second time in his career at Watkins Glen. Logano was fighting for a spot inside the top-five on the first laps when the leaders stacked up and Logano made contact with Kyle Larson's No. 96. 42. The team was forced to withdraw from the competition due to a cracked radiator. The remainder of the regular season was dominated by top-ten finishes. He finished the regular season with his 6th highest point total before the playoffs.
Logano earned a respectable fourth-place finish at Las Vegas, which kicked off the playoffs. Richmond, on the other hand, was a quiet run, but he did finish 14th, a lap down. Charlotte's quiet competition ended in a 10th-place finish and advanced to the next round. He started the Round of 12 by placing third at Dover and fifth at Talladega, and fifth at Talladega. He was the empathetic flag bearer for his team. Logano was the sole Penske driver in the Round of 8 of the Playoffs after teammates Keselowski and Blaney were eliminated in the Kansas playoff race. Logano had a chance to make it to Homestead and win the championship after being in the round of 8. After a tense fight with Martin Truex Jr. over the finish line and secured his spot in the Championship 4, he won the fall Martinsville race. Logano had dominated the event, winning 329 of 500 laps, including his first grandfather clock.
With a 3rd-place finish at Texas, he continued his streak of top-tens for a string of top-tens. Logano had a rough weekend in Phoenix, but he was determined to be the favorite for the championship, crashed a flat tire in the second stage of the competition, ending his career and his sixth-consecutive Top 10 finish, even though he finished fifth, in which he would have won a tiebreaker over Chase Elliott if he had finished fifth.
Logano won at Homestead and became the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion after beating Martin Truex Jr. with a pass on the high side with 12 laps to go as the sun rose and the lights came on.
He had a good season, with 3 wins, 13 top-five finishes, 26 top ten finishes, and an average finish of 10.7.
Logano began the season with a third-place finish in the rain-delayed Clash and made a big jump on Clint Bowyer, who led 41 laps on the final lap and claimed the duel was only leading one lap. He debuted 4th at the Daytona, ranking him as a strong candidate for the championship during the season. Logano went back and forth for the victory all day, including avoiding "The Big One" that took out 21 other drivers, but the Joe Gibbs Racing team came up short of a 1-2-3 finish. Logano had argued with fellow Ford teammate Michael McDowell for failing to give Logano the support he needed for victory. He ranked Daytona second in points and tied for second, behind Denny Hamlin. He had issues with his qualifying laps and started 27th in qualifying at Atlanta. The challenges remained throughout the race. Although he fought for the win late, he suffered from tire issues to finish 23rd.
Logano bounced back from Las Vegas, seeing off a teammate Brad Keselowski for his first victory at the track. Logano's 22nd spring race in Las Vegas, his 22nd Cup victory and the first in a Pennzoil-sponsored No. A 22-car fleet. Logano won with a 10th-place run at Phoenix, as well as a runner-up finish at Fontana.
Logano rode in seven races in Martinsville, his fifth pole appearance in a row, making it his 10th straight season in which he has won a pole. At the start of the season, it was a slow start. He was the first five laps but didn't lead the race again. He started 1st and ended 19th in 19th. It was not the end that the 22 team needed. He was crowned Stage 1 in Texas later this year, but pit lane issues forced him to lose positions and finish 17th. He had a winning car at Bristol, but he came late in the race and restarted a few points from where he started. He came in third, behind Kyle and Kurt's Busch brothers. Having won Stage 2 and placed 2nd at Stage 1, Langley had the fastest car and was chasing Martin Truex Jr. He unfortunately, he didn't have enough time to pass Truex and finished second. He had another good qualifying session at Talladega. He began fifth and led lap 182. He was leading the revival, but there was no match for Chase Elliott, Bowman, and rookie Ryan Preece, who finished fourth.
Logano was ranked 4th at Dover after qualifying as the fourth best in the world. He won Stage 1 ahead of teammate Keselowski. He came in seventh place in the Top Ten Finishers group, extending his streak of Top-ten finishes to four. Despite being downplayed since Richmond, he ranks second, five points behind leader Kyle Busch. Logano finished 20th at Kansas, but he didn't pass the pre-race exam and started 30th. Logano had already advanced to ten places in the first ten laps. He finished 10th in the first stage and finished 15th, 1 lap down, but Kyle Busch, the points leader after Dover, placed 30th, and as a result, Logano took the lead in points.
Logano made his way into the playoffs with his two victories. He survived a tire barrier crash to finish 10th and advance to the Round of 12. Logano was forced to park himself in the garage until the first laps to ensure that a busted rear axle was fixed. Denny Hamlin chastised him for racing the lead cars extremely difficult, as he recovered 24 laps down. On turn four, Hamlin collided with Logano, squeezing Logano into the outside wall, prompting him to drop a tire and spin out two laps later. Despite the injuries, Logano finished eighth. Logano and Hamlin talked about the incident before Logano slapped Hamlin's right shoulder, igniting a fight between the two teams. Dave Nichols Jr., the No. 2 in NASCAR, has been suspended. During the altercation, the 22 team's tire technician was suspended for one race for pulling Hamlin down to the ground during the altercation. Logano's Title defense ended after being eliminated in the Round of 8 at Phoenix, with Hamlin and eventual Champion Kyle Busch ultimately beating him out for the remaining Championship 4 spots by winning the contest and finishing second respectively. Logano finished 5th in the race and the final points standings, the highest in points among non-Championship 4 drivers. Logano was also in every single race in 2019, with Ty Dillon as the only two to do so.
Logano began the 2020 season by defeating Duel 1 of the Blue Vacations Duels, with Paul Wolfe as his crew chief. Due to a collision with Ross Chastain, he finished 26th at the Daytona 500. Logano would find himself in victory lane at Phoenix a week later after winning at Las Vegas. Logano led the way in a scramble against Chase Elliott in the final laps until both competitors crashed into the wall, leaving Logano's teammate Brad Keselowski to win the race while Logano finished 21st. Logano's two victories earned him a spot in the 2020 Playoffs. After beating Kevin Harvick at Kansas, he locked himself in the Championship 4 for the fourth time. He ran first for all of stage 1 in the Phoenix Raceway championship run. He came in third place in the class and third in the Championship 4.
Logano was led by teammate Keselowski during a fiery crash on the final lap of the 2021 Daytona 500. Logano finished 12th, though McDowell won the race, not winning. He will win the inaugural Bristol Dirt race later this year.
Logano was turned into a bolt by Hamlin and clipped in the left-rear by Stenhouse Jr., throwing his car into a halt and his car into a tumble while his car was rolled backward and Logano was run upside down before his car rolled back over. He was uninjured but expressed dissatisfaction with NASCAR's safety issues and the package in his interview, prompting Ryan Newman's injury at the Daytona 500 last year.
Logano's victory in Bristol put him into the playoffs. He made it all the way to the Round of 8 before being disqualified after Martinsville. In the points standings, he ranked eighth in the standings this season.
Logano began the 2022 Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum in 2022. He won his first game of the season at Darlington by accelerating William Byron to the wall with two laps to go, enraging both Byron and the audience. Logano won his second game of the season at the inaugural Gateway race. He won at Las Vegas to make the Championship 4 During the playoffs.
Motorsports career results
(Bold): The key (Bold) (Bold – Pole position was awarded by qualifying time. Italics – pole position earned by points standings or practice time. Most laps led. (All laps lead) – The results were not determined.
* Season is still in progress. Ineligible for series points
(Bold) (Bold – Pole position won by qualifying time) – (Bold) (Bold – Key) (Bold – Byedle. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. (Most laps led) – Irma is the most popular.)