Joe Gibbs Racing goes for unprecedented sweep in Daytona 500
Feb. 21, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- As the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season begins to
unfold, "first" is the watchword for Joe Gibbs Racing.
Denny
Hamlin was first in last Saturday's Sprint Unlimited at Daytona
International Speedway. Hamlin and JGR teammate Matt Kenseth took
first in the two Budweiser Duel at Daytona 150-mile qualifying races on
Thursday night. JGR is the first organization to win the Unlimited and
both Duel races in the same season.
And
as JGR attempts Sunday to win its first Daytona 500 since 1993, Hamlin
will attempt to complete an unprecedented trifecta, as the
first driver to win the Unlimited, a Duel race and the Daytona 500 in
the same year.
Should he accomplish that feat, the victory would be the first for Toyota in NASCAR's most prestigious race.
Based
on their performance so far, the Gibbs drivers have to be the
oddsmakers' choice to win the Great American race -- and everyone
knows it.
"If
you're going to pick a favorite, I would consider them the favorites,"
said Jeff Gordon, runner-up in the second Duel won by Hamlin.
"They won both races (Thursday). They won the Unlimited. I don't know
if that means anything, but I would say that they're very quick and very
capable of winning this race…
"Along with 42 other guys," Gordon added with a sly smile.
To Hamlin, winning the Daytona 500 is a matter of holding himself back, as difficult as that may be.
"I
think the biggest challenge we'll have for myself is keeping the reins
back for 400 miles, 450 miles," Hamlin said
after the second Duel. "It's going to be a much longer race. Obviously,
when you go out here and you perform the way we have over these last
few races, it's hard not to just want to go out there, charge out there,
show that you're still on top and still the
best right on Lap 1.
"I think that will be my challenge, keeping the reins back and realizing how long this race is, trying to be as patient
as I can."
Other
drivers will face more daunting challenges in the 56th running of the
Daytona 500. Defending race winner and
defending series champion Jimmie Johnson will start from the back of
the field in a backup car after destroying the No. 48 Chevrolet on the
final lap of the second Duel.
Johnson already had used up his planned Daytona 500 back-up car in the Unlimited. Uncharacteristically, Johnson and
his usually well-oiled No. 48 team were responsible for both wrecks.
In the Unlimited, Johnson pulled out to pass Hamlin and lost control of the car in Turn 4, demolishing the vaunted
No. 48. In the second Duel, Johnson's team didn't get enough gas in the fuel cell to run the final 24 laps of the race.
Johnson
slowed dramatically in the final corner, leaving Jamie McMurray no
choice but to run into the back of Johnson's
car. The No. 48 turned sideways, slammed into the wall and burst into
flames, as eight other cars also were consumed in the chaos.
Clint
Bowyer's Toyota did a full flip and stuck a perfect four-point landing.
Martin Truex's Chevy, scheduled to start
on the outside of the front row, crossed the finish line in flames.
Fortunately, no drivers were injured in the last-lap accident.
Johnson,
Bowyer, McMurray and Truex rolled out backup cars after the wreck, as
did Michael Waltrip and David Ragan,
who also were wreck victims. This six drivers will drop to the rear of
the field for the start of the Daytona 500, as will Tony Stewart, Danica
Patrick and Bobby Labonte, who changed engines after failures in
practice last Saturday.
Coors
Light pole award winner Austin Dillon, on the other hand, nursed his
Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet to a
18th-place finish in the first Duel (after Kevin Harvick's post-race
penalty), keeping the car out of harm's way. Barring an issue in
practice before the Daytona 500, Dillon's No. 3 will lead the field to
green in the first appearance of that car number in
NASCAR Sprint Cup racing since Dale Earnhardt died as a result of
injuries sustained in the 2001 Daytona 500.
No comments:
Post a Comment