Earnhardt, Kyle Busch prevail in Can-Am Duels at Daytona
Feb. 18, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – Retaking the lead with five laps left in the first of
Thursday night’s Can-Am Duel 150-mile qualifying races, Dale Earnhardt
Jr. cruised to a dominating
victory and grabbed the third staring spot for Sunday’s Daytona 500.
In
the second Duel, reigning NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Kyle Busch
took the checkered flag under caution after a wild last-lap wreck took
out the cars of Jimmie Johnson,
Martin Truex Jr., Matt Kenseth, AJ Allmendinger and Danica Patrick and
damaged the No. 41 Chevrolet of Kurt Busch.
Kenseth
will go to a backup car and start from the rear in the Daytona 500,
surrendering the second starting spot he earned during last Sunday’s
time trials.
“I
guess it was quiet and calm there for a long time, and the last lap
just went kind of crazy,” Busch said. “Great car. These guys at Joe
Gibbs Racing did a phenomenal job
this winter building some new pieces for us to come down here with and
have some fun.
“Looking
forward to starting the Daytona 500 in the fourth spot, but I think I
will actually get the outside front row now that Kenseth got caught up
in that mess and tore
up his car.”
Driving
a chassis nicknamed “Amelia” for famed aviatrix Amelia Earhart,
Earnhardt won his Duel for the second straight year and for the fifth
time overall. The two-time Daytona
500 winner drove Amelia in all four restrictor-plate races and the Duel
last year, winning two points races as well as the Daytona qualifier.
Earnhardt
held off 2015 Daytona 500 winner Joey Logano and rookie Ryan Blaney,
who drove their Fords to second and third, respectively. Kevin Harvick
finished fourth, followed
by Denny Hamlin and Daytona 500 pole winner Chase Elliott.
With
Blaney finishing highest in the first Duel among the four “open”
drivers who had to race into the field, Michael McDowell earned a spot
in the Daytona 500 based on his
qualifying speed from last Thursday, the third fastest among the “open”
drivers. Blaney was already locked into the field as the fastest
qualifier among the “open” drivers.
“You
all know what it means to be in the 500,” McDowell said. I've been on
the other side, too, where I've been loading up, too, and going home on a
Thursday night. I definitely
appreciate it when we make the races.
“It's
definitely a big thing for our team, Circle Sport and Leavine Family
Racing. We're going to have two cars in the Daytona 500, especially for a
small team. To really start
out the year well, it's very important. This is such a huge race.”
Earnhardt
got the lead on Lap 55 of 60, diving to the inside and pulling up
beside Hamlin, who was leading at the time. Earnhardt stayed out front
for the final five laps,
bringing his total for the race to 43.
“Denny
is such a great plate racer,” Earnhardt said. “There are a lot of guys
that are really good at it these days. I knew he was going to be real
tough to get around. When
he got the lead (during a sequence of green-flag pit stops), I didn’t
know if we were going to be able to get around him. He’s got a great
car and he’s real smart.
“For
whatever reason, I was able to get to his quarter-panel, (and) he saw
we had a pretty good run. I don’t know, I didn’t think I was going to
clear him. We got away from
him so he couldn’t side draft us, I guess. I was really surprised as
anybody that we got by him. He’ll be tough on Sunday.”
With
Brian Scott spinning off Turn 4 and slamming into the inside wall on
the final lap, Earnhardt crossed the finish line .183 seconds ahead of
Logano, who also finished second
to Hamlin in last Saturday’s Sprint Unlimited exhibition race.
The
first Duel sets the inside lane for the Daytona 500. Hence, Earnhardt,
Logano, Blaney, Harvick and Hamlin will line up third, fifth, seventh,
ninth and 11th behind Elliott
on Sunday.
Jamie
McMurray, Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards and Ty Dillon finished second
through fifth in the second Duel and will line up behind Kyle Busch in
the outside lane on Sunday, provided
none of those drivers has to go to a backup car, and provided Elliott
chooses the inside lane for the start of the race (the pole winner has
lane choice).
With
Matt DiBenedetto finishing highest among the "open" drivers in the
second Duel, Robert Richardson Jr. earned the last starting spot in the
Daytona 500 on speed, given
that DiBenedetto already was locked into the field as the second
fastest "open" qualifier during time trials.
With
Richardson and DiBenedetto in the race, BK Racing has all four of its
cars in the field. The cars of David Ragan and Michael Waltrip are
chartered and therefore guaranteed
starting spots.
“Two
weeks ago I was at home working on my ranch, got a phone call from Lane
Segerstrom from (sponsor) StalkIt, saying he was trying to put a deal
together trying to run the
Daytona 500,” Richardson said. “This was two weeks ago. A lot of guys
start preparing for this race as soon as the season ends from last year.
“I'm
very, very honored to be a part of BK Racing, having another
opportunity to run here at the Daytona 500. I've been in it once before,
but this one is very, very special
to me. My wife and I welcomed our brand new baby boy who was born in
early December. Every bit of the earnings we get from this race are
going to go into a college fund for him.”
Failing to qualify for the Daytona 500 were Cole Whitt, Josh Wise, David Gilliland and Reed Sorenson.
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