Driving iconic No. 43, Almirola nabs first career win in rain-shortened Daytona race
July 7, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – The rain and the wrecks kept on coming at Daytona
International Speedway in Sunday’s 56th running of the Coke Zero 400
Powered by Coca-Cola.
When
the carnage from two major contender-claiming incidents was over, it
was Aric Almirola who not only survived but claimed his first career
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory
and took the giant step of punching his ticket into the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Running
the iconic No. 43 with the U.S. Air Force on the hood for July 4
weekend, Almirola’s win came on the 30th anniversary of team owner
Richard Petty’s 200th Cup victory.
“I’m
more concerned with getting my first win than what happened 30 years
ago,” admitted Almirola during the race’s third red-flag delay for a
thunderstorm that eventually
halted the race with 48 scheduled laps remaining.
Not
that Almirola, who edged Brian Vickers and Kurt Busch for the win, had
no sense of history or what his triumph might mean to Richard Petty
Motorsports.
“Man, I
just took the 43 car to victory at Daytona,” said Almirola, standing
under an umbrella in Victory Lane. “This is amazing.
“I grew
up two hours away from here in Tampa and grew up in those stands,
watching Daytona 500s and Firecracker 400s -- and grew up dreaming about
what it would be like to
win here.”
Richard Petty wasn’t at Daytona on Sunday but reveled in the victory via phone.
“Today
is the future,” Petty said. “To be able to win a race down there, win it
for the Air Force on the Fourth of July, the whole thing is great.
We’ve had so many disappointments
– and it rained on us today. But it rained on us at the right time.
“You
know, I don’t ever give up on anything. Looking back on the history of
Petty Enterprises – the turmoil we’ve been through the last seven or
eight years ... I’ve always
said is that if I keep working on it long enough, you’re going to
overcome all of these things. One win doesn’t get you over the hump but
it makes it easier to go on from here.”
With
the No. 43’s first victory at Daytona since 1984 and first Cup win at
any track since John Andretti’s victory at Martinsville Speedway in
1999, Almirola can now dream
about what it will be like to pilot the No. 43 in the Chase.
“Yes,
and deservedly so for this race team,” he said. “Now we’re going to be a
part of that, to have the opportunity, not only to take (our sponsors)
to Victory Lane, but to
have that added exposure of the Chase. It is really cool to give back
to those people who took a chance on me and took a chance on our race
team.”
The
victory was the third consecutively for Ford, which last won three in a
row in 2005 with victories by Greg Biffle (2) and Carl Edwards.
Biffle,
who led the race briefly but finished 29th, predicted chaos when he
watched drivers such as David Gilliland, Landon Cassill and Reed
Sorenson, not among the points
leaders, battling at the front of the field early on. Biffle called it
some of the craziest racing he’d ever seen. But he never saw the massive
incident on Lap 98 brewing.
“The
beginning of (the race) was crazy when the 40 and 36 and 38 were dicing
for the lead,” he said. “Then it calmed down and we had a green-flag
pit cycle. (The 26-car crash)
was just a chain reaction. This wasn’t (about craziness) at all. This
was pretty calm.”
Sunday’s
first big-time wreck occurred on Lap 20, just prior to NASCAR’s
scheduled competition caution. Sixteen cars were involved, including the
top six drivers in the point
standings.
Near
the front of the field, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. got a bit loose. Jeff
Gordon, looking to avoid him, tapped Tony Stewart and the chaos was on.
Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick,
Carl Edwards, Kyle Larson and AJ Allmendinger joined Stenhouse and
Stewart in the garage with substantial damage.
“A
half-lap from getting a competition caution and Stenhouse is going to be
a hero,” said Stewart, among the perennial contenders to note of some
wild racing at the front of
the pack. “I guess Ricky thought it paid something to get to Lap 20. I
don’t know what happened to him, but he took out a bunch of good cars
right there.”
Stenhouse deflected the criticism.
“It
just got loose,” Stenhouse said. “We had a full head of steam. The 24
(Gordon) was pushing me pretty good there and the 33 (Bobby Labonte)
pulled out ahead of us and blocked.
I checked up a little and all of a sudden we got hit in the left rear. ”
The
second incident also began near the front of the pack when Biffle got
into the back of the weekend’s NASCAR Nationwide Series race winner
Kasey Kahne. That contact sent
Kahne and Joey Logano spinning in action that collected a total of 26
cars.
The
chaos left Almirola on the lead with Kurt Busch and Brian Vickers in
pursuit. It also left Kyle Busch upside down in his Joe Gibbs Toyota.
“I knew
it was going to be big as far up (in the field) as I was,” Kahne said.
“I was getting hit from behind and I just started spinning. It’s kind of
scary. I think my car
got airborne. I have never had that happen before and it’s a helpless
feeling when you’re getting hit as you are in the air. I was more
concerned when I got out and saw Kyle on his roof. I wasn’t sure why he
wasn’t getting out with his car being upside down
on the track.”
Kyle Busch was able to manage a bit of levity even after his car was plowed into by Cole Whitt, toppling it onto its roof.
“Just
hanging out,” Busch radioed, indicating he was OK. “It felt like a slow
carnival ride. I guess that’s fitting for 4th of July weekend but not
here in Daytona. I just
got T-boned there at the end and it just kind of toppled me over.”
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