Speed Weeks: A War of Attrition
Well the long awaited start to the season is in the history books. The racing was long hard and not overly exciting at times. History did indeed repeat itself. But not the history folks believed would repeat.
The Bud Shootout left most fans feeling disappointed and flat. The two car tandems were not fun to watch. Although NASCAR and the broadcast partners touted more lead changes and one of the closest finishes in the history of the race. The truth is the numbers are skewed. When cars have to run in pairs and have to switch places every 4 – 6 laps the number of lead changes is going to go up.
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[/media-credit]NASCAR assured a record number of lead changes in the top two series by making sure the tandems could not run for long periods of time. They made sure the cars would over heat if they did. In order to avoid blowing an engine they had to change up which would increase the number of lead changes recorded but the number is artificially skewed. You would have to divide the number by 2 to get an actual number of changes.
The race had an exciting conclusion but the only real racing occurred with 25 laps to go. The only problem with that, the race was 75 laps long. Which made the first 50 a time to scratch one’s head and say exactly what is this we are watching?
Take nothing away from Kurt Busch. He figured out how to work the situation to his benefit and he got Regan Smith to go along for the ride. Ryan Newman was in the worst place he could possibly be on the last lap he was leading coming to the checkers. Denny Hamlin choose to go below the yellow line and throw away both cars chances of beating the Busch and Smith tandem and then claim it was for the purpose of avoiding a wreck. Of course the next day it was because he was forced down there and had already taken the lead when he did it or so he thought. The controversy attempt did not work this time around and most simply ignored the attempt including race winner Kurt Busch. The big controversy was yet to come. But we wouldn’t see it until later in the week.
Qualifying was a series of surprises from the 88 on the pole to young Trevor Bayne in the top ten. But when the smoke cleared it was once again an all Hendrick front row with Dale Earnhardt Jr and Jeff Gordon on the front row.
Could it be? Was it possible? Could Junior really have a chance to win the 500 yet again and on the anniversary of his father’s death? It looked for all the world as though that was the scenario playing out in front of us. The 88 was fast. It was slick and scary fast. Dale Jr had that swagger back and a confidence in his voice and demeanor that had been gone too long. It appeared that the man once referred to as NASCAR’s Legacy, The Pied Piper of Daytona was back. But fate was not done yet.
On Wednesday, Dale Jr and the team had decided they didn’t want to practice. They had a fast car. They were comfortable and they were confident. But NASCAR would have none of it. They were required to take the car out and practice in order to enter the Gatorade Duels. It didn’t take long for disaster to strike after the several hours of rain delay.
A group of cars led by Robby Gordon and David Gilliland slide up in front of 5 time series champion Jimmie Johnson and his team mate Dale Jr. The 48, running at speed had to check up to keep from running over the slower cars. The pushing 88 checked up and steered away from his team mate just as Kasey Kahne gave the 56 of Martin Truex Jr a shove, right into the back of the 88. Around they went into the inside wall and through the grass.
The pole sitting car was destroyed. The Amp Energy Team immediately unloaded the back up with the assurances that it was just as good as the primary. Well not quite but really close. The 88 would start in the rear of the duels and the 500. He was one of only two cars that had actually qualified.
It didn’t matter what Dale Jr did in that race on Thursday he was going to start in the back. He could win by 2 laps and he would still start the Daytona 500 from the back. So why take the chance with the back up car. Rumors flew he wouldn’t run it. He would run it and he would start and park it. He would run it but he would run it in the back. NASCAR immediately made the statement that the 88 HAD to run the Duel. He was obligated by entry blank to run the Duel if he failed to start the duel he would not be allowed to run the 500 at all.
The rules for the Duels came under fire. With the changes NASCAR had mandated to the cooling system after the Shootout the field had already seen 4 engine changes due to heat damage or failure. There were 3 back up cars in the field because of the tandem racing. Speeds were still over 205 mph. Common sense should rule the day. But this is NASCAR and the only common sense that counts is the common cents that governs the profit ratios. Suddenly the cost containment concerns were out the window. It was not a secret that TV ratings and ticket sales for the Duels on Thursday were at risk if that 88 didn’t start the race. And the growing price of the junk yard was no longer an issue.
The duels saw more wrecks and a repeat of the Shootout in race one. The race was long with a few highlights and shining spots namely the consistency of a one car team from Denver Colorado with Ragan Smith at the wheel. Once again the young driver pushed past series champion Kurt Busch to the checkers. Smith showed the composure and the instincts of a wily veteran at speeds that made many cringe.
The second duel offered prophetic foreshadowing of the 500 when 4 time champion and winner of the 500 Jeff Gordon teamed up with 19 year old rookie Trevor Bayne who was piloting a historical Woods Brothers Ford. Their speed and Bayne’s consistency was not only surprising but refreshing. A car in the race not on points bought by a car owner. A ride earned through hard work and talent. And a driver with the humility to watch learn and emulate the master’s of the draft. It was only a last lap misfortune that ruined the young man’s day. But still there was a message there this rookie was not going to go quietly. He was going to be a factor in the race and he wasn’t afraid.
Friday, brought a beautiful day with little practice from the 500 field. But the NNS and the CWTS were out in full force. The truck series would start under the lights in its season opener but missing from the field for the first time in 7 years was past champion Mike Skinner.
Due to an error on the entry blank Skinner was not afforded the past champion’s provisional and his time did not put him in the race.
The pole went to Austin Dillon driver of the number 3 Bass Pro Shop Chevy. The race was nose to tail for most of the race. It wasn’t until there were 35 laps to go that the racing began.
The last 25 laps saw a race of attrition with only 6 trucks on the final restart that were had not been in a wreck or did not have serious damage. The final restart saw a determined Michael Waltrip take the lead out of 4 to take the checkers 10 years to the day after his first career win in that tragic running of the Daytona 500 that claimed the life of 7 time champion Dale Earnhardt. Waltrips truck was a tribute to his friend and car owner from that race carrying his number from that day and the NAPA sponsorship on the hood.
He was not given that respect. Pit Reporter Jamie Little continued to badger Waltrip in victory lane and put the veteran’s emotions on display as though they were entertainment fodder for the race. Her search for TV time in victory lane proved to be distasteful and disrespectful to Michael Waltrip his team and his memory of his friend.
The first race of the weekend in the books it was time for the second tier series to take the center stage on Saturday morning. With an all JR Motorsports second row, Jr Nation’s hopes were high. Would Dale Jr draft with Danica? Would he push her to the front? Would she push him to the front? It didn’t take long to find the answer. At the drop of the green Earnhardt Jr would set his Hellman’s Chevrolet to the front without Danica Patrick.
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[/media-credit]Patrick’s radio was filled with whining and complaining that no one would draft with her. Yet when she did get a partner willing to take a chance on her in Clint Bowyer who was driving the KHI number 33, when it came time to switch she raced for him for the position. Bowyer needing air to cool the car backed away from her and picked up another dancing partner. Patrick whined that she would do what needed to be done she “didn’t know how to push but she would try.” It was clear even amongst the boredom of the middle part of the race that she had lead her last lap and she lead it thanks to the partner she didn’t not want to give up a position to for the sake of the two car tango.
The entire first and middle part of the race was dubbed by past Daytona winner and series Champion Dale Jarrett, as “synchronized racing.” Featuring two car drafts that more resembled horse and cart racing than automobiles, which combined with a very poor broadcast whose camera work once again showed that ESPN is no longer the leader in motorsports coverage made for a long afternoon for TV viewers.
The broadcast team attempted to direct the camera team to the action with Brad Daughtery saying all the real racing action is from 12th on back. Still what we watched was 3 pair of cars who lead the pack around and around the 2.5 mile track.
It wasn’t until the final 25 laps that we actually saw racing as we know it. The exciting finish was close. The contenders fierce in their determination to take the win, but it would be Tony Stewart in the closest finish in series history at a super speedway.
It is important to add here that the finishes for all of the races thus far in speed weeks were close ones. The competition in the final laps was incredible. But in almost every single case the race was actually not a lot longer than a Saturday night race at your local track. With the go time being 25 to 35 laps to go, the real issue with that remains the length of the entire race.
The 500 now loomed large but the teams had not met their final obstacle from NASCAR as of yet. NASCAR announced shortly before the beginning of the NNS race that it had changed the grill opening for the Sprint Cup Cars by a half inch. Allowing them 3 inches of air intake instead of 2.5 inches, the move was made in response to the obvious over heating and engine failures that had been seen in the week preceding the 500. This change was announced less than 24 hours before the green flag was to fly.
The Daytona 500 began under conditions that were hotter than the rest of speed weeks. 43 beautiful, fast works of art and technology were led to the green flag exactly on time by three awesome tributes in the form of the Transformers cars of Jimmie Johnson, Dale Jr. and Juan Puablo Montoya. Team engineers and crew chiefs uttered a sigh of relief. It was time to race. Time to deal with the obstacles that they made a living dealing with every single week of the 36 week season no more changes, no more chances just time to go racing for the Harley J. Earl trophy.
The first blown engine was quick to appear when on lap 10 J.J. Yeley’s engine let go. Very shortly after on lap 20 one of the major surprises of the day would occur when Kevin Harvick’s Budweiser Chevrolet also had an engine let go. The war of attrition had begun. But the lap 29 17 car wreck that would take out 2 of the HMS cars and damage a third and damage the Roush teams chances severely. That incident would contribute heavily to the rising totals of the million dollar junk yard that is always seen at Talladega and Daytona.
The two car tango was again the order of the day with NASCAR bragging about record amounts of lead changes, cautions, and close front runners. Again numbers that did not allow for the switching of lead cars to allow for the over heating of the pushing car. Although we did see some brief multi car drafts they quickly broke down into 2 car drafts.
Wrecks, Spins, Blown Engines were fairly evenly spaced throughout the event keeping the monotony broke up. But the real truth is that the quality of racing did not improve with the super bowl of NASCAR. What did improve was the honesty of the broadcast. Larry McReynolds relaying Tony Stewart’s comment of being white knuckled and holding his breath. Dale Jr’s comment of this racing sucks to his crew chief who agreed with him.
[/media-credit]The feel good story of the year however, was the winner of the race. 20 year old rookie Trevor Bayne in only his second Sprint Cup start won the Daytona 500 for the Wood Brothers. The car a replica of David Pearson’s Daytona winning car and carrying the Hall of fame inductee’s name on the side sparked memories of when real men raced for 500 miles in real cars and what won on Sunday sold on Monday. It couldn’t have happened to a nicer kid or a nicer group of people. Miracles do happen and dreams do come true if you believe and Trevor Bayne will always remember the day his came true at Daytona.There were high points in speed weeks. Dale Jr won the pole. He ran good in the Nationwide race and he ran well being in the top ten most of the day and leading on multiple occasions until being taken out in a wreck 6 laps from the end of the 500. He and crew chief Steve Letarte proved who they are and what they are made of. They gave Jr. Nation something to be proud of and to look forward too.
Stewart Haas Racing was the strongest of all multiple car teams with both cars making it to the end. Even though Ryan Newman was also taken out in the same wreck as Earnhardt Jr which was caused when Robby Gordon attempted to re enter the track from the apron into a line of cars at speed.
Hendrick Motorsports showed their strength and dominance through out speed weeks with the front row and 4 cars and drivers that were pumped and primed and would undoubtedly have been a threat had they not been victims of circumstances.
Ford is back on track. For all the worshippers of the blue oval the long drought is over. Ford is once again a force to be contended with.
And finally, we have said our goodbyes, we have celebrated the life of one of the greatest heroes our sport will ever have, a man that continues to influence and change our sport and its fans even today 10 years after his passing. Now the time has come to move on. As his son put it, it’s time to go on with life. He will never be forgotten. But at last 10 years later perhaps the media can allow him to rest in peace and allow his son a measure of peace as well.
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Congratulations to Kurt Busch and the Penske team on their Bud Shootout win and their Gatorade Duel win. Congratulations to Dale Earnhardt Jr, Jeff Gordon and Hendrick Motorsports on their front row positions. To Jeff Burton and Richard Childress Racing on their victory in the Second Gatorade Duel race. To Michael Waltrip and Michael Waltrip Racing on his moving truck series win. And to Tony Stewart and Kevin Harvick Inc on his repeat performance in the Nationwide Series. And of course to Trevor Bayne and the Woods Brothers on their return to victory lane in the Daytona 500.
That said, to all the competitors in all the series thanks for giving us everything you have to give, you are our heroes. Most importantly, thanks to all the families who shared their loved ones with us so we could cheer our favorite driver and favorite teams. You are the true heroes of the sport and we are forever in your debt.
Danica Patrick NASCAR Nationwide Season Begins on a High Note
Danicamania is back! JR Motorsports driver Danica Patrick started from a career-best qualifying position of fourth, and earned a career-best finish of 14th at the Drive4COPD 300 on Saturday.
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[/media-credit]Patrick managed to maintain a Top 10 position without a tandem drafting partner for the first quarter of the race. She finally found a drafting partner in Clint Bowyer. He propelled her past four cars to take the race lead on lap 31, making her the first woman to ever lead a NASCAR lap at Daytona.
When Bowyer’s engine became hot, Patrick bobbled her car and was unable to reconnect. She then slipped to ninth place. Bowyer, slipping even further to 18th, blamed Patrick’s spotter for poor communication. Patrick admits that she wasn’t sure how to make pushing others work all that well yet.
In a spectacular finish, Tony Stewart went on to win the race by a narrow seven one thousands of a second margin over Bowyer.
Patrick, a lap down, was quite pleased with her first Top 15 finish. “It was a good experience, there was a lot to learn and I did learn a lot,” she said.
Car owner Dale Earnhardt Jr., praised her run by saying ” I think she was just doing whatever she felt was necessary to get to the end of the race and see if she had a shot. I think she did a good job.”
Patrick is scheduled to run a limited 14 race schedule for 2011. Her next race will be at Phoenix Motor Speedway
The Wood Brothers – Last of a Breed and Winning Again
The 2011 edition of the Daytona 500 was flawed. No one will deny that, but the result was sheer joy. It was uplifting to see the Wood family in victory lane once again. And they were all there—Leonard and Glen and their sons Len and Eddie. What a tribute to a true family organization.
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[/media-credit]Most of the teams in NASCAR, especially the successful ones are owned by some millionaire who wants to dabble in this sport. I don’t count Jack Roush or Richard Childress in this group. Those guys started at the bottom and worked their way up, but how many true family organizations are there? The Woods are one of the few left and it was gratifying to see them in their rightful place—victory lane.
Many expected that one of the powerful Chevrolet’s of Hendrick Motorsports or Richard Childress Racing would win the whole week, but it wasn’t to be. Childress cars only won a qualifying race all week. Hendrick had two cars on the front row for the 500, but nothing else to show for all the hoopla that surrounded them all week. You just can’t predict who is going to win one of these things at Daytona or Talladega. I’ve said many times that four times a year anyone can win, and that’s not taking anything away from Trevor Bayne and the Wood Brothers. They had a fast car and an amazingly mature driver for his age and it all came together.
The Wood Brothers are the oldest surviving team still operating in Sprint Cup. They started out in a tiny shop in Stuart, Virginia, just a little bit east of Martinsville. For years they stayed in their little shop where victories by such dignitaries as Marvin Paunch, Tiny Lund, Cale Yarborough, A.J. Foyt, Dan Gurney, Parnelli Jones, David Pearson, Neil Bonnett, Michael Waltrip, Dale Jarrett, and Elliott Sadler made them legends in the sport. Until today, the last victory the Woods had enjoyed was in 2001 with Sadler driving at Bristol Motor Speedway. Though the team has 98 victories, the last nine years had given them no victories. They faced a low point in 2008 when for the first time as an organized team; they did not make the field for the Daytona 500. It was then that they decided things had to change.
Because of limited sponsorship, the reduced their schedule to 13-15 races a year. In the early days, they usually didn’t run for championships, but not they had to quit running all the races for financial reasons. Still, that was getting them nowhere. Late in 2010, Eddie Wood went to Jack Roush and they formed an alliance. Roush-Yates was already supplying engines for the team, but now Roush-Fenway would supply cars to them, much like they do for Richard Petty Motorsports. The change in fortunes for the Woods was almost immediate.
The first race was last year’s second Texas race, and the driver was a 19-year old driver named Trevor Bayne that Roush-Fenway had signed. Bill Elliott had been piloting the cars, but Bayne was the driver for that day. Bayne finished 17th on the lead lap. In the off-season, the Woods decided to give Bayne a chance at Daytona and the rest is history. The Wood Brothers Ford was fast with Bayne qualifying fourth. He was a star in the making and proved it with his Daytona 500 win.
So, for a day, all was right with the world. In the beginning of this sport, men and their families built race cars and came to the track chasing a dream. For a little while, the big tycoons who pretty much run this sport with their multi-million dollar drivers took a back seat to the Wood Brothers. It’s a shame that even if Bayne decides to change his declaration for which series he’s running for the championship (he had declared he was running for the Nationwide Series championship because the Woods were only planning 17 races this year), he will get no points for today’s race and the win will not be considered, but a rule is a rule I suppose. Let’s hope he smokes the field again and again this year and the 43 points he lost will only be an afterthought. That is, if someone steps up to the plate and offers the Woods a sponsorship deal for the remaining 19 races. Wouldn’t that be just perfect?
HOORAHS AND WAZZUPS: So that’s who Trevor Bayne is!
NASCAR officially opened their 2011 season with the annual Daytona Speedweeks. By the time the checkers fell on the running of the 53d annual Daytona 500 last Sunday, that annual February effort was all about the presence of superstars. During Speedweeks at Daytona we witnessed the emergence of a new future superstar while, at the same time, we witnessed the triumphant return of a former superstar race team that we honestly thought was over and done. We also honored the memory of one of the sport’s greatest superstars. With those thoughts in mind, let’s begin with:
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[/media-credit]HOORAH to Trevor Bayne for first raising eyebrows all during Speedweeks and then stunning the competition by winning the Daytona 500 during the final laps of a double green-white-checker finish. This accomplishment was even more amazing because Bayne, who celebrated his 20th birthday the day before the 500, earned the right to permanently attach the moniker “Daytona 500 Champion” to his racing resume in only his second ever NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start. Bayne only led the race one time, for six laps, but the effort came at the most important point of the event. With the poise of a seasoned veteran, Bayne held off a hard charging Carl Edwards, during the final few feet of the race, to take the win by a mere margin of 0.118 seconds.
The amazing aspect to this story is the fact that no one, prior to Speedweeks, had really taken the time to find out who this young driver is. It was just a few short months ago that Bayne was sitting in his Tennessee home wondering if he even had the prospects of a full time ride in any of NASCAR’s big three national touring series.
But talent potential prevailed and Bayne was hired by Jack Roush to join their NASCAR Nationwide Series effort. That in turn led the Wood Brothers to take a gamble on a young, still in development, driver and sign him for 17 Sprint Cup events this year. Everyone seems to be highly satisfied with the results of those decisions.
Those facts leads to a HOORAH for Wood Brothers Racing. Their family legacy in NASCAR dates back to 1949 and this group of iconic racers will forever be remembered for the role they played in developing the sport of NASCAR. The last time the Wood Brothers won a Sprint Cup event was all the way back in 2001 when driver Elliott Sadler placed the car in victory lane at Bristol. Last Sunday’s effort marked their 98th Cup win and their fifth Daytona 500 win.
But the Woods fell on hard times in recent years. The team was no longer competitive and the sponsorship packages that came their way only allowed them to run part time schedules in the Sprint Cup Series. Going into the new season, they had just enough sponsorship from Motorcraft and Quick Lane, to run a 17 race schedule. It’s a strong possibility that their telephone is already ringing with calls from potential new sponsors who will interested in joining the excitement that Bayne created last Sunday. The Wood Brothers certainly deserve that opportunity.
Yet another HOORAH goes out to the Daytona 500 winner’s parents, Rocky and Stephanie Bayne. First off, it’s apparent that they did a fine job in raising their son. It turns out that the young man is equally dynamic off the track as he is inside of the race car. The sight of proud parents watching their son win his first Sprint Cup race is always a precious sight.
The Baynes deserve a second HOORAH for making the decision to watch that special moment in time from the grandstands instead of pit road. Rocky Bayne said he gets highly emotional watching his son race and he didn’t want to take the chance of that emotion becoming a distraction to the team. That’s a very smart decision. We’ve seen emotional Dads turn into team distractions in the past. I assume you all know which NASCAR Sprint Cup Dad I’m referring to.
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A combined WAZZUP-HOORAH goes out to the Daytona circumstances that created a new phenomenon in NASCAR restictor plate racing: the two car draft. A new, super smooth, pavement job on the track was one of the factors that saw two car drafting replace the traditional lengthy draft lines we are accustomed to seeing. The WAZZUP portion was issued because, quite frankly, I honestly didn’t care for the concept at first. However that opinion changed as I witnessed the close finishes in each and every one of the Speedweek events.
With that came a concern over engine temperatures which led to a maneuver known as “the change over.” That occurred when the first car in the draft switched positions with the second car and that brief separation allowed the opportunity for fresh air to help cool off the engines. The two car draft also created some new racing terms such as “two car interlock” and “team mate for a day.” The only new term I didn’t hear was “the push me pull you” in reference to the two headed animal from the movie “Dr Doolittle.”
Also interesting was the fact that the two car draft was not necessarily a team function. Drivers spent the practice sessions and Speedweek events, such as the Budweiser Shootout and the Gatorade Duels, finding out which car they could draft with the best. That in turn led to the team spotters literally dictating the terms of the maneuvers. Because the second driver in the draft often had trouble seeing the track in front of him, the spotter for the first car was had to relay information for both cars. Additionally there were in car radio contact between the drivers which allowed them to set up draft partnerships during the racing. Some of these drivers actually had access to as many as 15 different radio frequencies on their car’s steering wheels.
In one additional item, that involves the two car draft, a HOORAH goes out to the United States Air Force’s Thunderbird flying exhibition team. Apparently they liked what they saw because, during last Thursday’s first Gatorade Duel qualifying race, they performed a double plane draft fly by over the Daytona Speedway.
Those elaborate radio communications spawned a great line from Bob Osbourne, crew chief for driver Carl Edwards, who said he was actually getting a bad headache from all of those voices he was hearing over his radio headset.
HOORAH to Goodyear for providing a high quality tire, loaded with plenty of grip, that aided the efforts of the two car draft. The quality of that tire also provided crew chiefs the option of calling fuel only pit stops.
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A double WAZZUP goes out to driver David Ragan who made a monumental blunder that cost him a major chance to win the Daytona 500. During the start of the first green-white-checker attempt Ragan went from the outside lane to the inside to pick up a two car draft with Trevor Bayne. But, NASCAR rules dictate that you cannot make a move like that prior to crossing the start-finish line. The other amazing aspect here was the fact that Ragan was actually angry over the ruling and the penalty that came with it. The fact of the matter is: he blew it big time.
WAZZUP with the snake bit Michael Waltrip? The semi retired two time Daytona 500 champion, turned team owner, was making his 25th start in the great American race and found himself with a steering wheel full of trouble. It started early in the event when he launched the race’s first yellow flag after accidentally spinning out Kyle Busch. But the big problem came on lap 28 when Waltrip launched a 15 car “big one” that heavily damaged the cars of a lot of the pre race favorites. While double car drafting with his team mate, and a car that he owns, Waltrip accidentally spun out David Reutimann and the collateral damage started from that point. Reutimann deserves a HOORAH for his post wreck interview diplomacy by making it clear that what happened to him was not the fault of the guy who signs his paychecks.
A combined WAZZUP-HOORAH goes out to Dale Earnhardt Jr who certainly had his hands full during the Daytona Speedweeks. NASCAR’s most popular driver went up and down like a roller coaster. The team looked strong during the practice sessions and they looked like winners during the Budweiser Shootout only to get caught up in a late race crash not of their making.
But the spirit of the Junior Nation rose again on qualifying day when their driver won the pole position. But that spirit was deflated again when a practice crash three days later forced the use of a back up car that had Earnhardt starting the Daytona 500 from the rear of the field. The spirit soared again as Earnhardt looked like a potential winner during the 500 only to have another disappointment when he got caught up a crash, again not of his making, during the first green-white-checker attempt to finish the race.
The HOORAH aspect here lies in the fact that Earnhardt’s team, under the leadership of new crew chief Steve Letarte, looked strong and well organized. That’s good news as well as a major building block for the races to come. They just couldn’t seem to overcome the element of bad luck. Also bear in mind that all of this up and down drama presented itself in the middle of the tenth anniversary of the tragic accident that claimed the life of the driver’s famous father.
WAZZUP with early race concerns over the performance of Earnhardt Childress racing engines? Pre race favorite Kevin Harvick exited the Daytona 500 with a blown engine on lap 22 in his Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet and had to settle for a 42nd place finish. On lap 92 Childress driver Jeff Burton, another pre race favorite, also left the race with a blown engine which led to his 36th place finish. You could clearly see the look of concern on the face of Richard Childress.
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HOORAH to Tony Stewart for winning Saturday’s season opening Nationwide Series race at Daytona in a photo finish that was very exciting. Stewart came under the checkers a scant seven-one thousandths of a second ahead of Clint Bowyer. It was the fourth consecutive Nationwide Series season opener victory for Stewart and his sixth win overall at Daytona. That’s pretty impressive considering the fact that the driver was seriously ill with the flu for three days prior to the race.
A HOORAH goes out to winning team owners Kevin and Delana Harvick whose impressive racing operation was in the process of celebrating its tenth anniversary. By the way the car that Clint Bowyer was driving was also owned by Kevin Harvick Inc giving the team a one-two finish.
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While Michael Waltrip had his hands filled with problems on the Sprint Cup side of Speedweeks, he absolutely deserves a HOORAH for winning last Friday’s Daytona season opener for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. That very exciting race had two “big ones” with the second multi truck crash coming only four laps from the end of the race. In the final few feet, on the final lap of a green-white-checker finish, Waltrip made a beautiful outside move on race leader Elliott Sadler to steal the win by a mere margin of 0.061 seconds.
Waltirp’s winning Toyota Truck was owned by the Las Vegas based Vision Aviation Racing who, just a matter of weeks ago, set up a race shop in North Carolina to race in the truck series and then set up a merger with the former Billy Ballew Motorsports to move that project forward in a hurry. VAR gets a huge HOORAH for winning their first ever race in a NASCAR national touring series.
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The final HOORAHS of the week goes to the effort and coverage of the ten year anniversary of the tragic loss of Dale Earnhardt. On lap three of the Daytona 500 the Fox Sports broadcast team went silent and aimed their cameras at 182,000 fans who all stood up while holding three fingers in the air to commemorate Earnhardt’s famed car number. It was truly an awesome sight.
Another HOORAH goes out to the SPEED Channel for their airing of the documentary “The Day”. This extremely well done presentation documented the day we lost Dale Earnhardt and presented information that we have never heard before during all of these years. “The Day” tapped every human emotion you could name and was extremely well produced.
For that matter let’s send another HOORAH to the SPEED Channel for their massive coverage of the 2011 Daytona Speedweeks. It was a job well done.
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I suppose some of you are thinking that the final WAZZUP of the week is going to focus on certain comments made last week by by a certain ESPN host that intimated NASCAR had fixed the results of the Daytona 500 qualifying because they really wanted their long time most popular driver, Dale Earnhardt Jr, to start the 500 on the front row and win a race that was also in memory of the passing of his famous father ten years ago.
Normally I would not be interested in lending exposure or credence to something this damn stupid. But, seeing how some of you are expecting it, here goes:
Last week Tony Kornheiser, the host of the ESPN television program “Pardon The Interruption” as well as an ESPN talk radio host, announced that Earnhardt’s pole winning effort was fixed because NASCAR was discreetly willing to overlook the fact that the car might be illegal in some un named capacity. Those statements were reportedly aided on Kornheiser’s radio show last Tuesday morning by “Washington Post” columnist and former NASCAR reporter Liz Clarke who claimed that she was 60 percent sure that Earnhardt’s car was not completely legal.
First off, you have to understand the nature of Kornheiser’s job with ESPN. It’s his duty to get fans riled up with statements that often range from the controversial to the completely stupid. That’s because it creates the ratings numbers the host needs to keep his job. If you can get some writer from a prominent newspaper to help you out with the gag then the job gets even easier.
Having seen Kornheiser on his television show in the past it’s pretty obvious that he virtually knows nothing about the sport of NASCAR and probably doesn’t care enough to learn about it. It’s even safe to assume that his motorsports knowledge is handed to him on a sheet of paper by a hard working, but unpaid, ESPN intern.
Last week’s antics was just another cheap and stupid stunt from a media commentator looking to generate extra interest, and of course ratings numbers, so he can keep that lucrative paycheck I’m sure he receives.
Also remember he’s just stating an opinion and opinions are like a**holes, we all have one. In fact it’s my personal opinion that Tony Kornheiser was an a**hole long before he attacked NASCAR racing last week.
The Final Word on the Daytona 500
So, what did we learn at the Daytona 500?
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[/media-credit]Well, we learned that if the rest of the races this season are comparable to the first, 2011 will be one hell of a year in NASCAR. To start with, you have a 20 year (and one day) old driver winning his first race in his second Cup start in an event it took Dale Earnhardt 20 years to finally claim. Trevor Bayne demonstrated throughout all the practices and his duel qualifier that he has that certain something. Jeff Gordon recognized it, and now most race fans should as well. The only question remaining is, what is the kid going to do now for an encore?
We learned that Dale Earnhardt, even ten years after his death, is still held in reverence. In sports, only hockey’s Maurice Richard comes to mind as being even close. Only Elvis can still spark such emotions. Few people in this world can still bring tears to the eyes of strangers after a decade as the memory of the Intimidator did over the past week.
We learned that his son can still run strong at the big track and remains as popular as ever. Too bad he found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time as Junior went from a Top Ten to sit 24th. David Ragan messed up the re-start of a green-white-checkers, which started a chain reaction of misfortune behind him that concluded Junior’s day. Earnhardt’s three team mates all got caught up in the 15-car Big One of Lap 29, with Jimmie Johnson and Gordon limping around to finish in 27th and 28th place. At least Mark Martin recovered to wrap up 10th.
We learned that Hendrick engines can, and did, fail. Kevin Harvick was gone from the scene within 20 laps, while Jeff Burton didn’t even make half way. J.J. Yeley got in ten before he was done, deemed the day’s Biggest Loser and collecting his single point for coming out.
We learned that eight cylinders beats seven, which is why last year’s Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray had to settle for 18th. We learned that Furniture Row’s Regan Smith is another fellow to watch for this season as he did himself proud to wind up seventh. Of course, we learned that two cars in tandem not only move fast at Daytona, but if the manoeuver isn’t done just right one can help ruin the day of the guy you were trying to help.
We learned that FOX came in with some new toys. They had cameras that showed heated tires and images that showed how much the drivers were turning the wheel. Nothing as stupid as ESPN’s bogus draft track, but unfortunately someone there insists on keeping Digger alive. Digger is dead, so let’s move on.
We learned on Friday night that Michael Waltrip still has some racing left in him, as he won the truck event 10 years to the day after he won the Daytona 500. Tony Stewart was 13th Sunday, but won his sixth season opening Nationwide race in his last seven attempts at Daytona on Saturday.
Next Sunday, a most welcome schedule change moves up our first visit to Phoenix by more than a month. Last April, Ryan Newman was the man, with Gordon and Johnson finishing right behind him. After their Daytona experience, I’m thinking those two could use a little history repeating itself in Arizona. By the way, as Bayne isn’t in the running for a Cup title this year, Carl Edwards leads the standings by a single point over David Gilliland and Bobby Labonte. Huh? Oh, it could be a very interesting season.
Enjoy your week.
Fairy Tales Do Come True, Just Ask Trevor Bayne, Daytona 500 Winner
For Trevor Bayne, fresh off his 20th birthday and in only his second race in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, dreams really do come true. Bayne became the youngest winner of “The Great American Race”, the Daytona 500.
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[/media-credit]”I keep thinking I’m dreaming, I really do,” Bayne said in Victory Lane. “We said a prayer before the race and this just shows how powerful God is and the good job these guys did on this race car. This is just incredible.”
“I drove down here in my F150 and I was planning to drive back, but I think someone else will have to drive it back for me,” Bayne said, acknowledging that he must now do his Daytona 500 duties in New York City as the race winner. “I guess I will have to call someone to get some clothes down here.”
“This is so crazy,” Bayne continued. “I felt a little undeserving, but I’m just glad that I got to be the guy behind the wheel to get the win.”
Bayne’s team owners Eddie and Len Wood were beside themselves after the win. It was so emotional that they both, particularly Eddie Wood, had to stop talking several times to get their tears in check.
“It hasn’t really sunk in yet,” owner Eddie Wood said, with a hitch in his voice. “We’ve struggled just to make the Daytona 500.”
“It’s unbelievable we are sitting here,” Wood continued. “Trevor Bayne did such a good job. Now he is a Daytona 500 winner.”
Donnie Wingo, Bayne’s crew chief, was also elated at his driver and team’s success.
“I couldn’t be happier and the job the kid done today, you couldn’t ask for anything else,” Donnie Wingo, crew chief, said. “At the end, he did what he needed to do.”
“He just might be the next big deal.”
The race not only left Trevor Bayne and his car owners and crew chief shaking in disbelief, but many of the other drivers as well. There were a record 74 lead changes, a record 22 different race leaders, and a record 16 cautions in the event.
“I’ve never run one like that,” veteran Terry Labonte, driver of the No. 32 U.S. Chrome Ford Fusion, said. “It’s a good thing the race wasn’t much longer because we were about done.” Labonte finished the race in the 15th position.
Just as in the Bud Shootout and the Gatorade Duels, this running of the Daytona 500 necessitated a dance partner, with all cars running in the now familiar duo pack. The tandem racing put even more pressure on the spotters, who were not only having to guide their drivers around the track but strategize on the spotter stand as to who to partner up with next.
“It was a pretty crazy day overall,” Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 18 M&Ms Toyota, said. “Everything was just all over the place and pretty nuts.”
Busch had his own set of challenges, spinning early in the race on lap 4 after getting tagged by his pusher, who was at the time Michael Waltrip. Busch managed to recover and snag a top-ten finish, scoring in the eighth spot.
Another major factor in the race was engine failure, especially given the hotter ambient temperature at Daytona. Both Kevin Harvick and Richard Childress Racing teammate Jeff Burton lost their engines, an anomaly for sure for ECR engines.
Harvick denied any forewarning of his engine failure, saying “No, it just let loose.”
“I just blew water out of the bottom of the thing,” Harvick continued. “I hadn’t done anything different.”
Burton echoed his teammate’s sentiments about the engine failure.
“We are asking a lot out of the engines here for sure,” Burton said. “These are tough situations. I thought we were well within our limits but maybe not.”
It would not be a Daytona 500 without the “big one” and this was delivered at lap 29 of the race. Fourteen cars were involved, including three of the Hendrick teammates Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, and Mark Martin, taking them for the most part out of race contention.
Dale Earnhardt, Jr., in the spotlight due to the commemoration of the tenth anniversary of his father’s death at Daytona, also had a good run, at least until the final laps of the race when a crash took him out of contention. Earnhardt came in 24th, after claiming the pole, wrecking in practice, and starting from the rear of the field.
“We run good,” Earnhardt, Jr. said. “I had as much fun as I could under the circumstances. It was wild.”
Carl Edwards took the runner up spot to Bayne’s fairy tale ending.
“Trevor, he did a good job of blocking the bottom,” Edwards said. “All day we waited and waited, trying not to tear up the race car.”
“There at the end, it almost worked out perfectly,” Edwards continued. “We didn’t have a chance to be able to mount up a real charge on him.”
“I think that I can tell you that second place in the Daytona 500 feels way worse than any other position I’ve ever finished in the Daytona 500,” Edwards said. “But that is made better by listening to Trevor and how excited he is. He is really a nice young man, a great guy to represent this sport with this win.”
David Gilliland, veteran Bobby Labonte, and Kurt Busch rounded out the top five in “The Great American Race.” The rest of the top ten included Juan Pablo Montoya in sixth, Regan Smith in seventh, Kyle Busch in eighth, Paul Menard in ninth, and Mark Martin, who rebounded from the big one to finish tenth.
Unofficial Race Results
Daytona 500, Daytona International Speedway
February 20, 2011 – Race 1 of 36
| Pos. | St. | No. | Driver | Make | Pts. | Bon. | Laps | Status |
| 1 | 31 | 21 | Trevor Bayne | Ford | 0 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 2 | 12 | 99 | Carl Edwards | Ford | 42 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 3 | 5 | 34 | David Gilliland | Ford | 41 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 4 | 6 | 47 | Bobby Labonte | Toyota | 41 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 5 | 25 | 22 | Kurt Busch | Dodge | 40 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 6 | 4 | 42 | Juan Montoya | Chevrolet | 39 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 7 | 27 | 78 | Regan Smith | Chevrolet | 38 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 8 | 39 | 18 | Kyle Busch | Toyota | 37 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 9 | 1 | 27 | Paul Menard | Chevrolet | 36 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 10 | 34 | 5 | Mark Martin | Chevrolet | 34 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 11 | 35 | 43 | A.J. Allmendinger | Ford | 34 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 12 | 42 | 9 | Bill Elliott | Chevrolet | 32 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 13 | 3 | 14 | Tony Stewart | Chevrolet | 31 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 14 | 18 | 6 | David Ragan | Ford | 31 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 15 | 37 | 32 | Terry Labonte | Ford | 30 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 16 | 16 | 7 | Robby Gordon | Dodge | 29 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 17 | 15 | 33 | Clint Bowyer | Chevrolet | 28 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 18 | 2 | 1 | Jamie McMurray | Chevrolet | 27 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 19 | 29 | 56 | Martin Truex Jr. | Toyota | 26 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 20 | 36 | 77 | Steve Wallace | Toyota | 0 | 0 | 208 | Running |
| 21 | 38 | 11 | Denny Hamlin | Toyota | 24 | 1 | 208 | Running |
| 22 | 20 | 39 | Ryan Newman | Chevrolet | 24 | 2 | 206 | Running |
| 23 | 11 | 20 | Joey Logano | Toyota | 21 | 0 | 206 | Running |
| 24 | 13 | 88 | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | Chevrolet | 21 | 1 | 202 | Running |
| 25 | 17 | 4 | Kasey Kahne | Toyota | 19 | 0 | 199 | Running |
| 26 | 21 | 36 | Dave Blaney | Chevrolet | 19 | 1 | 198 | In Pit |
| 27 | 24 | 48 | Jimmie Johnson | Chevrolet | 17 | 0 | 189 | Running |
| 28 | 23 | 24 | Jeff Gordon | Chevrolet | 17 | 1 | 173 | Running |
| 29 | 8 | 2 | Brad Keselowski | Dodge | 16 | 1 | 166 | Running |
| 30 | 10 | 0 | David Reutimann | Toyota | 14 | 0 | 164 | Running |
| 31 | 30 | 83 | Brian Vickers | Toyota | 13 | 0 | 160 | Running |
| 32 | 7 | 38 | Travis Kvapil | Ford | 0 | 0 | 153 | In Pit |
| 33 | 33 | 71 | Andy Lally * | Chevrolet | 11 | 0 | 149 | Running |
| 34 | 26 | 17 | Matt Kenseth | Ford | 10 | 0 | 133 | Running |
| 35 | 14 | 16 | Greg Biffle | Ford | 9 | 10 | 126 | Running |
| 36 | 32 | 31 | Jeff Burton | Chevrolet | 9 | 1 | 92 | Out |
| 37 | 19 | 9 | Marcos Ambrose | Ford | 7 | 0 | 82 | Running |
| 38 | 40 | 37 | Robert Richardson Jr. | Ford | 0 | 0 | 45 | Running |
| 39 | 22 | 87 | Joe Nemechek | Toyota | 0 | 0 | 29 | In Pit |
| 40 | 9 | 115 | Michael Waltrip | Toyota | 4 | 0 | 28 | In Pit |
| 41 | 41 | 192 | Brian Keselowski* | Dodge | 3 | 0 | 28 | Running |
| 42 | 28 | 29 | Kevin Harvick | Chevrolet | 3 | 1 | 22 | Out |
| 43 | 43 | 46 | J.J. Yeley | Chevrolet | 1 | 0 | 10 | Out |








