Dale Earnhardt Jr. holds off Denny Hamlin for second Daytona 500 win
Feb. 23, 2014 (
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla.—In a race that started in broad daylight and ended 42
minutes before midnight, and with a swatch of tape covering part of his
grille, Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the rain-interrupted 56th running of the
Daytona 500 Sunday night at Daytona International Speedway.
Earnhardt
was a car-length ahead of Denny Hamlin when NASCAR threw the seventh
caution of the race a split second before Earnhardt crossed the finish
line to win the Great American Race for the second time in his career.
Under
NASCAR's new Chase for the Sprint Cup format, Earnhardt's 20th career
Sprint Cup Series victory almost assuredly locks him into the 10-race
postseason playoff, set to start at Chicagoland Speedway in September.
Hamlin
came home second as the race ended under caution, with Brad Keselowski,
Jeff Gordon and reigning series champion Jimmie Johnson running third
through fifth, respectively.
In
Victory Lane, Earnhardt didn't even try to contain his elation. After
all, he had just broken a 55-race winless streak. After finishing second
in three last four Daytona 500s, he had just won the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series season opener in his last year with crew chief Steve Letarte, who
is headed for the TV booth in 2015.
And
he had just won his second Daytona 500 a decade after winning his
first, holding off Hamlin in a dramatic two-lap dash to the finish.
"Man,
winning this race is the greatest feeling that you can feel in the
sport, aside from obviously accepting the trophy for the championship,"
Earnhardt all but shouted over the din of the celebration. "I didn't
know if I'd ever get a chance to feel that again, and it feels just as
good, if not better than the first because of how hard we tried year
after year after year, running second all those
years and wondering why and what we needed to do.
"I've
got to get my head together ... This race car was awesome. We showed
them all night long how good a car we had, and it's because of these
guys right here (his team) putting it together in the shop. We could
fight off battles after battles. We got a little help from Jeff (Gordon)
to get away on that (last) restart and tried to take care of it from
there.
"This
is amazing. I can't believe this is happening. I'll never take this for
granted, because this just doesn't happen twice, let alone once. I'm
so thankful. Thanks to all my fans out there for supporting. We pretty
much might be in the Chase? We get that off our chest and we are
two-time Daytona 500 champion!"
After
a rain delay of 6 hours 22 minutes, the race ran-caution-free from a
restart on Lap 47 to Lap 145, when a wild 13-car wreck in Turn 4 thinned
the field.
On
the inside of a three-wide trio with Brian Scott and Aric Almirola,
Kevin Harvick drifted up the track and clipped Brian Scott's Chevrolet,
sending
Scott into Almirola's Ford and turning it sideways.
Almirola
hit Danica Patrick's No. 10 Chevrolet, which shot nose-first into the
outside wall in the tri-oval, destroying the car. The No. 3 Chevy
of polesitter Austin Dillon also sustained damage but remained on the
lead lap.
Dillon's
Richard Childress Racing teammate, Paul Menard, wasn't as fortunate.
His No. 27 Chevy, which had led 29 laps, was heavily damaged and lost
14 laps as his team worked feverishly to repair it.
"What the hell happened?" Patrick said, as she slid to a stop in the soggy infield grass.
Sixteen
laps after the first major incident of the race, Dillon's Chevrolet got
loose and tapped the No. 42 of fellow rookie Kyle Larson, triggering
an 11-car wreck that slowed the race. At Lap 184, 2011 Daytona 500
winner Trevor Bayne slammed into the outside wall on the backstretch to
cause the fifth caution of the race.
On
Lap 194, contact between Dillon and the No. 31 Chevrolet of RCR
teammate Ryan Newman ignited a seven-car wreck in Turn 3 that set up the
wild
finish. Earnhardt, who was in the lead, ran over the swatch of Bear
Bond (tape) from Newman's car under the yellow and tried in vain to
remove the tape by driving within inches of the pace car.
First
out of the race was Martin Truex Jr., whose luck turned from bad to
worse on Sunday. With his primary car destroyed in a last-lap wreck in
Thursday night's Budwesier Duel at Daytona, Truex had to give up his
second-place starting position and take the green flag from the rear of
the field in a backup car.
On
Lap 32, Truex's engine expired after the oil pump belt dislodged,
forcing an early exit from a race the driver of the No. 78 Chevrolet
thought
he had a chance to win.
"The
car was super-fast today, and I went to bed last night thinking that
this was my best shot ever to win the Daytona 500 and really felt that
way, even today," Truex said. "The car was just so good, and we were
just riding around and biding our time, being patient and trying to get
to the end of this thing.
"Unfortunately, it wasn't meant to be."
It wasn't meant to be for Tony Stewart or Clint Bowyer either.
Stewart,
in his first points race after missing the final 15 events of 2013 with
a broken right leg, took his No. 14 Chevrolet to the garage with
a fuel pressure problem after completing 118 laps, frustrated in his
16th fruitless attempt to win the Daytona 500. Bowyer's engine expired
after 127 laps, relegating the driver of the No. 15 Toyota to a
42nd-place finish.
Stewart ended the race in 35th, 26 laps down.
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