Rating the Race – Sprint Unlimited at Daytona

Photo Credit: David Yeazell
Photo Credit: David Yeazell

Why I watched…

NASCAR returned with 19 of its stars in its annual pre-season contest featuring the pole winners from last season, along with the former winners of what had been known as the Bud Shootout. More importantly, we were hoping for a real good look at the new Gen 6 car to see if the new design could actually lend itself to a more visually appealing contest.

The race…

Yes! Yes! Yes! If they had the broadcast of this race up on one of those HD big screens, be it in Times Square or just in a department store showroom, people would have stopped and watched. That is when you know you have something. Under the lights in Daytona with cars that looks like real cars, with gyro-cams tilting as they went along the high banks and the overhead cam chasing them as they sailed more than 190 mph down the straightaway. Yes, it looked impressive.

It was not impressive that Terry Labonte made five laps then parked. Anyone see enough of that car to see if it even had a sponsor? Did something actually go wrong mechanically or it was just pulled before something did? If anything happened that was unexpected on the night, that might have been it.

You knew we would be in line for some action, especially after Dale Earnhardt Jr mentioned to his guys that he hoped they were not too attached to his car. He was not sure he would bring it home. The likes of Jimmie Johnson, Denny Hamlin, Jeff Gordon, Mark Martin, Martin Truex Jr, and the Busch brothers did not. Lap 15 saw Tony Stewart make a mistake, got nicked by Marcos Ambrose, and while neither wrecked they sure caused a mess behind them. Maybe Labonte’s team read the script before the race and, like the departed manufacturer, got the heck out of Dodge.

It was pretty to watch, and concluded with a bit of drama. For much of this event, we had just a dozen cars running about a second apart. 12 entries that showed that you did not need 43 cars to make a race, just enough who could and would compete. Sometimes you don’t need the hamburger helper when you could simply savor some top choice steak.

When it came time to put the pedal to the metal, we saw Kevin Harvick diving to the inside to block Stewart, then shooting back up to the outside just in time to block Greg Biffle. A split second later and Biffle would have delivered some bad times that would have left Happy testing the fence in a hard way. As it turned out, Harvick did not break his auto until after he crossed the line, and even then that boo-boo was on the inside, not the outside. The #29 still looked as pretty as when they began.

Rating the race – 10 /10…

What more would you want? Maybe a car that would shoot by on the outside in a sleek slingshot maneuver like in the days of old, but that was about it. We had action, we had racing, we had drama, and it was all presented in a fashion that even the most jaded NASCAR hater would have had to be impressed with. If the Daytona Duels on Thursday and next Sunday’s Daytona 500 can match what we just witnessed we are going to have a very good start to the 2013 season. Don’t you agree?

Race Results – Sprint Unlimited at Daytona International Speedway

Pos. No. Driver MFG Start Laps Laps Led Status
1 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 17 75 40 Running
2 16 Greg Biffle Ford 4 75 2 Running
3 22 Joey Logano Ford 9 75 0 Running
4 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 15 75 5 Running
5 20 Matt Kenseth Toyota 12 75 26 Running
6 43 Aric Almirola Ford 8 75 0 Running
7 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 3 75 0 Running
8 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr Chevrolet 16 75 0 Running
9 56 Martin Truex Jr Toyota 6 75 2 Running
10 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Chevrolet 14 75 0 Running
11 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 10 75 0 Running
12 99 Carl Edwards Ford 1 75 0 Running
13 78 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 18 15 0 Accident
14 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 11 14 0 Accident
15 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 5 14 0 Accident
16 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 13 14 0 Accident
17 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 7 14 0 Accident
18 55 Mark Martin Toyota 2 14 0 Accident
19 32 Ken Schrader Ford 19 2 0 Vibration

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of SpeedwayMedia.com

Ron Thornton
Ron Thornton
A former radio and television broadcaster, newspaper columnist, Little League baseball coach, Ron Thornton has been following NASCAR on this site since 2004. While his focus may have changed over recent years, he continues to make periodic appearances only when he has something to say. That makes him a rather unique journalist.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Bobby Labonte was NOT in the race. You meant Terry Labonte that finished last. Didn’t matter as he had no chance of winning. Just collecting a fat paycheck.

    • I did watch it. Right after I sent this in for publication I noticed my error, but as the boy did not bother to hang around long enough for anyone to determine if it was Terry, Bobby, Schrader, Mr. Labonte, or the pet dog, I left it. Two parade laps then off to the garage? Someone should be ashamed.

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