Calhoun Times

Daytona road course was a success

- By Alex Andrejev

The Charlotte Observer (TNS)

When the coronaviru­s pandemic uprooted NASCAR’s schedule, the sport pivoted to different tracks, new weekends and doublehead­er races. The road course at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway was substitute­d for the one at Watkins Glen Internatio­nal for a first-time event at the Florida track without allowing teams any practice.

Despite drivers’ “anxiety” around the unknowns prior to the race, Sunday’s Go Bowling 235 went off without a hitch. Only one caution for an incident was called during the 65-lap event, and that was only for Kyle Busch’s tire trouble which didn’t impact other cars. There was bumping and rubbing, but there were no major wrecks Sunday.

“I was a little surprised that the first maybe four or five laps weren’t potentiall­y a little messier than that,” NASCAR senior vice president of competitio­n Scott Miller said. “Just amazing what we saw.”

Second-place finisher Denny Hamlin said he spoke with the three other drivers leading the field at the green flag — Kevin Harvick, Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Busch — to determine where they would brake before the first turn. Hamlin said they didn’t want to have any secrets, nor did they want to “look like a bunch of dummies there in Turn 1.”

“We made sure we kept it clean to start,” Hamlin said. “And then you can get your bearings about you after you run a few laps.”

Eventual winner Chase Elliott said before the race that he expected the course to be “a big-time challenge for everyone.” Instead, Elliott careened to a stage 1 win, and led more than half the laps for his second official race win of the season. It was the No. 9 driver’s third road course win in a row after he finished first at the Charlotte ROVAL and Watkins Glen last year.

“Obviously, Watkins Glen has been good to us,” Elliott said. “But I was just really happy that we replaced a road course with a road course and didn’t just pile something else on the schedule to check a box.”

Third-place finisher Truex Jr. said the race was more “fun” than he anticipate­d.

“I thought we’ve seen a good race,” Truex Jr. said. “And obviously not a ton of cautions, not a ton of crashes and guys doing crazy stuff. I thought the race went really well. The racing was good.”

Truex Jr. added that he felt like he was able to make passes of slower cars, which helped put on a better show, and that he would be “totally fine” if the course were added to NASCAR’s schedule next year.

The No. 19 driver also mentioned an issue that emerged: The Florida coast weather. Temperatur­es in Daytona

Beach reached over 90 degrees (heat index was 103 degrees), and the inside of the cars are normally an additional 30 degrees hotter.

Multiple Truck Series drivers were evaluated in the track’s infield care center for heat exhaustion before the Cup race started. No. 27 Cup driver J.J. Yeley exited his car early after his in-car air conditione­r unit broke early in the second stage. Yeley said after the race that he’d thrown up “plenty of times in the car in (his) helmet” and was able to endure it, but Sunday’s heat took him out. He was replaced by Rick Ware Racing driver Bayley Currey.

“Between the temperatur­es in the car and just the focus that was needed here today here at Daytona, I just was really struggling,” Yeley said on his Instagram after the race. “And I can’t believe in my 16-year time in NASCAR, I’ve never not finished a race because of fatigue.”

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