Perfect Storm: Almirola's storybook win a dream come true
July 6, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Aric Almirola loves to work on cars. To race them, he says is a bonus.
And to
become the first driver of Cuban descent to win in NASCAR's top series,
as he did Sunday at Daytona International Speedway for Richard Petty
Motorsports, is fulfillment
of a dream beyond any expectations.
Almirola,
30, grew up not far from Daytona and raced go-karts in the shadow of
the World Center of Racing. He attended the University of Central
Florida and was working on
his degree in mechanical engineering when he got the chance to
participate as a development driver with Joe Gibbs Racing and its
diversity partnership with former NFL player Reggie White in 2004.
“Now,
here I am a winner in the Sprint Cup Series,” he said. “It’s pretty
amazing. It’s just really surreal to be able to make it to this level. I
think about this often. I’m
one of 43 guys who get to do what I do on Sundays and race at this
level and I feel very blessed and lucky to have this opportunity.”
Sunday,
his prayers for rain were answered as he waited out an hour-long rain
delay. When NASCAR made the Coke Zero 400 official after 112 of 160
scheduled laps, Almirola had
his first Sprint Cup win.
“In
2012, when I came here, Richard Petty Motorsports was on the rebound,”
Almirola said. “It had been through some turmoil and came out of that.
Like Richard said, he wasn’t
going to give up on it. I was so grateful that they thought that I
could be the guy that could contribute to that and could help get the 43
car back to where it needed to be – to get the 43 car back to Victory
Lane.
“I think it’s very cool that we won on this weekend – 30 years to the weekend that The King (Petty) won his 200th race.”
To get the job done at Daytona made it that much more special for Almirola.
“I said
it last week when I when I went to Tampa to a lot of pre-event media
for Daytona. I said, ‘Man, of all the places I could pick to win, I
would pick Daytona. I grew
up two hours away (in Tampa) I’ve sat in these grandstands ... My
family loaded up every Christmas, and after Christmas dinner, we got
ready for kart week. I’d race right outside this race track at the
municipal stadium and come out over here and check out
this race track.”
Even
more fitting, Almirola was driving the U.S. Air Force car on Sunday. Of
Cuban-American descent, he was born at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.
His paternal grandparents
emigrated from Cuba in 1966.
That
also makes Almirola a lightning rod for attention in NASCAR’s ongoing
quest for diversity. His win on Sunday makes him the third Latin driver –
joining Juan Pablo Montoya
and Nelson Piquet Jr. – to win a national series race.
“I love
racing, period,” Almirola said. “There’s many a weekend or even during a
week when I have an opportunity to go help a friend work on a late
model or go sprint car racing
with Tony Stewart or help him on his sprint cars. I’m up for that
because I enjoy racing. This is just an added bonus that I get to be a
winning driver.
“Everybody
always asks me about how much pressure it is to drive ‘The King’s’ car
and all that stuff,” says Almirola, the 43rd driver to pilot the No. 43
car. “To be honest,
nobody can put any more pressure on me than me. I want to win for
myself.
“I know
that sounds terrible. But it’s more about winning so I can feel a sense
of accomplishment than just winning to give Richard Petty another win.
He’s won enough races.
I’m just glad we got this 43 car back to Victory Lane.”
Almirola
says there’s plenty of credit to go around, from his team’s sponsors to
competition director Sammy Johns to crew chief Trent Owens and the crew
behind the scenes.
“We’ve
got a lot of guys that show up to work every morning at 6 a.m. and give
their heart and soul to build the best cars they can.
“We
have our off weekends, don’t get me wrong. But for the large majority of
the races, we run in the top 15. We’re not Jimmie Johnson. We don’t win
every week. But I think
what we are accomplishing and what we are doing is extremely
respectable.”
Almirola’s
victory was his second top-five and fourth top-10 finish this season -
and all but assured him a spot in NASCAR's playoffs, the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup.
It moved him up two places to 21st in series points – one spot behind
Stewart and ahead of Jamie McMurray, Kurt Busch and Martin Truex Jr.
among other notables.
“I feel
like I’m the best race car driver I’ve ever been today,” he said. “And I
feel like I continue to get better very week, having Trent Owens work
on these race cars and
the group of guys we have giving me the best car they can bring to the
race track every single weekend.”
Almirola led 14 of the final 15 laps, taking the lead from Busch on the final restart.
“I
could see how dark it was getting on the backstretch and in Turn 3,” he
said. “I knew the rain was close and I knew it was time to go. Trent had
me in position to be up
front and our pit crew did a great job to get us out behind Kurt for
that last restart.
“I was
actually shocked that he took the bottom on the restart. I thought for
sure he was going to take the top. When we took off, I just made sure I
side-drafted the heck
out of him and stayed right on his door so he couldn’t get away from
me.”
The
rest was soon history. A new little piece of it for the 43, Richard
Petty Motorsports and the kid who began his career in the shadows of
Daytona.
No comments:
Post a Comment