Dale Earnhardt Jr. rolls off first, Sunday, 1:05 p.m. ET on FOX

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    Track Qualifying Record: Bill Elliott, 02/15/87, 42.783 sec/210.364 mph
# Car Driver Team
1 88 Dale Earnhardt. Jr. National Guard Chevrolet
2 52 Bobby Labonte Phoenix Construction Chevrolet
3 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
4 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
5 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet
6 35 Eric McClure(i) Hefty Ultimate/Reynolds Wrap Ford
7 66 Michael Waltrip BlueDEF/AAA Toyota
8 47 AJ Allmendinger Kroger/USO Chevrolet
9 87 Joe Nemechek(i) 300 Rise of an Empire Toyota
10 23 Alex Bowman # Dr.Pepper Toyota
11 21 Trevor Bayne(i) Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford
12 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
13 98 Josh Wise Curb Records Ford
14 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
15 33 Brian Scott(i) Whitetail Chevrolet
16 7 Michael Annett # Pilot/Flying J Travel Centers Chevrolet
17 51 Justin Allgaier # Brandt Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
18 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
19 32 Terry Labonte C&J Energy Services Ford
20 77 Dave Blaney Plinker Arms Ford
21 43 Aric Almirola Smithfield Ford
22 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet
23 36 Reed Sorenson Golden Corral Chevrolet
24 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota
25 93 Morgan Shepherd(i) SupportMilitary.org Toyota
26 4 Kevin Harvick Budweiser Chevrolet
27 30 Parker Kligerman # Swan Energy Toyota
28 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance Chevrolet
29 27 Paul Menard Peak/Menards Chevrolet
30 40 Landon Cassill(i) Hillman Racing Chevrolet
31 26 Cole Whitt # Speed Stick Gear Toyota
32 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet
33 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
34 83 Ryan Truex # Borla Exhaust Toyota
35 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
36 95 Michael McDowell K-Love Ford
37 9 Marcos Ambrose Stanley Ford
38 3 Austin Dillon # DOW Chevrolet
39 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet
40 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford
41 38 David Gilliland Love’s Travel Stops Ford
42 34 David Ragan CSX – Play It Safe Ford
43 99 Carl Edwards Fastenal Ford
44 24 Jeff Gordon Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet
45 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
46 17 Ricky Stenhouse. Jr. Nationwide Insurance Ford
47 78 Martin Truex. Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet
48 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
49 15 Clint Bowyer 5-hour Energy Toyota

* Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series

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Looking back at the top moments from the exhibition race that kicks off the season

It began in 1979 with nine drivers pulling numbered beer cans from a bucket full of ice. It continues Saturday night with twice that many competitors taking to the high banks of NASCAR’s most famous speedway. In between, what was originally billed as "the richest race per mile" has become a season-opening tradition that’s as much a spectacle as it is an event.

There are no points on the line, and never have been for an exhibition that started as a race reserved solely for pole winners from the previous season. And yet, you’d never know that given the drivers who have occasionally attempted to skirt or outright defy the rules, the cars that have ended up as steaming husks, or the finishes that have been wheel-to-wheel. The name of the race — which started as a clash, became a shootout and is now the Sprint Unlimited — has always seemed to fit.

Saturday night a collection of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stars will go at it again at Daytona International Speedway, once more under a set of unpredictable rules that are contingent upon fan voting. The exhibition race to kick off the season will continue to whet the appetite for the remainder of Speedweeks to come, and perhaps add another memorable moment in an event that has plenty of them despite its relatively short distance. Until then, here are the top 10.

10. The Buddy system

Nine drivers, 20 laps, four lead changes and 15 minutes. That’s about the extent of what was the inaugural Busch Clash in 1979. Benny Parsons pulled beer can No. 1 out of the bucket to claim the first starting position, but 20 laps later it was Buddy Baker who cashed the $50,000 first prize. The race went green the whole way, Baker pulled away late with drafting help from Darrell Waltrip, and he went unchallenged in leading the final five circuits. The race was aired on tape delay, as part of the Speedweeks that featured the first live flag-to-flag coverage of the Daytona 500.

9. Rookie statement

A rookie driver had never won the season-opening exhibition at Daytona — until Denny Hamlin intervened in 2006, when the event was postponed until Sunday afternoon because of rain. Hamlin had won a pole at Phoenix in a seven-race slate the previous season, qualifying him for the event in his rookie season with Joe Gibbs Racing. He made that berth count, leading 16 of the final 21 laps to claim the trophy in his first race as a full-time Sprint Cup driver. Hamlin’s crew got him out in first after the crucial final stop, and the No. 11 car outran Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Tony Stewart in the first kickoff event to feature a green-white-checkered finish.

8. Under the lights

Who says nothing good happens after dark? What was then known as the Budweiser Shootout went under the lights in 2003, and the result was vintage Dale Earnhardt Jr. This was at the height of Dale Earnhardt Inc.’s dominance on restrictor-plate tracks, when that red No. 8 car seemed able to make moves and pull away on its own. It certainly did in that first nighttime exhibition race, where Earnhardt led the final five laps and was virtually untouchable at the end. It was a precursor to the next Speedweeks, when NASCAR’s most popular driver would add the Daytona 500.

7. The wildest card

Neil Bonnett didn’t win a pole in 1982, but he earned entry into the season-opening exhibition the following year because of a "wild card" berth selected by blind draw among those fastest in second-round qualifying (remember that?) the year before. Bonnett made it count, making a final-lap pass on Darrell Waltrip in Turn 3 that earned him the victory in 1983 — but also sparked a crash involving Baker, Terry Labonte and Dale Earnhardt. The Intimidator had been black-flagged earlier in the event due to an oil leak, but refused to heed the flag and had his scorecard pulled by race officials.

6. Over the line

Aiming for his second victory in the event, Hamlin found himself locked onto the bumper of leader Ryan Newman on the final lap in 2011. Off the final corner, Kurt Busch went high, and Hamlin went low — but too low, as it turns out. Roughly half the No. 11 car was below the yellow line at the bottom of the race track, under which cars cannot advance their position in a restrictor-plate event. Newman forced Hamlin down there without making contact, opening the top for Busch, who barreled through and won a three-wide finish by .058 seconds. Penalized to the end of the lead lap, Hamlin wound up 12th.

5. Jarrett and Junior

Earnhardt Jr. was a beast at Daytona in 2004, during a Speedweeks where he would win every race — except one. The exception came in the opener, where Dale Jarrett jetted ahead of the No. 8 car as the field entered the final lap. On the backstretch, Jamie McMurray turned Newman into the outside wall, but NASCAR kept out the green flag and allowed the competitors to race to the finish on the 2.5-mile track. Off the final turn, Earnhardt looked low, then high, but had to settle for second behind Jarrett, who won the race for the third and final time.

4. Sign of things to come

Jeff Gordon wasn’t a rookie in 1994, given that he had completed the previous full season — his first — in the No. 24 car. But he was making his maiden voyage in the Daytona exhibition, thanks to a pole he had won at Charlotte the year before. Gordon made the most of it, reaching Victory Lane the first time he was qualified for the event. He passed Ernie Irvan with two laps remaining and won by a comfortable margin. It was a sign of things to come, given that Gordon’s first points victory would come later that same season, and the first of four championships would arrive the next year.

3. Rudd goes for a ride

The most infamous crash in the history of the season-opening exhibition came in 1984, in a race where Bonnett went on to win for the second consecutive season. But the day’s biggest story involved Ricky Rudd, who was turned sideways exiting Turn 4 and had his Bud Moore Engineering car lift off the ground. What followed next was jarring, with Rudd’s vehicle tumbling violently, pirouetting on its hood and then tumbling again before coming to rest in the grass. Rudd emerged badly bruised, and then famously taped his swollen eyes open to compete in the Daytona 500 — where he finished seventh. A week later at Richmond, he won.

2. Taking the sixth

Dale Earnhardt may have needed 20 tries to win the Daytona 500, but he absolutely dominated the exhibition that kicked off Speedweeks. The Intimidator won the event’s second edition in 1980, claimed another in 1986, and collected four more in 1988, 1991, 1993 and 1995. His complete control of the race was on full display in 1995, when Earnhardt led 18 of 20 laps to win the event for a record sixth time. Although a trio of drivers — Jarrett, Stewart and Kevin Harvick — have each won it three times, Earnhardt’s record remains.

1. Save, and a beauty

Kyle Busch won by the closest margin of victory ever in 2012, using a slingshot pass on the final lap to prevail by .013 seconds over Stewart. But it was how he got there that was the interesting part. He had to make two epic saves just to keep his car in one piece, and the latter was an all-timer. With two laps remaining in regulation, Gordon got into the back of Busch, whose car fishtailed wildly and threw sparks as the driver fought it back up onto the banking. The ensuing accident left Gordon rolling upside down on his roof, but afterward Busch’s saves were all the rage.

"Stab and steer," Busch called it. Earlier in the race he had done the same after changing lanes in front of Jimmie Johnson. He wasn’t completely clear, leading Busch’s No. 18 car to swerve almost fully left to right before the driver reined it in. "There aren’t many people, ever, who could have done that," Stewart said. It all set the stage for the end, where Busch collected his almost-out-of-control car for a second time, and then roared back up through the field to win. Not bad for stab and steer. Or a race with no points on the line.

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Driver eager to get going with Furniture Row Racing team

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Yes, Daytona, there really is a Martin Truex Jr.
 
You can’t blame those who were beginning to wonder. Though Truex and his new Furniture Row Racing team were barely acquainted in January, they didn’t participate in Preseason Thunder testing at Daytona International Speedway in early January.
 
During the NASCAR Sprint Cup Media Tour late last month, Truex appeared via Skype from a Caribbean vacation spot in Anguilla.

Nor did Truex make it to his scheduled Media Day appearance Thursday at Daytona. His plane was snowed in at the Statesville, N.C., airport until late afternoon.
 
But after what has been an unusual offseason for the driver of the No. 78 Chevrolet, Truex arrived at the Daytona on Thursday evening well-rested and ready to go.
 
"I feel really good about it, definitely refreshed, rejuvenated, ready to go," Truex said Friday.
 
Truex added that there was a method to skipping the Preseason Thunder sessions, part of which might have to do with superstition on the part of crew chief Todd Berrier.
 
"I think they’re approaching this a little differently," Truex said. "They didn’t feel like this was one of the places where they wanted to spend the time and effort testing. They felt like their time was better spent getting stuff ready at the shop to go test at a place like Nashville, which we’ve already been to.
 
"I think part of it is Berrier’s a little bit superstitious. He said the year that they didn’t test here they won the (Daytona) 500 (with Kevin Harvick at Richard Childress Racing in 2007). So maybe that’s part of the reason as well. He hasn’t really said that, but that’s kind of what I got from talking to him.
 
"But we’ll just see how it goes. It’s been a great offseason. There’s been a lot of work behind the scenes, obviously, getting all the stuff ready. … It hasn’t been a typical offseason, but it’s been a busy one, for sure."
 
NEW BEGINNING
 

There’s no driver in the garage who’s happier than Denny Hamlin to see the end of the offseason.
 
For obvious reasons, Hamlin is eager to forget the 2013 season, even though he won the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
 
The driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota missed four races with a compression fracture of his first lumbar vertebra, the result of an accident at Auto Club Speedway (Fontana, Calif.) in late March.
 
Though he won a series-best five Coors Light Pole Awards, Hamlin crashed out of four races and suffered three engine failures after returning to action.
 
"Usually, you’re kind of thinking about the grind’s about to start and you’re about to spend a lot of time away from home," Hamlin said. "But for me, I’m one of the few drivers that couldn’t get this offseason over quick enough, because as soon as we hit the race track, 2013 is over, and 2014 has started, and we can stop talking about last year.
 
"I’m excited for that part of it. So for me, it’s the anticipation, and (from) what I’ve seen from testing, I believe that we’re going to be one of the guys that come out pretty strong pretty early, and that’s typically not how we start anyway."
 
JOHNSON ANNOUNCES WELLNESS INITIATIVE
 
As part of his continuing commitment to K-12 public education, Jimmie Johnson announced Friday the Inaugural Wellness Challenge championed by the Jimmie Johnson Foundation.
 
The Wellness Challenge will consist of four events in North Carolina this year: a 5K on Apr. 27 in Huntersville; the Lake Norman Excursion (a 5K run and multi-distance bike ride) on July 12 in Mooresville; the Cane Creek Sprint Triathlon on Aug. 19 in Waxhaw; and the Lake Davidson Sprint Triathlon on Sept. 7 in Davidson.
 
In staging these events, the Jimmie Johnson Foundation, branding itself as TeamJJF, has partnered with Cool Breeze Cyclery, which operates in three Charlotte-area locations.
 
"We have a great fundraiser in California — a golf tournament — and it’s been extremely successful," Johnson said Friday during the announcement in the Daytona International Speedway media center. "The fundraising takes place in California, and with us living in North Carolina, we just felt like we needed to put on an event, or some events, in North Carolina to do fundraising there."
 
Johnson observes an extremely athletic lifestyle that includes distance running, swimming and cycling. He and wife Chani decided to model the Wellness Challenge after their own interests.
 
"We just felt like there was a great way to tie in fitness, wellness, making sure that you’re healthy and active … from a beginner all the way to an advanced athlete."
 
For more details, visit www.jimmiejohnsonfoundation.org.

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Fellow NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers offers their take on Petty’s comments

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — In varying ways, Danica Patrick‘s competitors issued a unanimous sentiment of support for her during Thursday’s NASCAR Media Day interviews.

And while they all reiterated their respect for NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty and his right to voice his opinion, they didn’t all agree with his public assessment that the only way Patrick would win a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race was "if everybody else stayed home."

Further, Petty told the Canadian Motorsports Expo audience this past weekend, "if she’d have been a male, nobody would ever know if she’d showed up at a racetrack."

Patrick’s team owner Tony Stewart immediately dismissed the notion he needed to respond to the situation. "I’m not even going to waste my time talking about that topic," he said. "Danica’s probably the best to talk about it."

Asked about the topic during her early morning interview session Thursday, Patrick reacted to the comments, smiling politely and saying that fundamentally she appreciates Petty’s right to share an opinion.

"You know, people have said things in the past and they will say things in the future. I still say the same thing and that’s that everybody is entitled to their own opinion," Patrick said. "People are going to judge what he said and I’m just not going to."

Her former team owner Dale Earnhardt Jr., who shares a Goody’s Headache Powder sponsorship with Petty and has known the family his whole life, seemed torn between his longtime respect for Petty and the NASCAR icon’s opinion about Patrick that Earnhardt didn’t agree with.

"I thought he was a little rough on Danica," said Earnhardt, whose JR Motorsports team fielded a car for Patrick in the NASCAR Nationwide Series for parts of three seasons (2010-12).

"You can’t call out (Petty) because he’s ‘The King’ and he’s such a patriarch and icon in the sport and has tons of wisdom and insight and done a lot for this sport. But at the same time, she deals with more criticism than anyone who has ever raced in the sport. It seems like she goes by a different set of rules because of her gender, and that’s unfortunate.

"It seems like she’s always having to answer to something like that and it’s a pain in her butt and frankly, it’s got to get old."

Understandably, Richard Petty Motorsports driver Aric Almirola asked people to remember context and perspective. The team cautioned this week that Petty insisted his words weren’t meant in a sexist manner and Almirola is convinced the whole situation is being overblown.

"In text and a newspaper or website there’s no emotion in that," explained Almirola, who is also friends with Patrick. "You can’t see his facial expression. You can’t hear what was talked about (before and after) that one-liner, so there is a lot that goes into it. People love a story. We all know that. People love drama, so he said one sentence that got taken out of context and blown up all over the media and now it’s gone viral.

"I’m sure if you asked him if he could take it back he probably would, but at the end of the day, he said it and what he probably meant is exactly what I’m telling you. For those expectations of people to think, ‘Hey, is Danica Patrick gonna win a race this year?’ Maybe, but in all likelihood, probably not. I’ll go on record saying that, too.

"I think it’s just tough. I’m telling you, look at guys like Denny Hamlin. He goes all year until Homestead without winning a race. Dale Jr. goes all year and doesn’t win a race. It’s not easy. If it was easy, everybody would do it and I think she does a damn good job. I think the time will come that she will go to Victory Lane and that’s about all I have to say about that."

One of Patrick’s new teammates at SHR, Kevin Harvick, smiled and shared his observations of Patrick and the whole topic, stressing the one thing he’s learned about Patrick is "she does not get rattled."

"She’s so used to people saying this and it doesn’t bother her," Harvick said. "And that’s not a front. It really doesn’t phase her and you really don’t have to stick up for anything that someone says or does.

"She is not phased by anything I’ve seen. She just doesn’t care and moves on and lets it roll off. I think she’s dealt with so much for so long that she’s just immune to it."

Furthermore, in his short time working alongside Patrick, Harvick said he has been impressed with both her work ethic and ability in transitioning from IndyCar to stock cars. He said he thinks she can win in NASCAR, but cautioned she’s still early in the development stages.

"I think this year is going to be really good for her and her learning curve just for the fact that we went and tested together at Nashville," Harvick said. "Just a couple of conversations can help. She can drive the car. Most all of us have done this for … I’ve been in a stock car since I was 16, so that’s 22 years. You aren’t going to make that experience up. She’s realistic about what she needs to do and accomplish. Just getting those little conversations over before you get to the track can overcome a lot of hurdles."

Patrick’s strongest supporter is her boyfriend, 2013 Sunoco Rookie of the Year Ricky Stenhouse Jr., who joked that the media was talking about Danica and Richard (himself) during last year’s Media Day, too.

He said they haven’t spent much time discussing Petty’s comments and conceded he didn’t appreciate the sentiment. But, he was quick to remind everyone, Patrick has dealt with this before in her career.

"It’s tough," Stenhouse acknowledged. "But she’s been going through it for a long time so she can handle it better than others I would say. I would not be happy if they said that about me like that. I think she handles it very well.

"I think she’s proved she can drive these race cars. She’s still got a lot to learn, I’ve got a lot to learn. It takes a lot to figure these cars out. If you look at my season, I’ve run a lot more races than she has in stock cars and last season wasn’t the greatest season for me either."

Then Stenhouse grinned and restated that Patrick will be just fine.

"We talked about it once, right when the comments came out, but as far as letting it worry her, no she hasn’t," Stenhouse said. "She’s really good at just letting it go, she has a lot of experience with it — a lot of people that talk good about her and a lot of people that talk bad about her, you’ve just got to take the good and stick with it and be positive about it."

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Coors Light Pole winners and past Sprint Unlimited champions make up the field

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No. 1 Jamie McMurray (Coors Light Pole at Sonoma)

No. 2 Brad Keselowski (Coors Light Pole at New Hampshire-1)

No. 4 Kevin Harvick (Coors Light Pole at Kansas-2)

No. 9 Marcos Ambrose (Coors Light Pole at Watkins Glen)

No. 10 Danica Patrick (Coors Light Pole at Daytona-1)

No. 11 Denny Hamlin (Coors Light Pole at Auto Club)

No. 14 Tony Stewart (Past Sprint Unlimited winner)

No. 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (Coors Light Pole at Atlanta)

No. 18 Kyle Busch (Coors Light Pole at Bristol-1)

No. 20 Matt Kenseth (Coors Light Pole at Kansas-1)

No. 22 Joey Logano (Coors Light Pole at Michigan-2)

No. 24 Jeff Gordon (Coors Light Pole at Richmond-2)

No. 31 Ryan Newman (Coors Light Pole at Indianapolis)

No. 32 Terry Labonte (Past Sprint Unlimited winner)

No. 41 Kurt Busch (Coors Light Pole at Darlington)

No. 48 Jimmie Johnson (Coors Light Pole at Martinsville-1)

No. 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. (Coors Light Pole at Kentucky)

No. 99 Carl Edwards (Coors Light Pole at Michigan-1)

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Final practice speeds is one option for fans to determine Sprint Unlimited starting lineup

MORE: Practice results
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Denny Hamlin topped Friday’s final practice for the Sprint Unlimited, posting a speed of 199.867 mph to take the top spot — something that could pay dividends for the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

The final practice results are one of the voting options fans have to set the starting lineup for Saturday night’s race. In addition to voting on how the starting lineup is determined, fans can also vote for the race format and restart order for the final segment. Fans can vote to define the rules for the Sprint Unlimited here.

Voting for the race format ends at 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, voting for the starting order ends at 7:30 p.m. ET on Saturday and voting for the restart order for the final segment ends at the conclusion of the second segment in Saturday’s race.

Jamie McMurray, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top five in the second session.

Friday’s first session marked Tony Stewart‘s long-awaited return behind the wheel of his No. 14 Chevrolet since breaking his right leg in a sprint car accident on Aug. 5. Stewart placed 10th on the speed chart in the opening session and ninth in the final session.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. topped the 45-minute opening practice session. Earnhardt Jr. put down a fastest lap of 198.421 mph.

Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch, Kevin Harvick and Stenhouse Jr. rounded out the top five from the first session.

The non-points exhibition race features 18 drivers who either won a pole last season or are previous winners of the race.

The 75-lap Sprint Unlimited is set for 8 p.m. ET on Saturday and will be televised on FOX Sports 1.

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Four-time series champion will drive No. 30 Rheem Comfort Products Chevrolet Silverado

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Former series champion Ron Hornaday Jr. has secured a ride for the upcoming Camping World Truck Series season-opening Nextera Energy Resources 250 with Turner Scott Motorsports, the team announced Friday.

Sponsored by Rheem Comfort Products, the 55-year-old veteran will pilot the red and black Rheem paint scheme of the No. 30 Chevrolet Silverado when the season kicks off under the lights on Feb. 21 at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1). The NASCAR veteran will embark on his second career start for TSM following a top-five finish in the 2013 season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

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"I’m very excited and grateful to have support from Steve Turner, Harry Scott and the entire TSM organization," Hornaday said via a team release. "We worked great together in Miami and to have the opportunity to come to Daytona to start the year off, I’m just really looking forward to it. I wouldn’t have this opportunity if it weren’t also for Rheem and their help. I think this is a winning combination that will give us a great chance to run up front and hopefully get a win."

Hornaday is no stranger to success at the 2.5-mile track, having 10 starts, two top-fives and three top 10s in the NCWTS alone. 

"I’m really excited about having a four-time champion in one of our trucks," TSM co-owner Steve Turner said. "Both Ron’s team and our team are working diligently to get a full-time deal put together for the 2014 season. Ron will bring great knowledge to the young drivers in our fleet. We all feel like Ron is a class act, both on and off the track."

A long-time competitor in NASCAR’s top series, Hornaday made his Truck Series debut nearly 18 years ago and is, to date, the all-time win leader in the NASCAR Truck Series with 51 wins in 355 starts.

"Ron Hornaday has been synonymous with competitive toughness and durability in all his days of racing. His hardnosed style and determination to win are legendary, but it’s his lifetime of caring generosity shown to so many young racers who needed an encouraging word or a place to stay that makes Ron Hornaday so special," said Rheem Manufacturing Company President and CEO, JR Jones. "Rheem was honored to have the opportunity to provide support to ensure this Truck Series legend would be back on the track at Daytona."

In its last visit to Daytona, Turner Scott Motorsports had a strong run in the NCWTS race, with all four entries starting in the top 10. With direction from former racer-turned-crew-chief, Shane Huffman, Hornaday completes the TSM roster for the NCWTS race at Daytona and will be running alongside teammates Ben Kennedy and Ryan Truex.

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Timeless collectibles available as part of historic Daytona Rising redevelopment

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As the "World Center of Racing" undergoes an historic reimagining, fans can purchase pieces of the Daytona International Speedway grandstand as part of the Daytona Rising Collection.

Fanatics Authentic is offering Daytona ticketholders their seats. Non-ticketholders can buy seats as well as additional speedway relics.

"From the day we announced the Daytona Rising project, we received a lot of interest from fans, industry partners and even drivers in purchasing seats and other memorabilia from the Speedway," Daytona International Speedway President Joie Chitwood III said. "By partnering with Fanatics Authentic, we will ensure the highest quality authentic memorabilia from the ‘World Center of Racing’ will be available to satisfy even the most die-hard NASCAR fan."

Fans that purchase items from the Daytona Rising Collection will begin to receive their memorabilia from Turn 1 in September 2014.

"The renovation of Daytona International Speedway will usher in a new era for race fans at the historic venue," Ross Tannenbaum, CEO of Fanatics Authentic said. "We’re thrilled to partner with Daytona International Speedway to offer race fans a chance to own a piece of that storied history.  The fond memories of the iconic motorsports landmark can now live on in fans’ households in a unique way."

The collection is available at www.FanaticsAuthentic.com/DAYTONA_Rising. Fans may also reserve their seats of choice with a Fanatics Authentic sales representative by calling (866) 578-0541.

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Friday practice felt like ‘business as usual’ for veteran

RELATED: Results from Friday’s practices

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Tony Stewart, unshaven and smiling, admitted "that’s way too long to wait to get back in a race car, that’s for sure."

Stewart, sidelined for the final 15 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races of 2013, made his first laps in the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet here at Daytona International Speedway on Friday as practice for Saturday’s Sprint Unlimited got underway.

"The great thing is there is zero percentage of pain in the car," said Stewart, still limping from the broken leg suffered Aug. 5 in a sprint car race. "That was nice. We’ll see what it feels like at 9 o’clock tonight, but so far so good. That’s better than I was hoping for, honestly. I thought we would have some kind of ache or pain, but it was like putting on a pair of shoes again."

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Stewart completed a total of 50 laps during the two practice sessions to wrap up his first day back behind the wheel. He was 10th on the speed chart (197.377 mph) in the first session among the 18 drivers scheduled to participate in Saturday’s non-points event. In the closing session, he was ninth at 197.994 mph.
 
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Denny Hamlin led the first and second sessions, respectively.

"Once I got the relief of knowing it was not hurting anywhere, then it was just the joy of being back out there again," Stewart, 42, said. "It didn’t feel like I’d been gone seven months when we started running. It did (earlier) today though; every five minutes I was looking at the clock from 3 o’clock on. I just wanted to get dressed and come in. That (wait) was small compared to the seven months."

Stewart, a three-time winner of the Sprint Unlimited, is working with a new crew chief — Chad Johnston has replaced Steve Addington atop the pit box — and has new teammates in Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch, as well as 2013 teammate Danica Patrick.

Concerns about the possible pain dissipated quickly, he said, and talk quickly turned to the handling of the car.

"As soon as we came in from that first run there, we were already talking about how (the car) was sucking up (in the draft), how it felt when we were leading, already going over details to what we can do to make it better for tomorrow," he said.

"Once I got in the car and once I didn’t feel the pain anymore, it was right back to business as usual. Denny (Hamlin) pushed me down the frontstretch and we got a little wiggly … it was crazy how it just felt like it was yesterday that we were doing the same thing. For somebody that hadn’t been in a car, it sure doesn’t feel like it. It feels like I was in it a week ago. So I was pleasantly surprised.

"Today in the big picture was just another practice … but obviously it was a little bigger than normal for us."

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Winning bidder also receives special prize pack for summer Daytona race

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The custom scooter Tony Stewart used during his recovery from a broken leg last year will be auctioned off, and the winning bidder will receive much more than an autographed piece of memorabilia.

Stewart, a three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, has donated the scooter to the Darrell Gwynn Foundation. It will be part of the Barrett-Jackson auction scheduled for April 11-13 in Palm Beach, Fla.

The scooter is painted to resemble the owner/driver’s No. 14 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet. It is part of a package that includes an autographed, race-worn fire suit from Stewart and a trip for two as his guests to this year’s Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway. Airfare, hotel and garage passes will be provided and two seats atop the No. 14 team’s pit box for the July 5 race are also included.

Stewart is a four-time winner of the July Sprint Cup Series race at Daytona.

"I knew pretty early once we got that scooter," Stewart said of his plans for the piece. "Once I saw how much attention I got at Richmond, I thought ‘we can do something productive with this.’

"We didn’t know how long we were going to have to use it. The good thing is we’ve been a big part of the Darrell Gwynn Foundation; I’m a believer of what he does. We knew right off the bat that once it got the attention it got at Richmond, when we were done with it we were going to donate it to Darrell. Instead of just giving it away to anybody, hopefully this thing can raise some money."

The Darrell Gwynn Foundation provides support for people with paralysis through financial and other means. More than 250 wheelchairs have been provided by the foundation thanks to funds raised through various initiatives.

"These wheelchairs he gives away are worth $22,000," Stewart said. "If this can raise $50,000 or $75,000, that’s two or three chairs that we can give to someone who needs it. We can take something that I have $5,000 invested in and hopefully put it to really good use."

According to officials, Stewart will match the first $50,000 bid for the scooter and prize package and donate it to the foundation.

Stewart broke his right leg in a sprint car accident Aug. 5 and missed the final 15 Sprint Cup races while undergoing three surgeries and months of rehabilitation. He returned to the track for the first time a month after his accident, at Richmond International Raceway, in early September and began using the scooter to navigate around the garage and pit road.

He will return to competition for the first time since suffering the injury this weekend at Daytona for the Sprint Unlimited.

MORE:

READ: Expansion, eliminations
highlight Chase changes

WATCH: Brian France breaks
down Chase changes

READ: Coors Light qualifying
changes announced

READ: 2014 NASCAR
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