This wasn’t a Penske Perfect day by any means.
Austin Cindric finished 34th after being punted into a heavy collision with the wall. Joey Logano committed two uncharacteristic errors and finished 31st, squandering a fast car that started first and led 73 laps.
Even Ryan Blaney had his issues during and following his first win of the season.
After driving from the back of the field twice because of loose wheels on pit stops, Blaney had to delay his winner’s interview after briefly leaving his No. 12 Ford in neutral (and rolling down the frontstretch banking). He later realized he forgot to FaceTime his wife and newborn son while celebrating.
RELATED: Race results | Cup Series standings
For the clean-cut organization that prides itself on attention to detail, a sloppy Sunday at Phoenix Raceway fell far short of being a Penske Perfect day.
But it was a Penske Perfect weekend.
Ultimately, that was all that mattered for a NASCAR trio feeling the heat after Team Penske went 3-for-3 in the first three big moments of the “desert doubleheader” weekend organized by the boss.
“You don’t want to mess it up,” Blaney said. “We had three out of the four boxes checked: IndyCar pole, Cup pole, IndyCar win. You got to finish it out, right? There’s a little more internal pressure because you don’t want to be the guys that don’t finish out the whole weekend for RP.
“You always want to win for Roger. It’s always special when you do, especially when he’s here.”
Roger Penske turned 89 last month, and there isn’t much left (aside from a 24 Hours of Le Mans win) that’s unprecedented for the auto racing icon.
But the Phoenix accomplishments were a first for the man who owns IndyCar and Indianapolis Motor Speedway — a cherry on top of an illustrious resume that encompasses five Cup championships (among nearly 50 series titles), three Daytona 500 wins and 20 Indianapolis 500 victories.
“Roger Penske does this to win races; that’s what he loves to do,” said Michael Nelson, who oversees the team’s NASCAR side as Penske Racing South president. “To give him something he hasn’t achieved before — race wins twice in one weekend with two different series — means the world to all of us.”
Over 312 laps Sunday at Phoenix, it might have meant too much at times, notably in the mistakes by Logano. The three-time Cup Series champion triggered a pileup by driving through Ross Chastain on a Lap 217 restart and then ended his day on another restart by trying to wedge into a gap that was a few inches too narrow for his No. 22 Ford.
The miscues by Blaney’s pit crew seemed further evidence of a Cup team pressing to “match” its IndyCar counterparts’ Saturday success — a victory for Josef Newgarden on the heels of a Friday pole position by David Malukas.
No less than three times in 24 hours, Newgarden reminded the world that the NASCAR team would come up short for “The Captain” without a win Sunday.
The first came when longtime racing journalist Bruce Martin asked how important it would be for the NASCAR team to complete the Penske Perfect weekend.
“I think it’s incredibly important,” Newgarden said, pausing to add with a devilish grin. “It will be so disappointing if the Cup guys do not deliver tomorrow.”
“Horribly disappointing,” cracked Jonathan Diuguid, the Penske Racing president who oversees the IndyCar and IMSA operations.
“It’s a great point, Bruce,” Newgarden said. “Put the pressure on them.”
The two-time IndyCar champion and Indy 500 winner still was tossing barbs the next day on national TV when interviewed during the Cup race (while wearing a gray Team Penske T-shirt embossed with Blaney’s name and number).
“I don’t know that (Penske’s NASCAR drivers) need a lot of advice from me, but I’ll motivate them,” Newgarden said. “At a function last night with Team Penske and our partners. I said it’s going to be a real shame if we don’t double up this weekend. I know we did our job. You guys better deliver.”
Newgarden was kidding … but he also kind of wasn’t.
MORE: At-track photos: Phoenix
The “Team of Rivals” concept is fostered by Penske, whose IndyCar, NASCAR and sports cars teams are in their 20th season headquartered under the same roof.
The team’s drivers across all three series have built camaraderie and friendly rivalries from often seeing each other in passing at the workout facilities or pit stop area inside the sprawling shop in Mooresville, North Carolina.
Roger Penske enjoys competition in every possible form, even when it’s pitting his drivers against each other. Several years ago, his team created “The Penske Games,” a goofy intrasquad Olympics-style event in which drivers competed in dodgeball, table tennis and cramming as many marshmallows into their mouths as possible.
There is plenty of collegiality. The drivers regularly exchange supportive texts. Malukas and Scott McLaughlin visited Victory Lane to congratulate Blaney, who had done the same Saturday for Newgarden after Penske’s first IndyCar win this season.
But there is also a subtle competitive spirit.
“(Newgarden) put the pressure on us,” Nelson said. “He definitely pushed hard on us to try to keep up our end of the bargain. We would have done the same.”
The pressure was also on because the Phoenix market has special meaning to Roger Penske, whose immaculate Penske Racing Museum is based in Scottsdale (nestled inside an auto mall that houses various Penske Automotive dealerships).
When Team Penske announced a Mobil 1 sponsorship during a Phoenix race weekend in 2007, money was spent to helicopter a few dozen media members from the track to the glitzy event at the museum (which was located on the other side of the Salt River Valley).
To celebrate its 60th season of competition last weekend at Phoenix Raceway, Team Penske rolled out the red carpet for nonstop hospitality and media events — despite an uncharacteristic slow start in NASCAR. Through the first three races, Penske drivers had managed only three top 10s, and Cindric finished outside the top 25 at Phoenix for the fourth consecutive race.
After watching Newgarden’s win with an enthusiastic Penske in a trackside suite Saturday, Blaney was almost giddy thinking about how excited the team owner would have been in the same suite Sunday — while watching with his IndyCar drivers.
“It was cool that those guys stuck around,” Blaney said of Newgarden, Malukas and McLaughlin. “It was fun to see them in Victory Lane, too.”
It certainly was better than seeing them at the shop — and having to face lighthearted jabs about the pursuit of perfection.
“It’s cool that we could add another milestone to Roger, especially the 60-year anniversary,” Blaney said. “It’s a special year for everybody. Nice we could get something new that we haven’t done before.”

