Thursday Daytona Notebook
Dale Earnhardt Jr. says the lead is the place to be on Sunday
Feb. 20, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—Dale Earnhardt Jr. knows exactly where he wants to be in the closing laps of Sunday's Daytona 500.
He wants to be up front, without question.
If
that seems obvious, remember that the lead hasn't always been the best
place to be when approaching the checkered flag in the Great American
Race.
But
Earnhardt is weary of runner-up finishes—he has run second in three of
the last four season-opening races—and he'd prefer to take his chances
from the top spot in the running order.
"As
far as trying to win one of these races, or not run second again, I
think we need to be up front," Earnhardt said Thursday during a
question-and-answer
session with reporters in the Daytona International Speedway media
center. "We're not far enough toward the front. When we've run second,
we've come from third or fourth or fifth or sixth those last few laps.
"You're
not going to win the race from back there. You might run second, but
you aren't going to win. You need to be leading the race. I would much
rather be leading the Daytona 500 inside of five laps to go than be
anywhere else."
Earnhardt
doesn't think the wild wrecks that interrupted Wednesday's first NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series practice constitute an indicator of the nature
of Sunday's race.
"I think just saying '500 miles' changes everybody's demeanor and everybody's approach to that race," Earnhardt explained.
"Those
wrecks in practice definitely surprised me and surprised a lot of
people, and I hope it's just a product of a lot of cars trying to get
out
of the draft, cars blending in and cars put in a bad position that they
couldn't get out of."
MATCH RACE?
Remember the "Battle of the Sexes" between tennis players Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King?
Tony Stewart suggested a revival of the concept—racing style—featuring seven-time champion Richard Petty and Danica Patrick.
Petty
said during a recent appearance at the Canadian Motorsports Expo in
Toronto that Patrick, who drives for Stewart-Haas Racing, could win a
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race only "if everybody else stayed home."
SHR
co-owner Tony Stewart suggested Wednesday during an appearance on the
Performance Racing Network's "Fast Talk" that the King and Patrick
should
settle their differences on the race track.
"I
think that would settle it once and for all—maybe get him to shut up a
little bit, too," Stewart said in defense of his teammate. "I will
supply
the cars. If he wants to race her, I'll make sure they have exactly the
same setup in the car and give him the chance.
"He can drive one of my (No.) 14 cars. I don't care."
PRN
host Doug Rice suggested that, if Patrick wins, she should take the
checkered flag to Petty and have him sign it. Stewart had other ideas.
"If I were her, I'd take it over there and cram it up his (butt)," Stewart said.
DAYTONA DYNAMO
Three guesses. Who ran the fastest lap in final NASCAR Nationwide Series practice on Thursday?
Was it one of the series regulars? Nope.
Was it a full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular, such as Kyle Busch or Dale Earnhardt Jr.? Wrong again.
Then
it must of been one of the nine talented series rookies trying to earn
starting spots in Saturday's Drive4COPD 300 at Daytona International
Speedway. No, that's strike three.
The
driver who paced the field in Happy Hour was ARCA veteran Bobby
Gerhart, who is attempting to qualify for the NNS race in his No. 85
Chevrolet.
Gerhart's
proficiency in the draft shouldn't come as a complete surprise. After
all, the 55-year-old driver has won the season-opening ARCA race
at the 2.5-mile superspeedway no less than eight times.
NASCAR's
new qualifying system, which will debut Friday, also should benefit
Gerhart, who failed to make the field for last year's Nationwide Series
opener at Daytona under a single-car-run time trial format.
This year, drivers will establish qualifying speeds in a group draft, and that should help Gerhart make the show.
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