Earnhardt, Johnson complete Hendrick sweep of Daytona Duels
Feb. 19, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—Hendrick Motorsports swept the front-row starting positions for Sunday’s Daytona 500.
Apparently enjoying the feeling, HMS then swept Thursday’s Budweiser Duel at Daytona twin 150-mile qualifying races.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. came from his last-place starting position to win Thursday
night’s first Budweiser Duel at Daytona 150-mile qualifying race at
Daytona International Speedway,
as unsung heroes behind him diced their way into the 57th running of
the Great American Race (1 p.m. ET on FOX).
Jimmie
Johnson, on the pole for the second Duel and already locked into the
outside of the front row for the Daytona 500, completed the Hendrick
sweep with a .125-second victory
over Kyle Busch, leading 40 laps in the process.
In a
drama-filled second Duel, both Danica Patrick and David Ragan recovered
from wrecks to race their way into the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’ most
prestigious race, Patrick
with a strong push from Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kurt Busch.
For the
second time during Speedweeks, Patrick was involved in a crash with
Denny Hamlin, and the two drivers had an extended animated conversation
as soon as the cars parked
on pit road.
Earnhardt
started 25th in the first Duel because his qualifying time was
disallowed after inspectors discovered a ride-height violation on his
No. 88 Chevrolet after Sunday’s
time trials. Undeterred, Earnhardt worked his way methodically to the
front, grabbing the lead for the first time on Lap 35.
All
told, Earnhardt led 21 laps and crossed the finish line .165 seconds
ahead of Hendrick Motorsports teammate and Daytona 500 polesitter Jeff
Gordon. As the winner of the
first Duel, Earnhardt will line up behind Gordon in the third spot on
the grid for Sunday’s race.
In the
non-points qualifier, Earnhardt won for the first time with new crew
chief Greg Ives, who took over this season for Steve Letarte, hired by
NBC Sports as a television
analyst.
“We
have had a great car all week,” Earnhardt said. “I’m so glad to be able
to get through the Duel in one piece, because I know how good this race
car is. We have a couple
more practices to go through and try to stay out of trouble during
those and put this thing on the grid. We’re going to have a fun day on
Sunday.
“We had
to do a lot of blocking there at the end, but those guys were mounting
some pretty hard charges. We made a lot of good moves tonight because
the car is so good. TJ
Majors (spotter) deserves a ton of credit for helping us win that race
tonight. He called a great spotting job up on top of the hill there. He
gave me all the information I needed to make the moves I needed to kind
of keep them guys behind me.”
Joey
Logano came home third, followed by Tony Stewart and Clint Bowyer, whose
fifth-place finish in a backup car represented a stroke of good fortune
during an otherwise star-crossed
week at the 2.5-mile superspeedway.
The
real drama in the first Duel, however, took place behind the
frontrunners, as Landon Cassill (ninth), Cole Whitt (10th), Michael
McDowell (12th), JJ Yeley (13th), Michael
Annett (14th) and Ty Dillon (16th) all earned starting spots in the
500.
McDowell
made the most dramatic move, forcing his way up the middle and racing
from the tail end of the field to 12th place on the final lap.
“When I
crossed that white flag (to start the last lap) I was thinking, ‘I have
to do this. I don’t know what we’re gonna do, I don’t know how we’re
gonna do it, but we’ve
just got to do it,’” McDowell said. “You can’t make these cars go
faster. I had a run that was building and there wasn’t a gap and I made a
gap.
“I tore
up both sides of the race car in the process of doing it and had to
block some people, and probably upset a few people along the way, but
this race is so important
for us to make…”
For Johnson, the win in the second Duel was a continuation of a week that couldn’t have gone better.
“It’s a
special night,” Johnson said. “What a race car. I’m stoked for my
teammate (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) to win the first Duel. We won the second,
and Jeff (Gordon) and I have
the front row locked down. It’s been an awesome week for all our
Hendrick Motorsports cars.
“I’m just happy to start out the week like we have.”
On Lap 57 of the second Duel, Patrick spun in Turn 3 after Hamlin made a move to her inside in very close quarters.
“I
mean, we're superspeedway racing,” Hamlin said, after he and Patrick
went their separate ways. “I treat her as equal as anyone on the race
track. She deserves her spot here,
but you have to be able to run close to somebody on a superspeedway.
You have to have your car stable enough to handle those situations and,
to me, it's not much different than what it was with the 22 (Joey
Logano) and the 4 (Kevin Harvick) last week (in the
Sprint Unlimited) - only I wasn't pushing her.
“I was
just close to her and her car got loose and she spun. Thank goodness she
got her way in the 500. I didn't want to be responsible for that. I
treat her as an equal on
the race track. I'm not going to say, 'It's Danica, so I've got to make
sure I just leave some extra room.' If you're out here in the Cup
Series, you have to be able to handle those situations.”
Patrick wasn’t buying it.
“I’m
confident other cars get very close, and things like that don't happen,”
said Patrick, who finished 10th after Busch propelled her through the
field. “Done thousands of
miles of this speedway racing now, and I haven't found that to be a
problem. So I just think that he's wrong.
“I
think that he's too close. I think that he's taking the air and getting
it off the spoiler, and he's not squared up either. That's also part of
the problem. I don't know.
Maybe he likes my left rear.”
Notes:
Ty Dillon qualified for his first Daytona 500, as did Ryan Blaney, who
will pilot the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford. … Six drivers failed to
qualify: Ron Hornaday Jr., Josh
Wise, Jeb Burton, Justin Marks, Alex Bowman and Brian Scott.
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