DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. -- It couldn't happen to a nicer
guy.
Matt Kenseth, winless a year ago, added the biggest
jewel in NASCAR to his trophy collection Sunday, winning a dramatic,
rain-shortened Daytona 500 before a capacity crowd of some 200,000
at Daytona International Speedway, plus a Fox national television
audience.
Kenseth somehow dodged a huge pileup shortly after lap 125 that
easily could have sent him to the scrap-pile like it did young
sensation Kyle Busch.
Busch, who had led 88 laps to clearly establish himself as the
race favorite, was a victim in a 10-car wreck that had cars sliding
through the backstretch infield apron and down the end of the
backstretch straightaway in a huge cloud of smoke and debris.
The accident was triggered when Brian Vickers moved over to block
Dale Earnhardt, Jr. near the end of the backstretch. Earnhardt
was forced off the track onto the apron and into the grass. When
Earnhardt tried to steer his sliding car back on the track, he
clipped the rear end of Vickers' Toyota, sending Vickers shooting
across the track directly in front of the oncoming field of 200-mph
stock cars. At that point, it was pure havoc. No one was injured,
but the accident sent a number of cars to the junk heap.
Besides Busch, who finished 41st, others involved included Carl
Edwards (18th), Kurt Busch (10th), Vickers (39th), Earnhardt (27th),
Jamie McMurray (37th), Jimmie Johnson (31st), Robby Gordon (34th),
and Denny Hamlin (26th).
Kenseth started the race from 39th position after his crew had
to change an engine in his Jack Roush Ford sponsored by DeWalt.
Ironically, the runner-up in the abbreviated race -- 152 out
of a scheduled 200 laps were completed -- and winner of the Daytona
500 two years ago, Kevin Harvick, also started in the rear of
the field due to engine problems.
Third-place finisher AJ Allmindinger had a storybook finish since
he just hooked up with the Valvoline Dodge team several weeks
ago. His performance Sunday should help him find additional sponsorship.
Clint Bowyer finished fourth, Elliott Sadler fifth, David Ragan
sixth, former Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip seventh, Tony
Stewart eighth, and Reed Sorensen ninth. Truex was 11th.
It was a cool, overcast afternoon when the 51st running of this
classic got underway. Drivers mashed the gas to the floor right
from the git-go and three different drivers led the first three
laps, Truex, Martin and "wild thing" Busch, who took
over on the third lap and was leading when Almirola spun by himself
on the eighth circuit.
When racing resumed, Busch remained out front with Martin, Labonte,
Earnhardt and Edwards right behind.
A mandatory caution at lap 26 allowed the teams to check their
tire wear after rain washed the rubber off the track Saturday
night and Sunday morning. NASCAR officials informed the teams
at the start of the race of the mandatory caution.
Once all the teams had pitted, Busch resumed his lead with Earnhardt
on his bumper. Gordon was third, Hamlin fourth and Martin fifth.
Jeremy Mayfield, who started his own team about a month ago and
was one of the feelgood stories in making the race, had his luck
change at lap 33 when a problem cropped up with his motor.
At 40 laps, Busch had Kenseth on his bumper, who had started from
the rear after changing motors. Ragan had moved to third, Earnhardt
was fourth, Hamlin fifth and Ragan sixth.
Robbie Gordon dropped from the middle of the pack to 42nd when
a punctured tire prompted an unscheduled pit stop.
At 50 laps, Busch still led and looked as though he clearly had
the fastest car in the field but Earnhardt and Stewart were just
a car length behind. Earnhardt and Stewart, however, blew past
Busch on lap 53. One lap later, Busch pushed Stewart past Earnhardt.
On the next lap, Travis Kvapil smacked the wall, bringing out
the afternoon's second caution.
When the green flag fell again, it was Stewart out front with
Gordon second. Busch was third. Also running in the front pack
was McMurray, Hamlin, Edwards, Martin, Kenseth, Vickers, Ragan
and Kurt Busch, who finished second in this race last year.
Earnhardt, who completely missed his pit stall and had to go around
the track again, was way back in 35th on the restart.
By lap 70, Gordon led, followed by Busch, Hamlin, McMurray, Kenseth,
Edwards, Vickers, Stewart, who was shuffled backwards by one of
the famous Daytona drafts, Martin and Allmindinger.
Stewart's teammate and defending champion of the Daytona 500,
spent considerable time in the pits and lost several laps, which
pretty much ended his chance for winning "The Great American
Race" again.
On lap 81, rookie Joey Logano, running back in the field to gain
some experience, was in the wrong place at the right time. Another
rookie, former Formula One driver Scott Speed, got loose coming
out of four and had to ease off the throttle. Logano, right behind
him, had to make a jerky turn left to stay off Speed and spun
across the track. He smashed into the inside retaining wall almost
head-on, tearing his Home Depot machine to smithereens. Logano
was not injured.
On the restart at lap 85, it was Busch again and Hamlin moved
into second. Allmindinger was third with Truex fourth. Gordon
held on in fifth, followed by Edwards, Kenseth, Stewart, Ragan,
McMurray and Burton.
The best race drivers in the world were mixing it up as though
it was the last lap, rather than halfway. Gordon went from fifth
to second with a nifty slingshot move down the backstretch, which
resulted in Truex getting shoved back to 20th spot. Once Gordon
made his move, others tucked in on his bumper and formed a freight
train back to where Truex wound up.
The competition in the first half of this event was similar to
what fans had seen in the Twin Gatorade 150 Qualifying Races last
Thursday.