Wild Card: Anybody’s Race For A Spot In The Chase
When NASCAR announced the “win-and-in” format for the Chase, a few tracks were looked at as potential wild cards – Sonoma,
Talladega, Watkins Glen, and this one coming up, Daytona International Speedway.
Daytona has seen its share of surprise winners, with names like David Ragan, Trevor Bayne and Ward Burton gracing Victory
Lane.
So names like Ryan Newman, Paul Menard and Jamie McMurray should feel somewhat hopeful at the prospect of nabbing a first
win of 2014. Oh yeah, and Ragan too.
The list of potential winners-who-are-thus-far-winless-in-2014 is a long one. So long, it’ll likely fit the length of
this page.
Tony
Stewart: Among the winless bunch, Stewart and Matt Kenseth (see below)
are the favorites to add another win to their
masterful careers. Stewart has four wins at Daytona, all coming in the
July night race. His victories in this one are memorable (see:
celebratory fence climb), but a win on Saturday night might hold the
most meaning. Though 16th in points, he currently sits
outside the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup bubble (Denny Hamlin and
Kurt Busch are lower in points, but their respective wins would push him
out of the Chase Grid). Here are Stewart’s last two finishes in the
night race: First and second.
Matt
Kenseth: Besides a couple hiccups at Daytona during the 2013 season –
finishes of 33rd and 37th – Kenseth has been
stellar on the Florida high banks. One of 11 drivers to have won
multiple Daytona 500s, Kenseth finished sixth in this year’s edition of
The Great American Race. Fifth in points and the current highest
positioned winless driver, Kenseth is seemingly safe(ish).
Then again, a surprise winner here would up the winners total to 11 –
leaving only five Chase Grid spots remaining based on points.
Jamie
McMurray: His career has often existed on the outside looking in –
right from the get-go. In 2004, the first year
of the 10-driver Chase, he finished 11th. In 2010, he scored two wins
in the regular season, but just missed the Chase. A year later, NASCAR
instituted a “wild card” format for winners; McMurray went winless. It
hasn’t worked out yet for the talented Chip
Ganassi Racing diver. This could be the year. Of his seven career wins,
four have come at restrictor plate tracks. Two have come at Daytona –
once in the Daytona 500 (2010), another in the night race (2007).
Paul
Menard: They have yet to make a radar low enough that Menard can’t fly
under it. He’s 11th in points. He’s scored
top 10s in four of the last six races, and top fives to two of the last
four. He has nine top 10s this season; only four drivers have more. And
he’s done it without much hoopla. Having said all that, this might be
Menard’s toughest test; he has finished outside
the top 20 in each of the last three Daytona races.
Ryan
Newman: Newman comes of his best race of the season, scoring a third
place finish and a driver rating of 116.7 at
Kentucky – both season highs for the Indiana driver. A 2008 Daytona 500
winner, Newman has finished in the top 10 in three of the last four
Daytona races.
Danica
Patrick: Good vibes surround Patrick whenever she enters the tunnel at
Daytona International Speedway (despite
that 40th-place finish in this year’s Daytona 500). For the 2013
Daytona 500, she famously became the first female to win a Coors Light
Pole, and followed it up with an eighth place finish. Daytona may be her
best bet to make more history, as the first female
to win a NASCAR national series race.
Kyle
Larson: Currently 12th in points, Larson would lock into the Chase Grid
if it began today. It doesn’t. So a win
would be nice. A victory would make Larson the first Sunoco Rookie of
the Year candidate since Joey Logano in 2009 to win a NSCS race. It
would also likely make him the first rookie since Denny Hamlin in 2006
to make the Chase.
Greg
Biffle: Biffle seems to have righted his season over the last two
races. After finishing outside the top 15 in five
consecutive races, he has chipped in runs of ninth at Sonoma and 14th
at Kentucky. Not earth shattering – but it did move him to 13th in
points, and inside the Chase Grid bubble.
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