Danica Patrick weathers Duel, ready to make history on Sunday
Feb. 21, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- Danica Patrick's assignment on Thursday wasn't a
particularly exciting one, but she accomplished it successfully.
As
a result, the driver of the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet SS
will make history once again on Sunday as the first female driver
to lead the field to green in NASCAR's most important race, the Daytona
500.
To
ensure that distinction, Patrick had to keep her pole-winning car
intact during her Budweiser Duel 150-mile qualifying race on Thursday
at Daytona International Speedway. She did just that, dropping to the
back after seven laps and coming home 17th.
"It's
not an exciting mission when you just have to bring it home," Patrick
said. "But it is for the Daytona 500, so you've got to keep
that in mind. I learned that the outside (lane) is strong, and it
carries a lot of good momentum.
"And
then I learned that you need some friends. I also learned that you
can't be too tight (with respect to handling)… It was way too
tight at the start, but we wanted to be conservative. We didn't want to
have any issues with the GoDaddy car.
"We wanted to make sure we've got it on that front row for Sunday."
Mission accomplished.
TROUBLE MAGNET
Carl
Edwards has been destroying cars right and left at Daytona
International Speedway -- but not because he's done anything wrong.
Edwards,
who crashed in practice on Wednesday when Ryan Newman's Chevrolet
turned across the nose of Edwards' Ford, was the victim of
another accident in Thursday's first Budweiser Duel 150-mile qualifying
race.
Denny
Hamlin's Toyota got sideways to Edwards' outside and turned the No. 99
Ford hard into the outside wall, demolishing Edwards' car.
All told, four of Edwards' Roush Fenway Racing Fusions have fallen
victim to crashes at Daytona.
Despite finishing 22nd in the Duel, Edwards is locked into the starting field for Sunday's Daytona 500.
"I
don't know exactly what happened," Edwards said of Thursday's wreck.
"It looked like Denny got sideways and wrecked
us. That's the fourth time we've wrecked since we've been down here. I
told (crew chief) Jimmy (Fennig) we wrecked four times, so we have the
black flag already, and the race hasn't even started.
"We're
getting it out of our systems. Fortunately, we have a really good group
of guys and have a good backup car,
which is our (Unlimited) car. We'll just go get ‘em in the 500. I
learned a lot. If we can just have a little luck, I would not count our
99 team out. It will be a good race for us."
ICONIC BRAND MEETS LEGENDARY TRACK
Martinsville
Speedway, which has been on the NASCAR schedule since 1949, announced
Thursday at Daytona a partnership that will put the
name of a new brand from a long-time NASCAR sponsor on the spring race
at the .526-mile short track.
STP
will begin a multiyear entitlement at Martinsville with the April 7 STP
Gas Booster 500, adding that Sprint Cup race to a portfolio
that includes the STP 400 Cup race at Kansas Speedway and the STP 300
stand-alone Nationwide Series race at Chicagoland Speedway.
In
addition, the STP brand will serve as a co-primary sponsor for Richard
Petty Motorsports' No. 43 Jani-King STP Ford Fusion driven
by Aric Almirola in that race. The paint scheme commemorates the first
appearance of the STP logo on Richard Petty's car, at Riverside, Calif.,
in 1972.
"STP,
Martinsville and Richard Petty Motorsports make a perfect combination,"
said Jamie Kistner, brand director for STP. "Martinsville
has been hosting NASCAR races since 1949. STP has been part of the
NASCAR and Petty family for more than 40 years now, and Richard himself
has had the most starts with 67 and the most wins with 15 at
Martinsville."
In a career that spanned 35 years, Petty logged 27,891 laps at the paper-clip-shaped speedway, more than at any other track.
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