I hope you enjoy reading this blog. The contents are the property of Becca and Becca's Denny Hamlin Blog. It is intended for the private use of it's readers. I DO NOT give permission, written or implied, to anyone to use anything pertained in this site, in part or in whole for any reason. I also DO NOT have conversations in person or online with anyone for any reason about this blog, its subject or the sport of NASCAR.
Becca ~ Becca's Denny Hamlin Blog

Showing posts with label Joey Logano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joey Logano. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

2012 NASCAR Media Week - Joe Gibbs Racing

Coach Joe Gibbs addresses the media while son, JD Gibbs, looks on

Denny Hamlin takes questions from the media

NASCAR Media Week at JGR

New Crew Chief for the #11 Fed Ex Toyota and Denny Hamlin, Darian Grubb, takes questions from the Media

2012 NASCAR Media Week at JGR

Denny Hamlin

JGR's stable Joey Logano, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin

JD Gibbs fields media questions while Dad, Joe Gibbs, looks on

Saturday, March 7, 2009

The Joe Gibbs Racing Qualifying Report

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series – Atlanta 500

Date: March 6, 2009
Event: Kobalt 500 (Race 4 of 36)
Series: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway (1.54 Mile quad-oval)
Pole Winner: Mark Martin of Hendrick Motorsports (29.64 seconds at 187.045)

JGR Lineup:
Denny Hamlin, No. 11 FedEx Ground Toyota (Starts 6th – 29.78 seconds at 186.165 mph)
Kyle Busch, No. 18 M&Ms Toyota (Starts 9th - 29.82 seconds at 185.891 mph)
Joey Logano, No. 20 Home Depot Toyota (Starts 42nd – 30.47 seconds at 181.938 mph)

Denny Hamlin, driver of the No. 11 FedEx Ground Toyota will lead Joe Gibbs Racing’s three-car contingent to the green flag in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Atlanta Motor Speedway after posting the sixth-best qualifying effort tonight of 29.78 seconds.

"It was a little better,” said Hamlin. “We don't typically qualify very well, so it's a good change for us."

Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 18 M&Ms Toyota was first onto the track tonight and took one lap at 29.82 seconds which held up as the ninth best effort.

"We've struggled since we unloaded and we just didn't hit it right,” said Busch. “It was loose over the bumps and tight off of (turn) four - just not a great lap really."

Joey Logano, driver of the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota qualified 42nd with a lap of 30.47 seconds. This is Logano’s first start at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

“I’m just really upset with myself,” said Logano. “The car bottomed out real bad. It’s frustrating, but we’ll work on the car in practice tomorrow and try to make it better.”

Mark Martin earned the pole with a lap of 29.64 seconds. Kurt Busch, Jamie McMurray, Juan Pablo Montoya, and Greg Biffle round out the top-five qualifiers.

The Kobalt 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Atlanta, GA begins Sunday, March 8 at 2 PM ET with live, high-definition coverage provided by FOX beginning with its pre-race show at 1:30 PM. The race will also be broadcast live on SIRIUS Satellite Radio Channel 128.
JoeGibbsRacing.com

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

APRIL 30: BIG NIGHT AT SOUTHSIDE SPEEDWAY!!

* * * April 30 * * * Southside Speedway is pleased to announce it will host The Denny Hamlin Foundation Night on Thursday, April 30.

Drivers will include: TONY STEWART, DENNY HAMLIN, KYLE BUSCH, JOEY LOGANO and CURTIS MARKHAM. They will be racing in the Late Model Sportsman Division, along with our own local weekly drivers. Details about this event, such as ticket prices and sale dates, will be announced as they become available. Sign up for the Speedway website's email list to keep up-to-date on this and other events at the Toughest Short Track In The South!
(Note: Drivers, Dates and Times are always subject to change)

Visit www.southsidespeedway.com for more information, to sign up for email updates and for pictures from last year's event.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Joe Gibbs Racing NNS Crew Chiefs Looking Forward To Season

Two Joe Gibbs Racing Nationwide Series crew chiefs suspended last year for tampering with a NASCAR test are back on the job and hoping to put their troubles behind them.

Dave Rogers and Jason Ratcliff got back to work Thursday at Auto Club Speedway in California after 11-race suspensions for attempting to manipulate an engine horsepower test last August.

Their teams carried on well without them at the track. Rogers’ No. 20 team went on to win the series owners title, while Ratcliff’s No. 18 team won five of its last 10 races and is taking aim at both the owners and the drivers title as Kyle Busch will run the entire season for the team.

One of those wins came with Busch at Auto Club Speedway, and even though he wasn’t there, Ratcliff felt as if he was part of it.

“Anytime we’re successful, we all feel like we’re a part of it whether we were at the race track or not,” Ratcliff said Thursday at the track. “There’s a lot of guys on this team that stepped up and took new responsibilities last year and did a really great job.

“We’re that much of a stronger race team today than we were a year ago. We had some guys who had to dig a little deeper and go out of their comfort zone to do things. We’ve got a better race team for it.” Neither crew chief participated in JGR’s preseason media day, and only Rogers had talked about the punishment when he attended the Nationwide Series banquet last November. They return to the spotlight this week.

“Life is back to normal now,” Rogers said Thursday. “I’m ready to move on and have fun this year. … Just being with my guys, this is my second family – we hang out together whether we’re racing or playing. “To have to load the truck and watch these guys go without me is very disheartening.” Rogers and Ratcliff were among seven JGR crewmen suspended following the August race at Michigan.

After that event, NASCAR took the cars to test their engine horsepower, and JGR’s team had attached a washer to the throttle after the race so it wouldn’t generate top horsepower. The Toyota teams were angry that NASCAR had recently changed the rules that they felt unfairly punished the Toyota teams for running well. NASCAR lifted their indefinite suspensions prior to the season, and then JGR imposed an additional one-race suspension for the season-opening race at Daytona.

Both crew chiefs obviously want to put the incident behind them. “I think everybody knows that it didn’t have anything to do with [performance] on the race track,” Ratcliff said. “The reason we’re successful is because we have a hard-working group and have great equipment and great drivers.

“That deal that happened was not something that gave us a competitive advantage. I don’t feel like we have anything to prove. We just want to get back out there and race and do what we enjoy and let that be gone and create some new memories and have some new success and move on, have a good season.”

Ratcliff believes his No. 18 team is ready to compete for the title with Busch as the driver. “If you look back, this group has for the most part been together for four or five years,” Ratcliff said. “We’ve run with some different drivers, we’ve run some rookie drivers, we’ve run some limited deals. [We now] have the opportunity to run 35 races with one driver – and not only one driver, but in my opinion the best driver on the circuit right now.”

With the strong team, Busch is considered one of the favorites to win the Nationwide title. “It’s not going to be easy,” Ratcliff said. “If we can pick up where we left off last season, I would say we’re definitely a strong contender. … I would hope that we’re at least in the top three.”

Rogers will have multiple drivers in his No. 20 car – Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin and Brad Coleman. He hopes to win a second consecutive owners title, but he knows that Ratcliff’s team will be the top priority. “We do everything the same at our shop,” Rogers said.

“Typically, we have two of everything so neither one of us has to go without. Occasionally, we will get in a jam where there would be a preferred part. “Last year, we would get it. Obviously, at JGR the 18 cars get it. But [team owner] Joe [Gibbs] and [team President] J.D. [Gibbs] do a great job making sure both teams have the resources they need.”

The crew chiefs were welcomed back by their competitors with crewmen from other teams coming by to say hello. “You have a lot of hard-nosed competitors in this garage area,” Rogers said. “At the end of the day, we all care for one another. I’ve had a lot of people give a lot of support. “I’ve moved on. You can’t worry about yesterday. You just worry about today and tomorrow.”

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Farm Bureau Insurance Launches Racing Website

Farm Bureau Insurance Racing recently launched a new website,
www.farmbureauinsuranceracing.com

The site is especially for all fans of Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano and Joe Gibbs Racing. The launch of the innovative racing website correlates with the sponsorship of the Farm Bureau Insurance Racing Toyota Camry and Joe Gibbs Racing in the 2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

This new interactive, easy-to-navigate website is dedicated to providing NASCAR fans with the latest driver information, team news, race updates, schedules and standings.

FarmBureauInsuranceRacing.com is the ultimate fan destination, packed with an abundance of information related to Farm Bureau Insurance Racing and Joe Gibbs Racing.

Farm Bureau Insurance Racing website features “New to the Crew,” reality-type webisodes illustrating what it takes to be a member of the Joe Gibbs Racing pit-crew in humorous, yet insightful, segments. Additionally, NASCAR enthusiasts can browse the Fan Zone to find information for all race fans, from the new spectator to the avid race follower.

Other features of FarmBureauInsuranceRacing.com include custom, printable color sheets for the little fans that can be found in the Kids Korner. In addition, the website is the perfect location to purchase the latest Farm Bureau Insurance Racing apparel and merchandise. Fans can also sign up to receive the Farm Bureau Insurance Racing Newsletter. The newsletter will follow Farm Bureau Insurance Racing as it seeks victory in the 2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

The Farm Bureau Insurance race team makes its Sprint Cup Series debut in May with Denny Hamlin driving the #11 Farm Bureau Insurance Toyota Camry at the Southern 500 on the Darlington Raceway. Later in the year, Farm Bureau Insurance will be seen as the #20 Toyota Camry driven by Joey Logano and the #02 Toyota Camry driven by a third driver that is yet to be named.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Farm Bureau Insurance To Sponsor JGR For 6 Races in 2009

One of my favorite sponsors and paint schemes for the Joe Gibbs Racing guys in the Nationwide Series has been Farm Bureau Insurance. Farm Bureau Insurance Racing is scheduled to run six Sprint Cup races 2009 with Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin and a driver yet to be determined. The six races scheduled include:

Darlington in May with #11-Hamlin

Atlanta in Sept. with #11-Hamlin

Lowe's Motor Speedway in Oct, with #20-Logano

Martinsville in Oct in the #02-Driver TBA

Texas in Nov in the #02-Driver TBA

Homestead in Nov in the #02-Driver TBA

The 2009 Sprint Cup Series schedule has been set, and Farm Bureau Insurance Racing is the lead sponsor for six of the races. And like the rest of our Farm Bureau Insurance Racing fans out there, we’re all ready for race day.

Here’s what we know: 2009 marks the inaugural race year for the newest addition of the Farm Bureau Insurance Racing team - car #02 (also developed by Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota Camry). But, as you will see, with this addition comes something of a mystery.

Denny Hamlin will chew up the track in the first two races of the season in the #11 car at Darlington on May 9th and Atlanta Motor Speedway on September 6th.

Then, in the #20 car, Joey Logano will take the wheel in the Bank of America 500 at Lowe’s Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, on October 17th.

However, the driver for the #02 car for the rest of the racing season -Martinsville Speedway on October 25th, Texas Motor Speedway on November 8th and Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 22nd-is still being determined.

Naturally, our enthusiasm and excitement about who will drive the #02 car is getting the best of us. While it is purely speculative at this point, even some of our Farm Bureau Insurance Racing fans have begun to entertain some theories and questions.

Q: Will Hamlin and Logano simply share the duties, trading off driving the #02?

Q: Will Kyle Busch-who achieved a stunning 1st place win in Texas in the last race of 2008-slide into the #02?

Q: Will Marc Davis-who was recently signed to Joe Gibbs Racing-become the driver for the #02 Farm Bureau Insurance Racing car?


We, of course, don’t yet know but we found the theory regarding Marc Davis to be of interest. Marc Davis is Joe Gibbs Racing’s latest driving prospect. Davis, an 18-year-old African-American from Silver Spring, Maryland, caught the attention of a number of people with his strong showing in the 2006 Limited Late Model and Late Model races at Hickory Motor Speedway in Hickory, North Carolina.

After 2006, Davis moved up to the NASCAR Camping World Series East in 2007, and he continued to race at Camping World Series East in 2008, along with select events in the ARCA/REMAX Series. Davis became only the second African-American driver to win at Hickory Motor Speedway, an accomplishment first secured in April 2004 by former Joe Gibbs Racing development driver Chris Bristol.

In his own performance, Marc Davis racked up six victories in his rookie season, along with six poles, 17 Top 5 finishes and 20 Top 10. When Davis appeared in the 13-race Camping World East races, Davis showed five Top 5 finishes and seven Top 10 finishes. Like Joey Logano, despite his youth, Davis comes to Joe Gibbs Racing with over 10 years of racing experience, and could very well be a strong candidate for the #02 car in 2009.

I have just learned that Marc Davis plans to make his Sprint Cup debut in his family owned #15 Toyota at Infineon Raceway in June.
Courtesy Farm Bureau Insurance PR

Monday, December 22, 2008

The Best And Worst of 2008

The 2008 NASCAR Season has had its fair share of award-winning moments. It has also had a few that I personally would like to forget. So as I was writing out my Christmas cards and checking my list to Santa one last time to be sure I told everyone on my list just what I wanted, I thought I’d take a minute to recall some of 2008s best and worst moments.


Best:
10. Tony Stewart Forms His Own Team - While Smoke’s departure from Joe Gibbs Racing is quite sad, the idea of him owning his own team is quite a good thing for the sport. For once, a driver was thinking past his own career and took control of his destiny. Stewart nabbed fellow Hoosier Ryan Newman away from Penske Racing, returned to his Chevy roots and adopted his former boss’s work ethic and practices. While I question his decision to join forces with Gene Haas, I do commend Stewart for his vision and wish him the very best of luck with his new venture.


9. Kyle Busch Donates $100,000 To Help Sam Ard - After tying Sam Ard for 10 victories in the Nationwide Series this season, NASCAR’s resident bad boy donated $100,000 towards helping the ailing Ard to aid in making his every day life a bit easier. The moment left me in tears. For all the criticism Busch has drawn from fans, competitors and the media, this moment shows that Rowdy is very human and has a good heart. To Kyle it was nothing major, but to Sam Ard and his wife it was priceless. Racking up 21 victories falls short to the act of kindness that Kyle Busch showed to one of the sport’s finest. Say what you want about the Candy Man, you can’t deny that he is a selfless, caring man who deserves fewer boos and more applause.

8. Reed Sorenson Signs To Drive # 10 GEM Ride- Finally Reed Sorenson will be seen for the true talent that he is. At Ganassi Racing, he was the poster boy for wasted talent. His true abilities have never been realized and he has been overlooked since his 2006 Rookie season. He has been the third in line for equipment, personnel and time, but now that he is joining Gillette Evernham Motorsports, Sorenson will finally get first class equipment and the finest crew members and the attention he deserves. Sometimes drivers get what is due them and Reed Sorenson certainly deserves his chance in the spotlight. I can’t wait to see him shine.

7. David Stremme Gets Sprint Cup Ride - After getting the boot from his full time NEXTEL Cup ride at Ganassi Racing, Stremme was sent back to the Nationwide Series and Rusty Wallace Inc.’s # 64 car. While Stremme was successful there and a great mentor to teammate Steve Wallace, it was clear that Stremme still deserved a ride in the premier ranks. Well, with the decision to go to newly formed Stewart Haas Racing, Ryan Newman paved the way for Stremme’s return to Sprint Cup racing and Penske South’s # 12 Dodge. Patience is definitely a virtue and one that David Stremme proved pays off in a very big way. Welcome back to Sprint Cup David Stremme, you have been greatly missed.

6. Yates Racing Operates Without Full Time Sponsorship - The fact that the once thriving Yates team got to the point that it could not secure sponsorship for its two cars is not a high point. But the fact that both Travis Kvapil and David Gilliland were able to run the full 2008 season and finish in the Top 35 in points with limited funds shows just how talented these two guys are and that while things have changed since Robert Yates’ retirement from the sport, they will be back and better than ever. And with Paul Menard coming on board for 2009, the future looks bright. To Yates Racing and it’s never say never attitude and proving that sponsorship comes with persistence and talent, I must give due props.

5. Joey Logano Makes His Long-Awaited NASCAR Debut - Sliced Bread had been touted as the next best racecar driver. When Logano turned 18 on May 24th, he was finally old enough to enter the big leagues and what he did in his debut season was nothing short of spectacular. He won his first pole award in just his second start in the series and captured his first victory in just his third start. He has taken NASCAR by storm and the heir apparent to the two-time championship winning Home Depot #20 Toyota only promises to get better. For making NASCAR exciting and lighting it up with his angelic smile, a giant Thank You to Joey Logano. Welcome to NASCAR Sliced Bread. We’ve been waiting for you.

4. Carl Edwards vs. Kevin Harvick - Following a crash that effected Kevin Harvick’s finish that was clearly Carl Edward’s fault, Harvick retaliated in the media by calling Edwards a pansy. Apparently the well muscled Edwards didn’t appreciate being thrown under the bus, so he left a note on Harvick’s plane to accentuate the point. The fight that followed in the garage area was spectacular. There was no clear winner but seeing Harvick in a choke hold will forever be one of my favorite moments of 2008. Note to self: Don’t call Carl Edwards a pansy unless you want to find yourself in a death grip.

3. Sam Hornish Jr Assists Ryan Newman Back To Pit Road - After spinning out and struggling to get restarted, Ryan Newman was stranded on the race track. Then came teammate Sam Hornish Jr, who thinking not of himself but of his fellow driver, got behind Newman and pushed him to pit lane. It was the ultimate act of selflessness and sportsmanship and simply left me humbled. If only more men took a page from his book perhaps this sport would be quite different. Sam Hornish Jr, a gentleman and a total class act.

2. Kyle Busch Antagonizes Junior Nation - After causing Dale Earnhardt Jr’s early demise from a race, Busch drew the ire of every member of Junior Nation. From then on, when he won a race, and that was often, he did his now signature bow to the crowd just to infuriate them further. For his guts and class, I salute Kyle Busch. It takes a real man to stand up to the sport’s most popular driver and his legion of followers. Kyle Busch, my hero.



1. Brad Keselowski vs. Denny Hamlin at Lowe’s - During an on-track dispute between Hamlin and Keselowski, Keselowski drove up underneath Hamlin and raised his wheels up off the track. Hamlin then retaliated by hitting the #88 car in the left front fender, causing slight damage. This infuriated team owner Dale Earnhardt Jr, who took it upon himself to retaliate and hit Hamlin from behind. But it was the action after the checkered flag waved that makes this my favorite moment of 2008. Keselowski’s entire crew swarmed Hamlin the second he climbed out of the car and the brawl was classic. When interviewed, Hamlin said that he would have preferred to talk to Brad face to face instead of dealing with the crew. Instead of coming off like a hero, the NAVY driver looked more like a princess afraid to face the dragon alone. Then came the best quote ever. “If you throw a rock I’m going to throw a concrete block back” Thank you Denny Hamlin for making 2008 the BEST season EVER!

Worst:
10. Denny Hamlin Spends Night In Hospital After Talladega Crash - Undoubtedly the scariest moment in a Denny Hamlin fan’s season, seeing the Fed Ex Toyota driver grimacing while being put onto a stretcher, and then hearing of his overnight stay in an Alabama hospital is one moment I hope to never repeat again. Thank God for the COT car, safety equipment, safer barriers, and safety workers. Good riddance to crashes, equipment failures and all the like for Denny Hamlin and the JGR Fed Ex team.


9. Michael McDowell’s Terrifying Crash At Texas - The relatively unknown McDowell made quite a name for himself following his death defying tumble during qualifying at Texas. Miraculously, McDowell emerged from the wreck unscathed and even had a smile on his face during the interview. Welcome to NASCAR Michael…it’s a rocking good time.


8. Carl Edwards Makes Runner-Up A Theme - Coming up short is never easy. But doing it twice in both the Nationwide and Sprint Cup series has got to burn a little. I can’t help but think that had it not been for that 100 point penalty early in the season would things be different? Edwards has nothing to be ashamed of and the way he handled both situations shows what a class act he truly is. I would be proud to see him as the 2009 Champion for both series. He is the epitome of sportsmanship and is a gentleman in every sense of the word.


7. Mark Martin Signs Deal With Hendrick Motorsports - I’ve heard of taking dinosaurs out for display, but some are best left in the museum. Mark Martin is making one last run at a Championship before he finally retires. The only bright spot is that Casey Mears was relieved of his shadow duties in the No. 5 car at HMS for greener pastures at RCR. The fourth team at Hendrick Motorsports hasn’t been successful well, ever, and to think that Mark Martin is going to find success in the shadow of Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr, the sport’s three biggest egos, is simply tragic and laughable. It gives a whole new meaning to Silly Season.

6. Sprint Cup Series Banquet Broadcast on ESPN Classic - For some reason NASCAR felt it best to broadcast the much anticipated Sprint Cup series banquet on ESPN Classic and then replay it on ESPN2. In my town, no one even has ESPN Classic and the only way to get it is to subscribe to the highest tier of programming. I love my NASCAR but my love has a limit and it also has a price tag. NASCAR needs its fans and they need them to be happy. Put the banquet, which is after all for me, on a channel that I can easily get.

5. Denny Hamlin’s Media Massacre - After his brawl with Brad Keselowski’s NAVY crew at Lowe’s, Denny Hamlin became public enemy number one for tangling with the NNS’ golden boy, or atleast the wanna be golden boy. Then when he criticized his crew and declared that he didn’t deserve to be in the Chase after a poor finish at Michigan, the fire began to burn a lot hotter under Hamlin’s feet. Kyle Petty, who had his own conflict with Hamlin in 2007, began crucifying the Fed Ex driver at every turn, declaring Denny Hamlin a spoiled brat who didn’t deserve to be in a race car. With his 8th place finish in the Chase, Hamlin proved that not everything you hear in the media is true. And with Kyle Petty’s departure from NASCAR for a lesser racing series, it just goes to show that Karma is cruel and sometimes it is better to just keep your opinions to yourself. Sometimes lessons are learned a little too late.

4. Kyle Busch Finishes 10th In Chase - After dominating the first 26 races of the season, NASCAR’s resident bad boy fell flat to equipment failure and then became his own worst enemy when he let frustrations get the better of him. Everyone falls but it’s those who are able to rebound that show their true grit. Fortunately Rowdy Busch is still young and has plenty of time to learn from this mistake.


3. Joe Gibbs Racing Crew Chiefs Caught Cheating - Talented and extraordinary crew chiefs Dave Rogers and Jason Radcliff were caught cheating following a test of the horse power of the Toyota engines. Due to near-dominance of the Nationwide season, NASCAR held a test and both crew chiefs were caught with magnets on the gas pedals of their cars. The two were then suspended indefinitely. It was an incident that did not slow down the JGR drivers as they went on to further success with interim crew chiefs on top of the pit boxes.

2. NASCAR Changes The Bud Shootout Format - In an unprecedented act of ignorance, Brian France announced that there would be major changes to the Budweiser Shootout for 2009. Previously, the Pole Award Winners from the previous year and former winners of the Shootout were automatic entrants in the season’s kick off race. Now Pole Awards hold no merit and the top points holders for each manufacturer will be in the race. A very poor choice and one that has destroyed the qualifying process and the race that once drew great attention. If it isn’t broken, why does Brian France find the need to fix it?

1. The Tragic Loss of Brienne Davis - The NASCAR Community lost one of its own this year when NASCAR Inspector Brienne Davis was killed in a single car crash. It left a void in the hearts of those who knew her and even those who didn’t know of her until they heard of her tragic death that will never be filled. She paved the way for women everywhere to find their place in the sport of kings and left a legacy that will never be forgotten.

The 2008 NASCAR season was without question an amazing one for all three series. Johnny Benson narrowly edged out Ron Hornaday for the very last NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Title, Clint Bowyer won the Nationwide Series Title and Jimmie Johnson won a historic third NASCAR Sprint Cup Title. Carl Edwards finished second in two series and Kyle Busch schooled every driver in the sport with his impressive 21 wins. 2009 promises to be another for the record books.

Share your best and worst memory from the 2008 season. I can’t wait to see what you all remember that I may have forgotten or not even noticed.

Monday, November 24, 2008

What's So Unusual About Dominance?

In the above picture you see the amazing TEAM of Joe Gibbs Racing that is responsible for winning Joe Gibbs Racing the 2008 Owner's Championship for the No. 20 Toyota. JGR Teammates Tony Stewart, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch were selected to drive the season dominating car for the races they were best suited to and did it ever pay off. Big time.

Rookie phenom Joey Logano was being kept in the wings to become the heir apparent to the ride that would eventually be his. There was just one small problem. Sliced Bread wasn't old enough to pilot the No. 20 until May 24th. So the veteran drivers of team the entire Nationwide garage has chased all season long stepped up in a big way for their team.

It's been slated that JGR's approach to its Owners Championship is unusual. Wow, jealousy makes people say crazy things. Excuses and reasons are a dime a dozen but this one is certainly the most colorful I've ever heard. So, the fact that all 4 drivers in a stable were able to climb behind the wheel of the same car and get the same stellar results is odd. Interesting philosophy.

Perhaps the fact that even after the suspension of crew chief Dave Rogers, the team didn't slow down one bit makes it an even more bitter pill to swallow. The entire team stepped up to the plate and showed its qualifications. While the No. 18 car of Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch was the more dominant of the JGR cars after the addition of Logano, the consistency never waivered.

Seeing 4 drivers that get along, look out for one another and strive to bring out the best in each other is definitely something unusual in today's fiercely competitive racing. But it only showcases the caliber man that Joe and JD Gibbs put behind the wheel of their cars. Anyone can hire a race car driver. But when an owner hires a man to do the job, the results are incredible.

Just ask the guys shaking their heads trying to figure out what happened this season. There is such a thing as teammates. There is such a thing as being a gentleman and the drivers of JGR are the finest caliber gentlemen ever to hit the sport of auto racing. There isn't a more deserving group of guys than the ones that earned this trophy.

I've watched Denny Hamlin mentor Joey Logano in a way that leaves me in awe. Joey's first race, Denny was talking to Logano on the radio and his encouragement was breath taking. The entire team is there for each other in the same way and it's refreshing. There is no competition. The other drivers need to take notice and see how it's done.

After winning the pole for the Nationwide series race at Phoenix, Denny Hamlin was more concerned about teammate Joey Logano than he was about himself. That's just Denny but it's also the entire JGR team. Always looking out for each other and doing whatever it takes to help their friend shine if they can't.

In this day and age of fierce competition and struggles to find sponsorship for up and coming superstars, Joe Gibbs Racing and it's champion drivers prove that it truly is a team effort to be successful. It wasn't just one driver. While Kyle Busch has the majority of the wins, he didn't capture them all and he is fully aware of the efforts of his fellow drivers. Perhaps if more teams built their organizations the same way Joe and JD Gibbs have with the caliber of man behind the wheel that they possess the sport would not only be better off, it would be spectacular.