
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Your car is running 20th in the 2010 Daytona 500 with 35 laps to go. There's no way you can make it to the finish on the fuel left in the tank. But it's possible that because of track issues, the race may not go the entire 500-mile distance.
Do you play it conservatively and pit with the rest of the field, or do you gamble and stay out? For crew chief Jimmy Elledge on Sunday, the second option was a no-brainer. He kept Scott Speed on the track when the race was ready to be restarted, and Speed nearly made that gamble pay off when he led 12 laps before getting shuffled back into the middle of the pack when push came to shove.

"Restrictor-plate racing, when it gets down to the end and you give all these guys time to sit around and think about what they're going to do and with the track possibly coming apart, the safest place you can be is in the front," Elledge said. "Having 10 laps on our tires and stuff, it had been sitting there for an hour and everything cooled completely off, I thought that maybe we would get an opportunity to not get caught up in an incident. And we weren't within our fuel window of making it to the end.
"It's kind of like a, 'So what? Try it. See what happens.' And it turned out better than I expected. We knew we had a strong car but it even worked out better than I thought. It hopefully should give the driver some confidence that he's sat out there and led this race, and now knows he can do it."
When a three-car accident involving Elliott Sadler, Travis Kvapil and Ryan Newman brought out the caution with six laps to go, Speed was able to duck onto pit road for a welcome splash of fuel. And through three restarts -- two of the green-white-checkered variety -- he was able to work his way back to 19th at the finish.
"The idea was to stay up in the front and try to stay away from the wreck that was going to happen," Speed said. "Unfortunately, the wreck happened a little later than we thought it would and we almost ran out of gas. But as it turns out, we were able to get fuel and we ended up all right."
While Elledge rolled the dice with his contrarian strategy, it was up to Speed to dodge the dangers in the final handful of laps, and he was able to miss the crashes, bringing the car back to the hauler without a scratch. (Continued)
| Pos. | Driver | Make |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Jamie McMurray | Chevrolet |
| 2. | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | Chevrolet |
| 3. | Greg Biffle | Ford |
| 4. | Clint Bowyer | Chevrolet |
| 5. | David Reutimann | Toyota |
| 6. | Martin Truex Jr. | Toyota |
| 7. | Kevin Harvick | Chevrolet |
| 8. | Matt Kenseth | Ford |
| 9. | Carl Edwards | Ford |
| 10. | Juan Montoya | Chevrolet |