April 7, 2014
By John Sturbin
NASCAR Wire Service
FORT
WORTH, Texas -- An oddball combination of mud and fire abruptly ended
Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s reign as NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points leader
Monday morning during the rain-delayed Duck Commander 500 at Texas
Motor Speedway.
The
2014 Daytona 500 champion and series leader after four of the season’s
first six races, Junior crashed and burned on Lap 13 around TMS’
high-banked,
1.5-mile quad-oval. Junior was trailing Aric Almirola’s No. 43 Eckrich
Ford Fusion when he clipped the grass on the inside apron of the
frontstretch. The left-front splitter of Junior’s No. 88 National Guard
Chevrolet SS dug deeply into the mud, and the resulting
blown left-front tire shot the car across the track and careening into
the outside wall. That right-side impact caused a flash fire as Junior
scrambled to safety.
Junior
said he thought he was taking a “decent line” through the track’s
signature dogleg, as he and Almirola were attempting to pass Sunoco
Rookie
of the Year contender Kyle Larson.
"Just
didn't see the grass,” said Junior, who started 19th. “Didn't know the
grass was down there. With the way the A-post is on these cars you
can't really see that good to that angle. I just didn't have a good
visual of where the apron and the grass was and got down in there pretty
good. You can't run through there the way they have these cars on the
ground like that. Just a mistake on my part.
Just misjudged it."
The
race had just gone green after the opening 10 laps were run under a
competition yellow -- a bow to a damp racing surface. "It was no
factor,”
Junior said. “I just made a mistake."
Four-time
Sprint Cup champion Jeff Gordon, whose second-place finish to Joey
Logano of Penske Racing gave him the points lead, said the opening
sequence was just weird.
“When
we left pit road at the beginning of the race, we drove by the two jet
dryers, casually going by it,” said Gordon, driver of the No. 24 Axalta
/ Texas A&M School of Engineering Chevy. “The last one about blew
all of us over. I mean, I thought it damaged my car as well. It got my
attention. We all started avoiding that one.”
Junior
had logged four top-three finishes during the season’s first six races
en route to a nine-point lead (227-218) over Matt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs
Racing when the day began. Junior placed 43rd on Monday and exited
Texas in sixth, 31 points behind his Hendrick Motorsports teammate
Gordon, who leads Kenseth by four points (259-255) heading into the
Bojangles’ Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway Saturday
night.
LOGANO TOTING HOME TEXAS SWAG
Joey
Logano’s victory in Monday’s Duck Commander 500 was his first since
August 18 of last season at Michigan International Speedway. At 23
years,
10 months and 14 days, the Connecticut native is the youngest Sprint
Cup winner in TMS history.
"It's
such a tough race track and we had plenty of time to think about this
for the last couple days, so it's a really cool place to win," said
Logano, driver of the No. 22 Shell Pennzoil / Hertz Ford Fusion fielded
by Team Penske. "They give you a ring; I've got guns; I've got a
trophy; I've got a (cowboy) hat; I've got a duck call. It's pretty
cool."
STEWART RACKS UP LAPS LED
Pole-sitter
Tony Stewart led 74 laps early, pushing his career TMS total to 801 and
past Matt Kenseth (775) on the track’s all-time Sprint Cup list
dating to April 1997. Both drivers made their 24th career starts at the
track in Monday’s rain-delayed Duck Commander 500; Kenseth failed to
lead a lap.
The
laps-led were the first that Stewart, driver of the No. 14 Mobil 1 /
Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet SS, has paced in 2014. The three-time Sprint
Cup
champion said after qualifying on the pole Saturday that he is
returning to form after his 2013 season was cut short due to a broken
right leg suffered in a sprint car crash in August at Southern Iowa
Speedway. “Smoke” finished 10th in Texas, his third top
10 in seven starts this season.
UP NEXT: “THE LADY IN BLACK”
Darlington
Raceway will play host to its first April Sprint Cup race since 1991
Saturday evening, when the Bojangles’ Southern 500 takes the green
flag at 6:30 p.m. (ET). FOX’s live telecast will begin at 6 p.m.
The
weekend’s on-track schedule includes the NASCAR Nationwide Series VFW
Sport Clips Help a Hero 200 at 8 p.m. on Friday. Matt Kenseth of Joe
Gibbs
Racing won last year’s Sprint Cup race around the egg-shaped,
1.366-mile oval. The win was Kenseth’s third of the season, with
teammate Denny Hamlin second and Jeff Gordon third.
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