Confident to the finish

Logano bounces back from crash last week to win at Kansas Speedway

? That horrific barrel roll at Dover, the one that looked more like a scene from “Talladega Nights” than a real NASCAR wreck?

Turns out it gave Joey Logano confidence, not fear.

Passing points leader Kyle Busch with three laps left, Logano won at Kansas Speedway on Saturday, pulling out his fourth Nationwide victory less than a week after that spectacular crash during a Sprint Cup race.

“If you can barrel roll a race car like that and come out OK, it’s going to give you confidence to drive it harder,” Logano said. “I didn’t think it was a big deal at all coming into today. I knew a lot of people did and were wondering how I was going to be. This should put it all to rest, I hope.”

In the days leading up to Kansas, Logano assured everyone the Dover crash wouldn’t affect his aggressiveness on the track. Sure, he was shaky, even after walking away from the care center. Rolling a car seven times will tend to do that to a driver, even if he walks away unscathed, as Logano did.

Whether it was the nerves of a 19-year-old or the nature of a race-car driver, Logano wasn’t about to let fear climb into his head.

He proved it at Kansas.

Overcoming early handling problems, Logano stayed near the front for most of the race, then made his move after a late caution. Even a near wreck didn’t slow him down; Logano regrouped, hit the accelerator and passed Busch for his fifth career Nationwide win.

“I had no fear,” Logano said. “I didn’t think about anything like that and I don’t think 90 percent of these race car drivers think like that.”

Busch came up short against Logano yet again.

He had the strongest car most of the day, leading 173 of the 200 laps on the 1.5-mile oval. Busch has led 2,226 laps this season, breaking the season series record of 2,127 set by Sam Ard in 1984.

He just didn’t have enough to hold off Logano, who came back to beat him in the closing laps for the fourth time this season. Busch still extended his lead over Carl Edwards (seventh) to 245 points with six races left, but has finished second in all four of Logano’s Nationwide wins this season.

“It’s pretty self-explanatory: it is frustrating,” said Busch, who has 25 top-10 finishes this season. “We had a great race car today. We were good in the points. I’ve done that about 12 times this year so it ain’t the first time and it certainly ain’t going to be the last time.”