Repairs are in place at Daytona, but the quest for safer competition continues
Feb. 24, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- Arguably, what happened at Talladega in 2009 may have
saved lives at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday
afternoon.
Nearly
four years ago, Carl Edwards' Ford was launched into the catch fence at
Talladega in a last-lap crash, and debris from that incident
injured eight fans in the front grandstand.
In
Saturday's DRIVE4COPD Nationwide Series race at Daytona, a last-lap
wreck similar in character to the crash at Talladega sent debris
and a tire with suspension parts still attached from Kyle Larson's car
into the crowd and the engine and suspension parts into a gate in the
fencing at the base of the stands.
The
engine and the majority of the front suspension came to rest at the
edge of a walkway between the front row seats and the track.
Though
the number of fans who sustained injuries from the last-lap wreck at
Daytona was somewhat was difficult to pin down, Daytona
International Speedway president Joie Chitwood III reiterated to
reporters Sunday morning that 14 people had been transported to from the
track to medical facilities and another 14 treated and released on
site.
Halifax
Health Medical Center spokesperson Byron Cogdell told the NASCAR Wire
Service that seven patients had been admitted to that
facility for injuries attributable to debris from the wreck. Two
patients were injured critically, an adult and a minor.
Late
Saturday night, those two patients were upgraded from critical, and all
injured spectators admitted to Halifax were listed as stable.
As of 10 a.m., Sunday morning, the remaining five spectators injured by
debris from the wreck had been released from Halifax. In addition, six
patients taken to Halifax Health Medical Center of Port Orange, Fla.,
have been treated and released.
Daytona's
reaction to the 2009 wreck at Talladega may have prevented more
extensive injuries. Following Edwards' collision with the
frontstretch fence at Talladega, Daytona replaced its fencing, raising
the height from 14 to 22 feet across the frontstretch.
"Following
the 2009 Carl Edwards incident at Talladega, we brought in a structural
engineering firm to review all our safety fencing,"
Chitwood said. "We actually took every recommendation they made, and we
actually installed new fencing at Daytona International Speedway prior
to the 2010 season.
"So we felt like we had done everything as it relates to protocol in making sure we were prepared for yesterday's event."
The
accident began as Edwards' had at Talladega, with one driver making a
move and another trying to block it. In the case of Saturday's
Nationwide race, Regan Smith was leading off the final corner, with
Brad Keselowski pushing him.
As
Keselowski moved to the outside to attempt a winning pass, Smith
steered up the track to block his progress. Contact between the
cars turned Smith's Chevrolet sideways, and cars behind him attempted
to dodge the wreck.
Larson's
car nosed hard into the side of Keselowski's Ford, pinning Keselowski's
car along the frontstretch wall. The impact lifted
Larson's car off the pavement. At virtually the same instant, Brian
Scott's Chevrolet slammed into Larson's car, spinning it upward toward
the fence.
Thankfully,
as the front clip of Larson's car sheared off from the impact, the
fence contained most of the wreck and stopped the engine
from reaching the crowd.
Track
personnel worked long into the night to repair the fencing in time for
Sunday's Daytona 500. Steve O'Donnell, NASCAR senior vice
present of racing operations, said the sanctioning body was satisfied
with the quality of the work.
"As
you heard Joie say this morning, we worked closely with the race
track," O'Donnell told reporters in the Sprint Cup garage Sunday
morning. "We're confident with the repairs put in place. It'll be an
ongoing process for us with the race track. We have an R&D center up
in Concord, North Carolina, that specializes in looking at things like
that."
O'Donnell
said it's premature to talk about specific courses of action, but
NASCAR plans to conduct a thorough analysis of Larson's
car.
"We'll
look at every piece, what came off, what didn't, what held, and we'll
review the film of where it hit and just look at what,
if anything, we can do -- every aspect of that car will be looked at,"
O'Donnell said.
"I
think, for the most part, the car held up. The tethers (that hold the
wheels) held up. When a car gets into the fence, that's something
we have to take back, analyze everything we can. We'll do just that,
and the process has started."
One source of concern is the wheel assembly that flew into the grandstand.
"The
tethers did hold, but the challenge is that piece obviously got away
when it hit the fence," O'Donnell said. "That's something,
again, we can learn. The tethers came from an incident where we learned
with a tire going and escaping from the cars. We implemented tethers.
"Now we've got to take another look and say, 'Hey, is that the best practice, or is there more that we can do?'"
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