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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Martin Truex Jr. never even considered hanging around in the back. But now, he’ll have to start there — and give up a front-row spot for the biggest race of the NASCAR season.

Truex was one of nine cars involved in a large accident coming to the checkered flag in the second of Thursday night’s Budweiser Duel qualifying races at Daytona International Speedway. Six-time Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson ran out of fuel in the middle of a pack, and the vehicle of Clint Bowyer flipped into the air in the ensuing melee. As a result, several teams had to move to backup cars and give up their starting spots for the Daytona 500 — chief among them Truex, who four days earlier in qualifying had locked up a position on the front row.

In the night’s first qualifier, Daytona 500 pole winner Austin Dillon dropped to the back to ensure his front-row position for the Great American Race. Truex said he and Todd Berrier, crew chief for his Furniture Row Racing team, never even considered doing the same thing.

"Hindsight is 20/20. Yeah, we should have parked the damn thing," Truex said. "But we’re out here to race. That’s what we do. Todd said we’re here to race, and something bad happens, we’ve got a backup that’s just as good. We’ll be fine. It doesn’t matter where we start here, anyway. The biggest thing is, I feel bad for the guys that built the race car and put all the effort into building a front-row race car, and us not being able to use it on Sunday. That’s the worst part."

Thursday’s accident continued a trend of teams needing to move to backup cars. Five teams were forced to start at the rear of Thursday night’s qualifiers after moving to backups because of accidents in practice Wednesday. Six drivers involved in Thursday night’s fracas were expected to move to backups, which will necessitate dropping to the rear of the Daytona 500 field since starting positions for the race have been set.

One of those is the event’s defending champion, Johnson, who was trying to stretch his fuel to the end of the 60-lap event. But he ran dry with Jamie McMurray pushing from behind, and suddenly a powerless No. 48 car was into the outside wall. David Ragan went sideways in front of Bowyer, who flipped over the hood of the No. 34 car and landed on all four wheels. The vehicles of Truex, McMurray, and Michael Waltrip — who went sliding along the pit wall — all suffered damage as the accident unfolded.

"I ran out of gas, and I feel terrible," Johnson said. "So many good race care were torn up, and thankfully, everybody’s OK. Saw the replay just now, and to see the 15 (car of Bowyer) upside down and tumbling — man, I hate it. I ran out, and I got my hand out the window and tried to get out of the way, but with that much energy coming to the checkered flag, I just couldn’t get out of the way in time, and I got turned around."

McMurray, who will now move to his car from the Sprint Unlimited — which he said has been freshened back in the Chip Ganassi Racing shop in North Carolina — wasn’t aware Johnson was out of gas until it was too late.

"I was completely content just to push him in line, and I thought we could get to second and third," said McMurray, a former Daytona 500 winner. "I saw him move up, and just lost all power. So really, there’s not much you can do. I didn’t know that he’d run out of gas. I assumed something had happened, but I wasn’t really sure."

The cars of Johnson and Truex both caught fire, but the driver who got the worst of it was Bowyer — whose vehicle went nose-over-tail across the front end of Ragan’s vehicle, before landing on all fours and sliding into the grass. "That was one of the wildest flips I’ve ever had," Bowyer said. "I think we would have been just fine if I hadn’t hit the grass right here."

Waltrip, Bowyer’s car owner, went sailing into the infield in the wake of the accident, and tried to slide along the pit wall until he crossed the start/finish line. But he came up short when his car reached a gap in the pit wall, and with his steering broken, he ground to a halt.

"I should have just backed off, but I don’t get to race very often, and I would have been told to back off. I wouldn’t have just volunteered to back off," said Waltrip, a two-time Daytona 500 champion. "We were coming to the checkered, and unfortunately we tore up our car. And to add insult to injury, while I’m spinning through the infield, I said, ‘Oh, there’s my 15 car flipping in the air.’ So it’s a rough period of time, but I think we’re in anyway, and we’ll take our … backup off the trailer and try again Sunday."

All the drivers involved escaped uninjured, but it was the second day in a row a Sprint Cup car had gotten off the ground. Parker Kligerman’s vehicle slid over the top of Paul Menard’s in Wednesday’s practice, doing some damage to the catchfence before turning over and sliding on its roof. Both that accident and Thursday’s occurred in roughly the same area, as the cars were entering the tri-oval off Turn 4.

"It’s been pretty wild, to say the least," Truex said. "I guess you can’t really blame it on the cars tonight — somebody ran out of gas. So that was a human error. Just like the wrecks in practice, it was all human error. It does make us a little nervous that the cars are getting off the ground again, but I think it’s more of just cars hitting the right way than the air doing it or just spinning and flipping over."

Ragan, a two-time winner on restrictor-plate tracks, called the accidents "just coincidence. When you’re racing in a pack, one guy has an issue, and the result is a lot of cars got torn up. That’s unfortunate, but glad everybody’s safe. The safety stuff worked as planned, and everything was good."

Truex’s backup is a new car, according to his No. 78 team. "Just as good," he said, when asked how it compared to the primary. Thursday’s wreck marked the fourth multicar accident of what’s become a busy Speedweeks for mechanics and fabricators — and the Daytona 500 is still yet to come.

"Hopefully," Ragan said, "we get all this stuff out of our system before Sunday."

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Veteran NASCAR Nationwide Series driver looking to qualify for first career Daytona 500

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — To commemorate the 50th running of the Daytona 500 in 2008, artist Thomas Kinkade unveiled an oil-on-canvas of the starting field, with the double-file line of cars stretching in a long curve from the green flag back into Turn 4. As an aficionado of the man’s work, NASCAR driver Eric McClure is quite familiar with the painting — and the fact that his vehicle would have been included as a part of it, if he had made the race.

But McClure failed to qualify, just as he did in 2005 and 2007. Now the veteran of the Nationwide Series is back, in perhaps the best car he’s had here, and in a Speedweeks loaded with personal significance given the personal trials he’s faced over the past year. Thursday night’s second 150-mile qualifying event will likely present the ultimate go-or-go-home scenario for McClure, who has battled a spate of recent health issues and perhaps faces his last chance to realize a dream by making the Great American Race.

"It’s a special thing," said McClure, nephew of former car owner Larry McClure, who twice won the Daytona 500 with Sterling Marlin. "I thought about it one time — being on stage for introductions, being ignored by all the other competitors and the fans, but just being there with my family. … It’s a big deal to everybody in this industry, but it’s a huge deal personally because of what I grew up in. The good news is, you make the race, there’s no pressure, because nobody expects anything."

For McClure, all the pressure is the getting there. He’s among several drivers facing a potential go-or-go-home situation, among them former Daytona 500 champion Trevor Bayne (due to his part-time schedule), Brian Scott (for Joe Falk and Circle Sport) and former Cup champions Kurt Busch (driving a new car with Stewart-Haas Racing), and Bobby and Terry Labonte. Others needing to race their way in include Landon Cassill and Reed Sorenson, Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender Cole Whitt, and veterans Michael McDowell, Josh Wise, Joe Nemechek and 72-year-old Morgan Shepherd, trying to become the oldest starter in Daytona 500 history. Dave Blaney will be credited with an attempt, but he has withdrawn from further competition during Speedweeks.

With 48 drivers remaining, five will head home once the field is set following the Budweiser Duels. Some of those on the outside looking in had their quests complicated by crashes in practice Wednesday, when Truex went to a backup and Whitt’s primary underwent major repairs. McClure escaped any damage, a small perk for a driver who’s battled more than his share of adversity already — much of it stemming from a 2012 crash at Talladega that left him with a concussion, and then resulted in a kidney ailment that forced him to miss a handful of races last year.

That experience almost led McClure, a father of five daughters and a fixture in the Nationwide Series since 2007, to step away from the sport altogether. He missed four starts in late summer with kidney failure that likely stemmed from the painkillers he took in the aftermath of his Talladega crash.

"Everything later was all related to the accident at Talladega," McClure said. That included a more serious relapse later in the year that left him hospitalized, and forced him to turn his No. 14 car back over to Jeff Green for two of the final three races of the season.

There were times amid all that when McClure was convinced his driving career was finished. But he was competitive in a handful of starts later in the season, remembered how much fun his job could be, and missing those races at the end ate at him.

"I just felt like from a pride standpoint, and owing it to a lot of people, I couldn’t let it end that way if there was a possibility," McClure said. "I’m at peace if it ends, and there’s a day it’s going to end. … But I do feel like, short of an accident, if there’s a way to go out on my own terms, I would like to do that."

Hence another season in Nationwide, where he plans to run 28 races. His Daytona 500 entry is being fielded by Front Row Motorsports, which has turned out proven restrictor-plate cars and won with David Ragan at Talladega last year. "If I don’t make it, I don’t make it," McClure said. "But we have a great opportunity, and we’re going to try just to accomplish some things I’ve always wanted to do, and then we’re going to go from there. But I’m at the point now where it’s time to start transitioning into something different."

At 35 and with a growing family and a history of health issues, it’s the sensible decision. McClure said he entered "a vicious cycle" last season that he couldn’t get out of — one where an illness would trigger the kidney problem, and treatment for the kidneys would trigger something else. He still suffers from the arthritis and other pains he’s had since the Talladega crash, but he’s only returned to full health in the past few months. Heading to Daytona, McClure said he felt as well as he had in some time.

Still, he can’t continue to push it. "At this point, I just don’t see how I can continue in this capacity after this season," he said. "… With five little girls at home, with the accident and the illness, I need to be a dad 10 years from now. That becomes a greater priority now. We’re going to have fun and be as safe as we can be, and if something happens, we’ll address it. But the preparations are being made that the time is winding down."

He’s unsure of what will follow when he does step out of the car for good. McClure — whose best career Nationwide finish is eighth, last February at Daytona — holds a communications degree from Emory and Henry College, and owns the company that handles marketing for his Hefty/Reynolds sponsorship. He’s done some analysis for football games and would seem to embrace the idea of getting into broadcasting. He’s also writing a book entitled "I Almost Made It," which will surely detail a career full of challenges that helped shaped McClure into the person he is.

All of that, though, comes later. For now his focus is qualifying for the Daytona 500, in perhaps the last, best chance he’ll have to make his sport’s biggest race. It’s not lost on the McClure family that this year marks the 20th anniversary of Marlin’s first Daytona 500 victory in a Morgan-McClure car. There’s even a No. 4 sticker inside the No. 35 McClure is driving this week. McClure posted the sixth-quickest qualifying lap among the likely go-or-go-homers on Sunday and was fast again in practice Wednesday night, so at the least he knows his Front Row car has some speed.

"The reality is, I may never have this opportunity again," he said. "I’m going to try to soak up everything, be a part of Speedweeks, enjoy it. No pressure. And if we make the race, it will be huge for them, it will be huge for me, and then we can have fun. I’m just glad to have the opportunity to compete."

And he if makes it into the Daytona 500? And if somehow, circumstances convene and he finds himself in the middle of one of those patented Daytona miracles? Well then, Eric McClure would have the perfect swan song written for him.

"I will tell you this — if the impossible happens," he said with a smile, "I will not see you in Phoenix."

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Long-standing partnership continues with one of world’s largest snack companies

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 20, 2014) — NASCAR and Mondelēz International, one of the world’s largest snacks companies, jointly announced today a three-year extension to its long-standing Official Partnership. The newly signed extension will designate Mondelēz International as the Official Cookies (OREO, Nilla Wafers, Nutter Butter) and Crackers (RITZ, Wheat Thins) of NASCAR.

"We couldn’t be more thrilled to continue our long-term partnership with NASCAR," said Stephen Chriss, Senior Director, North America Consumer Engagement and Marketing Services at Mondelēz International. "After a quarter century of being a sponsor in the sport and having been the Official Cookie and Cracker of NASCAR since 2000, we continue to view this as a valuable way to reach our customers and influence purchasing behavior."

According to a 2013 study conducted by independent research company Sponsorship Research International (SRi), NASCAR-themed packaging for the iconic OREO brand is both more engaging and enhances consumer attention by 30 percent over standard packaging among NASCAR fans. The same research indicates that NASCAR-themed packaging leads to brand advocacy (a 32 percent lift) and has a positive impact on purchase decisions (an 8 percent lift).   

"Mondelēz International has been a valued NASCAR Official Partner for more than a decade and we’re excited to have their renewed commitment to our sport," said Norris Scott, vice president of partnership marketing, NASCAR. "The company’s marketing programs are not only powerful, but they also put the NASCAR brand in retail and into the homes of millions of Americans who enjoy OREO and RITZ."

Mondelēz International will continue its long tradition of creating NASCAR-themed, specially marked packages of OREO cookies and RITZ crackers for a national consumer sweepstakes. During the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, Nabisco will give fans a chance to win a VIP, all-access experience to take in all the roaring action on race day. Fans can enter to win a trip to the ultimate place to watch a NASCAR race — the Nabisco "Snack & Go" Sweepstakes and Instant Win. Fans can visit https://www.NabiscoRacing.com/ starting in February 2014 for more information.

Mondelēz International is comprised of the global snacking and food brands of the former Kraft Foods. NASCAR and Kraft Foods’ official partnership dates back to 2000.

 

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Earnhardt Jr. has finished runner-up in three of the past four years

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. knows exactly where he wants to be in the closing laps of Sunday’s Daytona 500.

He wants to be up front, without question.

If that seems obvious, remember that the lead hasn’t always been the best place to be when approaching the checkered flag in the Great American Race.

But Earnhardt is weary of runner-up finishes — he has run second in three of the last four season-opening races — and he’d prefer to take his chances from the top spot in the running order.

"As far as trying to win one of these races, or not run second again, I think we need to be up front," Earnhardt said Thursday during a question-and-answer session with reporters in the Daytona International Speedway media center. "We’re not far enough toward the front. When we’ve run second, we’ve come from third or fourth or fifth or sixth those last few laps.

"You’re not going to win the race from back there. You might run second, but you aren’t going to win. You need to be leading the race. I would much rather be leading the Daytona 500 inside of five laps to go than be anywhere else."

Earnhardt doesn’t think the wild wrecks that interrupted Wednesday’s first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice constitute an indicator of the nature of Sunday’s race.

"I think just saying ‘500 miles’ changes everybody’s demeanor and everybody’s approach to that race," Earnhardt explained. "Those wrecks in practice definitely surprised me and surprised a lot of people, and I hope it’s just a product of a lot of cars trying to get out of the draft, cars blending in and cars put in a bad position that they couldn’t get out of."

DAYTONA DYNAMO
Related: Nationwide practice speeds

Three guesses. Who ran the fastest lap in final NASCAR Nationwide Series practice on Thursday?

Was it one of the series regulars? Nope.

Was it a full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular, such as Kyle Busch or Dale Earnhardt Jr.? Wrong again.

Then it must have been one of the nine talented series rookies trying to earn starting spots in Saturday’s Drive4COPD 300 at Daytona International Speedway. No, that’s strike three.

The driver who paced the field in Happy Hour was ARCA veteran Bobby Gerhart, who is attempting to qualify for the NNS race in his No. 85 Chevrolet.

Gerhart’s proficiency in the draft shouldn’t come as a complete surprise. After all, the 55-year-old driver has won the season-opening ARCA race at the 2.5-mile superspeedway eight times.

NASCAR’s new qualifying system, which will debut Friday, also should benefit Gerhart, who failed to make the field for last year’s Nationwide Series opener at Daytona under a single-car-run time trial format.

This year, drivers will establish qualifying speeds in a group draft, and that should help Gerhart make the show.

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Joe Gibbs Racing teammates flex muscle in Daytona qualifiers

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Matt Kenseth outran Kevin Harvick and Kasey Kahne in a three-wide finish Thursday night at Daytona International Speedway, as the driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Chevrolet won the first 150-mile qualifying race in the Budweiser Duels at Daytona.
 
Sprint Unlimited winner Denny Hamlin took the second Duel under caution after a wreck in Turn 4 of the final lap ended a run that had been caution-free to that point. The win gave JGR a sweep of the first three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events at Daytona and cemented the Gibbs drivers as favorites in Sunday’s Daytona 500.

Jeff Gordon ran second to Hamlin, with Kurt Busch, Paul Menard, Brian Scott and Trevor Bayne claiming third through sixth, respectively. The last-lap wreck totaled the No. 48 Chevrolet of defending Daytona 500 winner Jimmie Johnson, who already had destroyed a car in Saturday’s Sprint Unlimited.
 
In a race that was devoid of yellow flags from start to finish, Kenseth drafted back past Harvick after the No. 4 Chevrolet made a move to the inside of Turn 4 on the final lap of Duel No. 1 and won the race to the stripe by .022 seconds. Kahne took the lead duo three-wide to the inside in the tri-oval and finished third, .062 seconds behind Kenseth.
 
Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet failed post-race inspection, however, and his finish in the Duel was disallowed. Harvick nevertheless qualified for Sunday’s Daytona 500 but will start 38th.
 
In the second Duel, Johnson triggered the wreck when he ran out of fuel and slowed in the final corner. Jamie McMurray nudged the back of Johnson’s Chevy, turning the car and starting a chain reaction that saw Clint Bowyer‘s car flipping and landing on its wheels and Martin Truex’s Chevy in flames as it crossed the finish line in eighth place.
 
Truex had qualified on the outside of the front row for the Daytona 500 but will give up his starting position and drop to the back because the wreck will force him to use a backup car.
 
"I feel terrible," Johnson said. "To tear up that many race cars, to see the No. 15 flip — I feel terrible, and certainly want to apologize to everyone. I tried to get up out of the way; I had my hand out of the side (signaling he was out of fuel).
 
"But last lap coming to the checkered, there is so much going on right there. So much energy in the pack that I knew I was going to get run over if I ran out, because guys warned me about it — and it did. Thankfully, everyone is all right, and I certainly feel bad for the torn-up race cars."
 
Hamlin, on the other hand, is clearly on a roll.
 
"Once that snowball starts to roll, it’s hard to stop it," said Hamlin, who will line up fourth in the Daytona 500, with Gordon and Busch in sixth and eighth behind him. "And right now, we’re just on a heck of a run."
 
Brothers Bobby Labonte and Terry Labonte, both past series champions, were far enough behind the wreck to roll through unaffected, and, ultimately, both raced their way into the field for Sunday.
 
In winning the first-ever Duel run under the lights, Kenseth claimed the third starting spot for Sunday’s Daytona 500. Because of Harvick’s infraction, Kahne will start fifth. Marcos Ambrose and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were third and fourth in the first Duel, after Harvick’s penalty, and will start the Daytona 500 seventh and ninth, respectively.
 
"The race ended up unfolding great for us," said Kenseth, a two-time Daytona 500 winner. "We learned a lot in the race. I had the car in some positions that I wouldn’t want to do again if I had to do it over. I was able to make some moves, get up to second behind Junior there for a long time, ultimately take the lead.
 
"At the end, I saw Kevin making that move. You weren’t going to be able to block it without wrecking. I just tried to get back to him, and, thankfully, I had enough time to get that run to the finish line."
 
Danica Patrick locked up a spot in the 56th running of the Great American Race with a 13th-place run. Tony Stewart, Patrick’s car owner and teammate, raced his way into the Daytona 500 field with a 10th-place result, after Harvick’s penalty.
 
Stewart missed the last 15 events of the 2013 season after breaking his right leg in an Aug. 5 sprint car accident in Iowa but could have relied on a past champion’s provisional berth had he not finished in the top 15 in his Duel.
 
Cole Whitt and Alex Bowman each will start the most prestigious NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race for the first time after finishing 11th and 14th in their qualifier, respectively.
 
Daytona 500 pole winner Austin Dillon came home 18th in the first Duel but accomplished his most important objective — keeping the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet intact for the start of Sunday’s race.
 
"Yeah, we ran on the outside there for a while," Dillon said. "As soon as we got kind of going backwards and three-wide or whatever, I said ‘Alright, now it’s time to go back there and play the patient game.’ It’s no fun, but we get to start on the pole for the Daytona 500 with a really fast car."
 
Whitt and Swan Racing teammate Parker Kligerman both wrecked in practice on Wednesday. Kligerman went to a backup car and ran 17th but made the field on an owner points provisional. Whitt’s team worked tirelessly to repair his No. 26 Toyota.
 
"We weren’t ready to give up," said Whitt, who cracked the top 15 with a strong last-lap run. "We knew coming down here — it was already hard for us to even get down here, let alone the things that happened to our team (Wednesday) — not just our car, from Swan Energy losing two cars.
 
"My guys pulled together and made it happen. My hat is off to them. Everything so far has just been pretty amazing. To be in the Daytona 500 is something I’ve dreamed of my whole life. Kind of a hard way to do it, but being out and back in with just a lap or so to go is pretty gnarly."
 
In the second Duel, 2012 champion Brad Keselowski led Laps 2-35, but his race fell apart when the No. 2 Ford was flagged for speeding on pit road during a Lap 36 stop. A subsequent flat tire put Keselowski three laps down. Though he finished last in the second Duel, Keselowski made the field as the sixth-fastest qualifier and will start 33rd on Sunday.
 
Eric McClure, Ryan Truex, Morgan Shepherd, Joe Nemechek and Michael McDowell failed to make the 43-car field. Shepherd, 72, was attempting to become the oldest driver to qualify for the Daytona 500.

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Teammates among seven drivers making first 500 starts; Labontes make field, too

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Cole Whitt called his night "amazing" while his Swan Racing teammate Parker Kligerman used the expression "heart-wrenching," but all’s well that ended well. They’ll both make their first Daytona 500 on Sunday.


Whitt’s 11th-place finish in the first Budweiser Duel 150 gave the 22-year-old immediate Daytona 500 gratification. But thanks to the one-of-a-kind qualifying format for NASCAR’s biggest race, Kligerman, 23, had to wait an excruciating hour to find out his fate after his No. 30 Lending Tree Toyota had an engine problem and lost power on the final lap leaving him outside the top-15 automatic transfer position into the Daytona 500.


His berth ultimately depended on how the second Duel played out with transfer spots, last year’s points standings and champions’ provisional setting the full 43-car field, which will include seven first-time Daytona 500 starters and three others with only a single 500 under the belt.

"I had a great qualifying weekend, a fast car and got it wrecked yesterday (in practice) and then having it all ripped apart and taken away on that last lap tonight is heart-wrenching," 

Kligerman said immediately after his race. "I wanted to be in this and be able to just chill out. Now we’re playing the waiting the game. I don’t know if I’ll even watch, maybe I’ll go sit somewhere, alone."


When Kligerman met with reporters after his fate was decided following the second race, he revealed he had a group of friends with him and watched the second race on TV in his motorhome.

"Watched every lap, sadly, it was terrible," said Kligerman smiling, a day after ending practice on his car’s roof after being collected in a seven-car accident.

"But," he continued, "It’s an honor (to be in this race). I’m grateful, astonished to be here, but ready to get the job done."

He will join six other first-time Daytona 500 starters — Whitt, Alex Bowman, Kyle Larson, Brian Scott, Justin Allgaier and Michael Annett. Three others will make only their second 500 start — Landon Cassill, Josh Wise and polesitter Austin Dillon.


Meanwhile, Ryan Truex, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Morgan Shepherd, Eric McClure and Dave Blaney (withdrew) did not qualify for the race.


And while nearly a quarter of the grid is comprised of first or second-time Daytona 500 starters, two-time NASCAR Cup champion Terry Labonte told reporters in the garage late Thursday night, that this — his 32nd — would be his final Daytona 500.


At various times during the 60-lap second race, Terry Labonte and Casey Mears looked like they may miss the field, but a nine-car accident coming out of the last turn on the final lap shuffled the way the field was set.
 Mears was still shaking his head about the way it all transpired.

"We just lost fuel pressure with two laps to go, so I finally came down pit road and everybody crashed and it ended up working out in our favor," Mears said. "I’m not sure how the final numbers worked out, but definitely an interesting end to the race."


For a while, Terry Labonte was battling his younger brother, 2000 Cup champ Bobby Labonte, for the final transfer spot. Then it looked as if the past champion’s provisional would be settled between them as well. They ended up safely inside the transfer window — Terry, 12th and Bobby, 13th — and neither had to use a champion’s provisional.


"That was close," said Terry Labonte, whose best Daytona 500 finishes were runner-up showings in 1986 and 1997 are his best efforts.


"I told (crew chief) Frankie (Stoddard) this was going to be my last 500 and that it would suck not to make the race. Fortunately we did.


"It was the first time I’ve ever had to go through (the extreme emotions). Thank goodness these guys are in the race. They came and tested and were slow so they built a brand new car. It’s hard for a single-car team without the resources all these other guys have and they’re not as high in points as they’d like to be. But thank goodness we made the race.

"You know I still love this, but I’ve been dragging this retirement out for seven years. I told them it was my last 500 last year too, but this year I really mean it. This will be my last 500 this Sunday."

On the other end of the spectrum, Whitt, who will start 23rd in the No. 26 Speed Stick Gear Toyota and Kligerman, who will start 41st, were still giddy at the thought of taking their first Daytona 500 green flag in 72 hours.


"It’s something I’ve dreamed of my whole life, kind of a hard way to do it," said Whitt. "But being out and back in with just a lap or so to go is pretty gnarly."


His teammate couldn’t have agreed more.

"I’ve always had a saying in life: it will all work out, always has, always will and that’s what helps me sleep," Kligerman said. 

"In my career, I didn’t come with a lot of family funding, not a lot of fanfare to this point. I’ve had to kind of fight and root and gouge for everything I’ve got.


"I’ve had a lot of times in my career where someone walked up to me before I got in the car and said, ‘this is your only shot, make it count.’

"I have a lot people that believe in me at this stage in my career. I know how to get it done. My team knows how to get it done. I had confidence in that."

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Six-time champion hopes to return to headlines with Sunday win

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Jimmie Johnson is the defending Daytona 500 winner and a reigning six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champ, yet maintaining one of the lowest profiles of Daytona Speedweeks.

So far.

"I think a lot of people are tired of hearing my name," Johnson said with a grin, meeting with reporters before practice Wednesday.

"It’s not bad to have the attention go somewhere else. I hope to be back in everyone’s mindset come Sunday evening in being the winner of the Daytona 500."

With rookie Austin Dillon winning the Daytona 500 Coors Light Pole award for Sunday’s race  – the first Sprint Cup race laps for the famous No. 3 since 2001; Danica Patrick and Richard Petty’s exchange of words; Tony Stewart’s return from injury and drastic and exciting changes to NASCAR’s Chase for the Sprint Cup playoffs dominating recent news cycles, Johnson’s quest for a seventh title and his role at the Daytona 500 has been relegated to subplot.

"From the No. 3 car standpoint, that’s the perk of winning the pole; you get to sit on it for a week, basically, and all the headlines leadoff with you as the pole sitter and we’ve been fortunate to be in that situation [before]," Johnson said. "I’m sure Danica would rather not be in the headlines at all with what’s transpired there, but we’re under the radar for now I guess, but certainly hope to change that come race time."

That’s not to say Johnson’s own time on the Daytona high banks this week have been uneventful.

He crashed out of the Sprint Unlimited non-points race on Saturday night — his No. 48 Lowe’s Chevy spinning by itself — only 25 laps into the 75-lap race, while practicing drafting techniques with a newly tweaked version of the Gen-6 Chevy.

He had a great attitude about it, however, insisting that was his bad luck for the week. And that would be bad news for the competition.

Johnson responded with a 14th-best qualifying effort and can improve his Daytona 500 starting position with a good showing in Thursday night’s Duel 150. He rolls off seventh in the second race.

Perhaps no one feels the challenge of having a new elimination-type Chase playoff formula as Johnson, who is a trophy away from joining the sport’s only seven-time champions: Hall-of-Famers Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt.

So even if Johnson’s historic quest isn’t receiving Speedweeks’ top billing yet, Johnson’s eyes are on the big prize — and he’s willing to methodically make a run at it. In fact, a brief pause from the cause was a welcome break from the pressure and expectations.

"Since the banquet, not much thought [went to winning a seventh title]," Johnson said. "At the banquet, and some of the stories that were around it and the questions that were asked, my mind was much more present with it. But I got into the off-season and relaxed and let go of racing and it was really nice to get into January and not have racing on the brain at all.

"So, I haven’t put a lot of thought into it. It’s a huge opportunity that we have, obviously, and I feel like we will be able to get a look or two at it as this year goes on and the next few years go on. It would be awfully cool to get it done. But it’s been out of my mind for a couple of months."

Not, however, far from his competitors thoughts. Many preseason polls have Johnson the favorite again.

"I think that they realize that (the No. 48 team) are the ones to beat. … but I think they also understand that this situation this year is, probably, if you look at it on paper, you would have to think (the new Chase format) puts everybody else in a better scenario to beat the 48 team in the end," said recently inducted NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Jarrett, an analyst for ESPN’s NASCAR broadcasts.

"That even though he’s won more races in the Chase than anybody else by a large margin, you would say, okay, all he’s got to do is win here, win here, move on to the last one and he’s got it, but it’s not going to be that simple.

"But I think that what I’m intrigued by is to see how they go about it because every time there’s been a change, whether it’s been in the car or whether it’s been in the points. … the changes that have been made, they’ve adapted better than anyone else.

"Even when they didn’t win the championship, they put themselves there, and there were just circumstances they created. How are they going to go about this?  People are going to pay attention to what they’re doing for sure, all of us are, but the teams in there are going to, also.

"You still have to make them the favorite, but I think it certainly brings a lot more people in the mix."

First, those teams will have to beat Johnson at Daytona, where — spotlight or not — he ultimately can’t be ignored.

He swept both the Daytona 500 and Coke Zero 400 last year following his second Daytona 500 win. His first win in the 500 came in 2006 — the year that kicked off five consecutive championship runs.

And he already has one leg-up on the field, beating all drivers — and most of the field — in a half-marathon Sunday morning, finishing the 13.1-mile course that incorporates a portion of the speedway in an impressive 1 hour, 28 minutes.

While Johnson may be flying under the radar so far this week, his competitors have their eyes on him.

"The respect factor from my peers is really important to me and it always has been," Johnson said. "I attribute a lot of that to the way I grew up racing and had some success, but not a lot of success. I enjoyed the race track because of my passion of competing and the relationships and friendships I had and whatever pits or garage area that existed in the vehicles I was racing.

"That whole environment has always been very important to me and relationships and respect have been really the foundation of all of that.

"And," Johnson continued, "I have to say, though, it was probably the second or third championship before I felt maybe the certain level of acceptance or respect.  … and it means the world to me.  It means more than the trophies ever will.  Those relationships really are everything for me."

 

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qualifying race lineups

Sponsorship of NASCAR Nationwide Series race goes through 2016

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Sport Clips Haircuts has extended its partnership agreement with Darlington Raceway to sponsor the NASCAR Nationwide Series VFW Sport Clips Help A Hero 200 through the 2016 season.

"Sport Clips has been a fantastic partner and we are honored it is going to continue its relationship with Darlington Raceway for the next three years,"  Darlington Raceway president Chip Wile said.

"We are proud that this great partner views Darlington Raceway as a valuable platform to increase awareness of its national veterans-support programs. Today’s announcement shows the strength of the relationship and our continued commitment to fostering meaningful lasting partnerships."

The agreement ensures that Sport Clips and Darlington Raceway will continue to build on an already strong foundation started in 2012. The VFW Sport Clips Help A Hero 200 is slated to run under the lights at the Track Too Tough to Tame on April 11.

As the "Official Haircutter" of the VFW, Sport Clips has donated more than $2 million to the organization through its annual "Help A Hero" campaign, which was established in 2007. Since their first contribution of more than $80,000, Sport Clips’donations have increased annually.

"As an organization comprised of combat veterans, the VFW is truly grateful for the continued effort of Sport Clips and Darlington Raceway in helping support those who’ve sacrificed so much for all of us," said VFW National Commander William A. Thien

Tickets to the NASCAR Nationwide Series VFW Sport Clips Help A Hero 200 on Friday, April 11 are now on sale. Remember, kids 12 and under are FREE for the race in general admission sections. Visit www.DarlingtonRaceway.com or call 866-459-7223 for more information.

The track offers all current and retired military personnel a half-priced ticket for any adult admission to either the VFW Sport Clips Help A Hero 200 or NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bojangles’ Southern 500 by calling 843-395-8802 or visiting the ticket office during normal business hours.

MORE:

READ: Austin Dillon wins
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Major associate sponsorship part of enhanced relationship with RCR

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Austin Dillon, the Daytona 500 Coors Light Pole Award winner, will sport a familiar look next week at Phoenix International Raceway.

American Ethanol will serve as primary sponsor for The Profit on CNBC 500, Presented by Small Business Fueling America on March 2 as well as other select NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races this season.

"Homegrown biofuels like American Ethanol have stepped up to help our nation’s economy,” Dillon, an official spokesperson for  said. "NASCAR drivers have run more than 5 million competitive miles on Sunoco Green E15 and I know we will reach even more milestones together. I am proud to wear the American Ethanol colors in NASCAR and I hope I can bring them to Victory Lane in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in 2014."

In addition to primary sponsorship on select races, American Ethanol, launched by Growth Energy and the National Corn Growers Association along with the support of other partners, will serve as a major associate sponsor for Dillon’s No. 3 Chevrolet for the full 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season joining Dow, Cheerios, Realtree Outdoors, Bass Pro Shops and the University of Northwestern Ohio.

"American Ethanol is extremely pleased to once again partner with Austin Dillon, Richard Childress and the entire RCR team to help promote a sustainable homegrown American fuel that is better for our environment, reduces our dependence on foreign oil and creates jobs right here in the U.S., while revitalizing rural economies across America and save consumers at the pump," Tom Buis, CEO of Growth Energy, said.

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READ: Austin Dillon wins
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LendingTree joins Swan Racing for first NASCAR sponsorship

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On Wednesday, Parker Kligerman went upside down after an incident during NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice at Daytona International Speedway.

On Thursday, the Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender gained a sponsor for the Daytona 500 his Swan Racing No. 30 Toyota as LendingTree announced it will partner with a NASCAR team for the first time.

“We’re extremely excited to partner with Swan Racing in our first–ever involvement with NASCAR, and proud to support rookie driver Parker Kligerman at Daytona,” said Doug Lebda, LendingTree’s founder CEO. “LendingTree’s primary focus is to empower individuals, whether that’s empowering borrowers against big banks or empowering up-and-coming drivers against more established race teams.”

After Wednesday’s practice, Kligerman will run a backup car in Thursday’s Budweiser Duel as he attempts to make his first Great American Race.

“The No. 30 LendingTree Toyota is ready to roll and we are looking forward to getting on track beginning with tonight’s Budweiser Duel qualifying race and then Sunday’s Daytona 500,” said Kligerman.

The Daytona 500 will be held Sunday, February 23 at 1 p.m. ET, live on FOX. 

MORE:

READ: Austin Dillon wins
Daytona 500 pole

READ: How to qualify
for the Daytona 500

WATCH: Massive wreck
in Sprint Unlimited

READ: Daytona Duel 150-mile
qualifying race lineups