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BackNot the perfect ending, but Junior's just getting started (cont'd)

By the time he came around the track again to complete another caution lap, Earnhardt already had convinced himself that pitting wouldn't have been a good idea anyway. As Eury had told him when he took the lead earlier -- holding it from Lap 162 through Lap 168 -- he was "better off out front. It's going to get pretty wild out there."

And it did.

Daytona 500

Official Results
Pos. Driver Make
1. Ryan Newman Dodge
2. Kurt Busch Dodge
3. Tony Stewart Toyota
4. Kyle Busch Toyota
5. Reed Sorenson Dodge
6. Elliott Sadler Dodge
7. Kasey Kahne Dodge
8. Robby Gordon Dodge
9. Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet
10. Greg Biffle Ford

"I don't want to be back up in that mess anyway," Earnhardt said as he moved to the front on his old tires.

In the end, though, the old tires weren't good enough to keep him there. Or maybe it was just that the car wasn't quite good enough to win all along -- or maybe, as Junior himself later suggested, he just didn't make the right decisions behind the wheel down the stretch.

"I didn't want to pit. The track was cooling down. I had great grip. Tires weren't really an issue," Earnhardt said. "Yeah, I mean I would have loved to have had four tires -- but would we have been able to come back up through there [after giving up the track position to get them]?

"We hadn't been great all night. We had been OK and we were hanging on, really, to fifth place most of the day. But I don't think we could have drove up by the 18 [Kyle Busch] or the 20 [Tony Stewart] and the guys that were outrunning us all day. I needed to be in front of 'em."

A good start
So what if he couldn't stay in front of 'em? As Earnhardt said, it could have been so much worse.

He left Daytona Sunday night with fewer questions hanging over his head than when he had arrived. Right out of the box, he proved he could win races in his new Hendrick car, albeit shorter, non-points ones. He still hasn't won a points race since May of 2006 at Richmond, a span that stretched to 63 events in a row without a trip to Victory Lane after Sunday.

There were brief moments Sunday when it appeared the drought might be over, the perfect week for Junior complete. But over those final 20 laps on the old tires, that script ended up in the trash can and Junior had to settle for what he could get.

"I couldn't do much. We were just in a box there at the end," he said. "We couldn't make any more moves than the ones I was making, and the ones I was making weren't doing any good. So I was getting frustrated.

"But we're happy with ninth. We'll take that and try to build on it and try to have a good year the rest of the season. It was touch and go at the end. I'm just glad we got it home in one piece."

That was more than what Hendrick teammates Johnson, Casey Mears and Gordon could say they did. Johnson suffered damage when he spun out, and faded to a 27th-place finish after sitting on the pole. Mears was running in the top five when he made a poor decision, trying to block Tony Stewart so late that Mears ended up sending himself sliding into the wall, which led to him finishing 35th. Gordon suffered a broken suspension and returned to the track after getting it repaired, but finished 14 laps down in 39th.

So as had been the case much of the eight-day stretch dating back to the Shootout, it was left to Earnhardt to carry the Hendrick Chevrolet banner on a night that ended up being dominated by Dodges and Toyotas.

He didn't do as well as he might have, but he did more than all right.

The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.

The End

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