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Co-Administrator
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: The flatlands...Where dirt is for farming, clay is for racin' and asphalt is for gettin there!!!
Posts: 7,451
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Logano's first Nationwide Series victory adds to the pressure
By Lee Montgomery - Associate Editor Tuesday, June 17, 2008 Pressure is nothing new to Joey Logano, NASCAR’s newest winner – and the youngest winner ever in the Nationwide Series. Logano, who won the Meijer 300 at Kentucky Speedway last week at age 18 years, 21 days, has been under immense expectations ever since Mark Martin started talking about him long before he could legally drive the streets of the United States. And as Logano continued to win along his journey to NASCAR, the pressure built. Is he really as good as he seems? Can he win when he gets to the national series level? “He’s had a lot of pressure, more than I’ve ever seen,” said Debbie Logano, his mom. “Now, everyone one can sit back and believe Mark Martin.” But there’s always more pressure. Now that he’s won in the Nationwide Series, can he win again? Can he win when he gets to Sprint Cup? Is he better than his Joe Gibbs Racing teammates? When will he win a Cup championship? “It’s something that I’ve gotten used to,” Logano said in Kentucky, not long after he won Saturday night. “Since I was 14 running [American Speed Association], I’ve always been under a microscope. ‘You can’t do this. You can’t do that.’ I’m kind of used to that pressure. That part is not really new to me. I’d feel weird if it wasn’t like that.” One way to deal with the pressure would be to believe you are above it. In other words, you start to believe you are better than you actually are. Is that a danger with Logano? After all, he’s been told since he was old enough to think for himself that he was the next Jeff Gordon, the next Tony Stewart. Not going to happen, his mother said. What’s going to prevent it from happening? “Me,” Debbie said. She wasn’t kidding. “But I don’t have to worry about that whatsoever,” Debbie said. Why not? His family says Logano is too grounded, even at such a young age. “Everybody says, ‘Just keep him the way he is,’” said his father, Tom. “That kid ain’t changing. He is who is, and he enjoys who he is. He has no reason to change. “He truly enjoys life. He’s very much grounded. He just has fun. He’s just Joey. Everyone that knows him just knows him as Joey.” “Just Joey” was posing for picture after picture in victory lane at Kentucky as sponsor representatives from various companies stepped in and out of position. But Logano stopped and wondered if his mom and dad and his sister Danielle could make sure they shared the spotlight with him. “I heard him say, ‘We haven’t taken a picture with my family yet,’” Debbie said. “He knows family.” But don’t Gibbs Cup drivers Stewart, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch also know family? Of course, but that hasn’t kept the three from getting embroiled in one controversy after another, it seems. Fans see enlarged ego as a problem with the trio, and whether it is true, perception is often reality. Will fans see Logano as arrogant? Even Steve de Souza, the general manager of JGR’s ultra-successful Nationwide Series operations, admits that the ego of a Cup driver can become inflated. But it won’t happen to Logano, de Souza said. “Obviously, when they get to Cup, things seem to change sometimes,” de Souza said. “But he’s grown up in a very social atmosphere. Since he’s been real small, he’s been familiar with being around adults. I think he’s going to have a good balance and temperament. “Going forward, I think he’s going to be a champion, and I think he’s going to be a great champion.” Logano's first Nationwide Series victory adds to the pressure - Nationwide Series | SceneDaily.com - NASCAR News
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