

Quote of the week: "I'm not bitter at all for finishing second." Especially when that's one spot better than the guy who punched Kurt in the nose earlier in the month.

The three most dangerous jobs in sports:
1. Bullfighting
2. Downhill skiing
3. Interviewing Tony Stewart after the Daytona 500

What if he hadn't overshot the pits on that last caution?
What if he had a better run on that final restart?
What if he had tied his brother's shoelaces together before the race?

Ryan's win in the 500 wasn't even the biggest sports story in West Lafayette, where the Boilermakers were on an 11-game winning streak and getting set to play arch-rival IU.

Kevin was going along just fine until a black CAT crossed his path.

Anti-Hendrick fans, don't start celebrating prematurely. Jimmie finished 39th at Daytona last season, and promptly went out and won three of the next five races.

That'll learn ya: Matt got an unexpected lesson in Raganomics on President's Day weekend.

That's the first time Jeff watched the finish from the motorhome since that wild wreck at Lowe's back last May.

Junior's missed opportunity to get four fresh tires there at the end brought to mind a Toby Keith song: "Little Less Talk and a Lot More Action."

Greg's 10th-place finish can be summed up in four words: Fastest Ford, few friends.

Was there a sadder moment than realizing that Jeff was a sitting duck on that restart there near the end?

Taking the fifth: There's something about Georgia-born drivers finishing fifth in the Daytona 500. Bill Elliott did it in 2001, David Ragan in 2007 and Reed this year.

A change will do you good: Kasey spent all but seven laps in the top 15 on Sunday, which looked a lot more like his 2006 season than last year's disappointment.

Second time around: Elliott finished sixth in the 500 last year, too, and then posted only more top-10 finish all season.

We'll have to see at Fontana if Clint believes in the adage: "Juan good turn deserves another."