Matt Kenseth, Denny Hamlin triumph in Budweiser Duel qualifying races
Feb. 20, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- Matt Kenseth outran Kevin Harvick and Kasey Kahne in a
three-wide finish Thursday night at Daytona International
Speedway, as the driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Chevrolet won
the first 150-mile qualifying race in the Budweiser Duel at Daytona.
Sprint
Unlimited winner Denny Hamlin took the second Duel under caution after a
wreck in Turn 4 of the final lap ended a run that had
been caution-free to that point. The win gave JGR a sweep of the first
three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events at Daytona and cemented the Gibbs
drivers as favorites in Sunday's Daytona 500.
Jeff
Gordon ran second to Hamlin, with Kurt Busch, Paul Menard, Brian Scott
and Trevor Bayne claiming third through sixth, respectively.
The last-lap wreck totaled the No. 48 Chevrolet of defending Daytona
500 winner Jimmie Johnson, who already had destroyed a car in Saturday's
Sprint Unlimited.
In
a race that was devoid of yellow flags from start to finish, Kenseth
drafted back past Harvick after the No. 4 Chevrolet made a move
to the inside of Turn 4 on the final lap of Duel No. 1 and won the race
to the stripe by .022 seconds. Kahne took the lead duo three-wide to
the inside in the tri-oval and finished third, .062 seconds behind
Kenseth.
Harvick's
No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet failed post-race inspection,
however, and his finish in the Duel was disallowed. Harvick
nevertheless qualified for Sunday's Daytona 500 but will start 38th.
In
the second Duel, Johnson triggered the wreck when he ran out of fuel
and slowed in the final corner. Jamie McMurray rammed the back
of Johnson's Chevy, turning the car and starting a chain reaction that
saw Clint Bowyer's car flipping and landing on its wheels and Martin
Truex's Chevy in flames as it crossed the finish line in eighth place.
Truex
had qualified on the outside of the front row for the Daytona 500 but
will give up his starting position and drop to the back
because the wreck will force him to use a backup car.
"I
feel terrible," Johnson said. "To tear up that many race cars, to see
the No. 15 flip -- I feel terrible, and certainly want to apologize
to everyone. I tried to get up out of the way; I had my hand out of the
side (signaling he was out of fuel).
"But
last lap coming to the checkered, there is so much going on right
there. So much energy in the pack that I knew I was going to
get run over if I ran out, because guys warned me about it -- and it
did. Thankfully, everyone is all right, and I certainly feel bad for the
torn-up race cars."
Hamlin, on the other hand, is clearly on a roll.
"Once
that snowball starts to roll, it's hard to stop it," said Hamlin, who
will line up fourth in the Daytona 500, with Gordon and
Busch in sixth and eighth behind him. "And right now, we're just on a
heck of a run."
Brothers
Bobby Labonte and Terry Labonte, both past series champions, were far
enough behind the wreck to roll through unaffected, and,
ultimately, both raced their way into the field for Sunday.
In
winning the first-ever Duel run under the lights, Kenseth claimed the
third starting spot for Sunday's Daytona 500. Because of Harvick's
infraction, Kahne will start fifth. Marcos Ambrose and Dale Earnhardt
Jr. were third and fourth in the first Duel, after Harvick's penalty,
and will start the Daytona 500 seventh and ninth, respectively.
"The
race ended up unfolding great for us," said Kenseth, a two-time Daytona
500 winner. "We learned a lot in the race. I
had the car in some positions that I wouldn't want to do again if I had
to do it over. I was able to make some moves, get up to second behind
Junior there for a long time, ultimately take the lead.
"At the end, I saw Kevin making that move. You weren't going to be able to block it without wrecking. I just tried
to get back to him, and, thankfully, I had enough time to get that run to the finish line."
Danica
Patrick locked up a spot in the 56th running of the Great American Race
with a 13th-place run. Tony Stewart, Patrick's car owner
and teammate, raced his way into the Daytona 500 field with an
10th-place result, after Harvick's penalty.
Stewart
missed the last 15 events of the 2013 season after breaking his right
leg in an Aug. 5 sprint car accident in Iowa but could
have relied on a past-champion's provisional had he not finished in the
top 15 in his Duel.
Cole
Whitt and Alex Bowman each will start the most prestigious NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series race for the first time after finishing 11th
and 14th, respectively.
Daytona
500 pole winner Austin Dillon came home 18th in the first Duel but
accomplished his most important objective -- keeping the
No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet intact for the start of
Sunday's race.
"Yeah,
we ran on the outside there for a while," Dillon said. "As soon as we
got kind of going backwards and three-wide or whatever,
I said 'Alright, now it's time to go back there and play the patient
game.' It's no fun, but we get to start on the pole for the Daytona 500
with a really fast car."
Whitt
and Swan Racing teammate Parker Kligerman both wrecked in practice on
Wednesday. Kligerman went to a backup car and ran 17th but
made the field on an owner points provisional. Whitt's team worked
tirelessly to repair his No. 26 Toyota.
"We
weren't ready to give up," said Whitt, who cracked the top 15 with a
strong last-lap run. "We knew coming down
here -- it was already hard for us to even get down here, let alone the
things that happened to our team (Wednesday) -- not just our car, from
Swan Energy losing two cars.
"My
guys pulled together and made it happen. My hat is off to them.
Everything so far has just been pretty amazing.
To be in the Daytona 500 is something I've dreamed of my whole
life. Kind of a hard way to do it, but being out and back in with just a
lap or so to go is pretty gnarly."
In
the second Duel, 2012 champion Brad Keselowski led Laps 2-35, but his
race fell apart when the No. 2 Ford was flagged
for speeding on pit road during a Lap 36 stop. A subsequent flat tire
put Keselowski three laps down. Though he finished last in the second
Duel, Keselowski made the field as the sixth fastest qualifier and will
start 33rd on Sunday.
Eric McClure, Ryan Truex, Morgan Shepherd, Joe Nemechek and Michael McDowell failed to make the 43-car field. Shepherd,
72, was attempting to become the oldest driver to qualify for the Daytona 500.
No comments:
Post a Comment