The Daytona 500 drew plenty of criticism all-around on Sunday, but it was an impromptu comment from one of NASCAR's most iconic drivers that kind of stole the show in that regard.
A late wreck in the "Great American Race" led to William Byron walking away with the win in the final laps of the 500-mile sprint.
Afterwards, Byron was asked by reporters if he felt any drivers were making "dumb moves" in the lead-up to the crash. And out of nowhere Jeff Gordon chimed-in: "Joey [Logano] did."
"I'll second that," Byron added.
The massive chain reaction occurred when Logano attempted to pass Ricky Stenhouse Jr. with 15 laps to go. As he closed down the space, he tried to sneak through the middle and that ended up wiping out a bunch of cars once Stenhouse blocked him.
Kyle Busch was perhaps the most angry in his post-race interview — questioning Logano's driving intelligence and spatial awareness on FOX.
"Looks like the fastest car got in a hurry to get to the wreck," Busch said. "Logano was by far the fastest car today. Saw a lot of laps led and he could about do anything. The Penske cars were very strong. We still got 20 laps to go and he's trying to go through the middle and make a hole that isn't there. Just created chaos."
"We had a fast car and we were in position and just kind of biding our time and seeing what was going to happen next," the NASCAR vet continued. "Yeah, just, you've got to know how wide your racecar is to be able to find a hole that it will fit in, and he obviously doesn't know that."
Obviously, things didn't end the way a lot of this weekend's drivers had hoped. And Jeff Gordon believes there's one man everybody can blame for that.
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