Sunday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Despite the crash that took him out, Earnhardt encouraged by strong performance
·
Ryan Blaney has mixed feelings about runner-up finish
·
Michael Waltrip finishes eighth in final Daytona 500
February 26, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Despite the crash that took him out, Earnhardt encouraged by strong performance
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – Returning to action from a concussion that sidelined him
for the second half of the 2016 season, Dale Earnhardt Jr. was leading
Sunday’s Daytona 500 at
the halfway point, having passed Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie
Johnson for the top spot on lap 97 of 200.
But
both Earnhardt and Johnson were off-cycle on pit stops, and a trip to
pit road was imminent. What Earnhardt needed was a caution.
What Earnhardt didn’t need was to be part of the wreck that caused the yellow.
On
Lap 105, Earnhardt was trailing a trio of Toyotas into Turn 3 when Kyle
Busch spun as his right rear tire deflated. Earnhardt tried to steer
around the wreck but clipped the
rear of Busch’s Toyota, severely damaging the right front suspension of
Earnhardt’s Chevrolet.
Earnhardt
took the car to the garage and fell out of the race in 37th place, a
disappointing end to a strong week that saw him qualify on the outside
of the front row for the
Great American Race and finish fifth in his Can-Am Duel on Thursday.
“I
don't know what happened there with the No. 18 (Busch),” Earnhardt said
of the crash that knocked him out of the race. “He just got turned
around. I tried to get the wheel
turned and get down the race track, but I lifted off the gas to miss
it, and got on the splitter a little bit, and the car went straight. We
jumped him, and got in the wall a little bit.
“Wasn't
too hard of a hit. We thought we could get the car fixed and get back
out there and see what we could do with the rest of the day and make up
some spots maybe. But there
was just too much damage. The radiator is pushed back. The toe is all
messed up. The front suspension is knocked around pretty bad, so the
upper A-frame is laid over on the motor. We just can't drive it like
that.”
The wreck, however, didn’t diminish the positive feelings Earnhardt takes away from Daytona.
“I
really enjoyed the whole week,” he said. “We had a lot of fun.
Everybody was looking forward to getting back to the race track. It
meant a lot to me. And I'm just sorry we
weren't able to deliver a better result today for all our fans and
everybody that was looking forward to today. We had a great car. At
least we went out leading the race.
“Luckily,
the hit wasn't that hard, and we'll be able to get to Atlanta and
compete again. It's going to be a fun season, and we've got pretty high
spirits. This was not the
result we wanted today, but like I said, it's been a great week.”
RYAN BLANEY HAS MIXED FEELINGS ABOUT RUNNER-UP FINISH
Given
his running position with two laps left in Sunday’s Daytona 500, Ryan
Blaney was pleasantly surprised with his runner-up finish in the Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series’
most prestigious race.
On the other hand, there was a tinge of disappointment at coming so close to a victory and falling .228 seconds short.
“We
all got single-file with 15 (laps) to go, something like that,” Blaney
said. “I tried to make a move with 10 to go to see what would happen. No
one really went with me. The
22 (Joey Logano) tried too. It really wasn’t happening. I was kind of
worried it was just going to end that way.
“Luckily,
I got Joey behind me there down the frontstretch, and we were able to
lay back to him and get a huge run into (Turn) 1. At the same moment,
the 41 (race winner Kurt
Busch) went to go pass the 42 (Kyle Larson), and it kept my run going,
all the way up to second.”
But second was also where the run stopped.
“It
was a good way to start off the year,” Blaney said. “Stinks to be so
close. But I think that’s good momentum for our team, to be good at the
beginning of the day, get some
damage and be able to rally for a good finish.”
MICHAEL WALTRIP FINISHES EIGHTH IN FINAL DAYTONA 500
Michael
Waltrip didn’t have the fastest car in Sunday’s Daytona 500, but he
managed to avoid the prolific multicar wrecks that peppered the first
150 laps of the race.
And
when he took the checkered flag, Waltrip was eighth in his 30th and
final trip around Daytona International Speedway in NASCAR’s most
important race.
“Yeah,
it’s going to be a great memory to have a top 10,” Waltrip said. “I had
so many times I was in the middle of a crash and just missed it. So you
do a good job, and you
get lucky—both. At the end, I just lost the draft, and that’s
unfortunate, because I was able to weave my way past people.
“I
had a really, really good handling car. I’m thankful that I survived,
and I’m thankful for being able to run up front, and I’m happy about the
finish. I’m ready for it to
be my last one, so it’s going to be a good one to remember it by.”
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