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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Scott Riggs and owner/driver Jeremy Mayfield used superspeedway Toyota Camrys that were built a year-and-a-half ago as "sisters," according to former Bill Davis Racing competition director Tommy Baldwin to make the Daytona 500 Thursday at Daytona International Speedway.
| Pos. | Driver | Make |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Jeff Gordon | Chevrolet |
| 2. | Tony Stewart | Chevrolet |
| 3. | Jimmie Johnson | Chevrolet |
| 4. | Joey Logano | Toyota |
| 5. | Aric Almirola | Chevrolet |
| 8. | Scott Riggs | Toyota |
| Pos. | Driver | Make |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Kyle Busch | Toyota |
| 2. | Mark Martin | Chevrolet |
| 3. | Brian Vickers | Toyota |
| 4. | Juan Montoya | Chevrolet |
| 5. | Denny Hamlin | Toyota |
| 9. | Jeremy Mayfield | Toyota |
| 10. | A.J. Allmendinger | Dodge |
"We're here on a dream, we're not here on having billions and billions of dollars," Baldwin said while standing in front of his car in the inspection area. "Watching that car run in the top five for 80 percent of the race, and I know how much I spent on it and I know how much them other guys spent, so I proved to myself and I hope some other people that we can get the job done at a fraction of the cost and still give our [partner] good value just like everybody else."
Incredibly enough, in an era when hundreds in the motorsports community are jobless and hopes and dreams live and die on yellow flags, flat tires and fuel mileage, none of the crewmen on either team is even getting paid.
"Like I keep telling everybody, we got a real small race team but we've got real big hearts," said the veteran crew chief Baldwin, who out of necessity became a Cup team owner when the sale of Davis' race team left him jobless. "I'm overwhelmed at the amount of support that I've had with the group of guys that have kept coming to the shop, day in and day out, nighttime, daytime and weekends.
"They wanted no money -- they just wanted to help. We have nobody getting paid right now and we have between 15 and 25 coming every single day working on that thing. We had to get through this race and California and Vegas to build up enough capital so we can start paying these guys.
"These guys have been here for nothing because they feel our dream and they know, with them being loyal to me I'm going to give them a job. I'm hoping I can hire a hundred people some day. One step at a time and [Thursday] was an important step."
Mayfield, who was briefly in tears on pit road after getting out of his No. 41 Camry, sang basically the same tune, saying "23 days ago we didn't even have a race team." When a deal he was trying to pull together faltered, Mayfield decided to get some cars and go racing, so "I'm pretty emotional right now, because this is why I came back. It's pretty awesome.
"We've got 12 or 15 guys that are on the payroll -- but I really haven't even paid 'em -- not until we get back from Daytona," Mayfield said. "We've got some checks [now], and let me tell you what's funny. I don't have a clue what Tony [Furr, crew chief] makes -- we haven't even talked about salaries.
"That's what's cool, I've got Tony and Cecil Tipton and all kind of good guys on my team, and not one of them has talked about their salaries, I have no idea what I'm going to pay them. I'll pay 'em by the week and bonuses for the races we make, so we can keep going on."
They were the biggest surprises among the 17 go-or-go-home drivers that strove to make the Great American Race in a pair of 150-mile qualifying races. A.J. Allmendinger might have been the most relieved.

After a savvy, gutsy performance in the first qualifying race, Riggs finished eighth in the No. 36 Toyota and made his fifth Daytona 500 and the first for new Cup team owner Baldwin, in the 17th position.
Tony Stewart, who was a guaranteed starter anyway, earned the fifth starting spot in the 500 with his runner-up finish to Jeff Gordon in the first 150.
Mayfield used Furr's brave pit call for two tires to finish ninth in his 150 and earn the 18th spot in the 500.
"The car wasn't that bad on two [tires]," Mayfield said of the call. "We didn't know it was gonna be that good but we didn't have any other choice. I would have felt like [crap] if I would have taken four and had to be back there racing three or four guys to get in. I would rather hold 'em off than race them, so we had to keep track position."
Allmendinger, who inadvertently found himself in the middle of a "NASCAR bookkeeping" nightmare that forced his Richard Petty Motorsports team into the go-or-go-home camp, promised his team sponsor a 500 spot, and he delivered with a 10th place run in the 150 that earned his No. 44 Dodge team the 20th spot in the 500 and Allmendinger his Daytona 500 debut.
Other 500 qualifiers from the go-or-go-home camp include three men who got in via their qualifying speeds and will start 40th-42nd: Bill Elliott, Travis Kvapil and Regan Smith; plus 1996 champion Terry Labonte, who'll start 43rd using the past-champion provisional.
Riggs was most thankful after the finish he scored with the same chassis that Dave Blaney qualified second and finished third with at the 2007 Talladega event.
"I don't know what to say -- I'm just elated," said Riggs, who was jobless last month. "It feels like a win for us, considering all we've been through. These guys -- they all came together at the last minute. Tommy is so positive and so passionate about what he does and he puts 110 percent into it. I'm just thankful to be here."
But for every answered prayer was utter heartache. As Joe Nemechek put it, "one lap and one car" cost him his 15th consecutive start in the Great American Race. Nemechek had started every 500 since 1995, when he made his debut in his family-owned No. 87 Chevrolet.
Thursday, Nemechek started ninth but fell back as far as 18th with less than 10 laps to go. But adjustments to his No. 87 Toyota put him in a position to challenge as Riggs, who restarted fifth with four laps to go, fell back toward him.
"There at the end, I had a heckuva run going," Nemechek said. "And then [coming off Turn 2] the 26 [Jamie McMurray] lost the front end and slid up and pinched me up in the fence, there and killed my run."
After exiting his car on pit road, Nemechek said he had no definite plans of where he'd watch the second race.
"You just got to say a prayer, now," Nemechek said. "Man, it was a crazy race. That last lap, it was perfect because I was about 15 miles an hour faster than Scott Riggs at that time, and it ruined my day, right there."
It didn't work out for Nemechek, nor did it for Cup part-timer Boris Said, a former Daytona pole winner who earlier in the day announced a deal four months in the making that would give his No Fear Racing team the ability to make as many as 18 races this season.
In the second 150, Said was able to draft up into a qualified spot early in the race, but had a right front flat tire that tore the right front fender off his No. 08 Ford and ended his race.
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| Pos. | Driver | Make |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Martin Truex Jr. | Chevrolet |
| 2. | Mark Martin | Chevrolet |
| 3. | Jeff Gordon | Chevrolet |
| 4. | Kyle Busch | Toyota |
| 5. | Tony Stewart | Chevrolet |
| 6. | Brian Vickers | Toyota |
| 7. | Jimmie Johnson | Chevrolet |
| 8. | Juan Montoya | Chevrolet |
| 9. | Joey Logano | Toyota |
| 10. | Denny Hamlin | Toyota |
| 17. | Scott Riggs | Toyota |
| 18. | Jeremy Mayfield | Toyota |
| 20. | A.J. Allmendinger | Dodge |