Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Stenhouse wins longest Daytona 500 in history

- By Jenna Fryer

BEACH, FLA. » Ricky Stenhouse Jr. has had a rollercoas­ter career in which he had to fight to keep a job, lost his seat at a NASCAR powerhouse team and opened his 14th season mired in a five-year losing streak.

To say this Daytona 500 was a milestone race was an understate­ment — for Stenhouse and for NASCAR.

Stenhouse won the Daytona 500 in double overtime and under caution on Sunday in the longest running of “The Great American Race.” The two overtimes pushed the 65th running of the race to a record 212 laps — a dozen laps beyond the scheduled distance and a whopping 530 miles.

It provided anxious moments before a landmark celebratio­n: The first Daytona 500-winning team coowned by a Black man and a woman.

Stenhouse’s win for JTG Daugherty Racing was the third of his career. JTG is the first single-car team to win the Daytona 500 since The Wood Brothers Racing did it with Trevor Bayne in 2011.

The team is owned by Tad and Jodi Geschickte­r along with former NBA player Brad Daugherty.

Daugherty, who left the track earlier Sunday with an eye irritation, is the first Black car owner to win the race and Jodi Geschickte­r joined Teresa Earnhardt as female car owners to win the Daytona 500. Earnhardt ran Dale Earnhardt Inc. when Michael Waltrip and Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the Daytona 500 in 2003 and 2004.

To get to victory lane Sunday, JTG stuck with Stenhouse and even reunited him this season with the crew chief who led him to a pair of Xfinity Series titles years ago.

Mike Kelly’s biggest task was convincing Stenhouse that he can indeed win races. So ahead of the Daytona

500, he taped a note inside the Chevrolet. The message? The team believes in the driver.

“When I woke up today I told myself that I was going to do something that I used to do for Ricky when we had tough days,” Kelly said. “I just wrote him a note that only he would see. It was on top of the roll bar in front of him, and it just said, ‘We believe.’ That’s been our motto the whole offseason — that we believe.

“We’re trying to get people to believe in Ricky Stenhouse Jr. again.”

Stenhouse’s only other victories came in 2017, at Talladega and the summer race at Daytona.

Now the 35-year-old from Olive Branch, Mississipp­i, has a repeat win at Daytona in NASCAR’s biggest race of the season.

“I think this whole offseason Mike just preached how much we all believed in each other. They left me a note in the car that said they believe in me and to go get the job done,” Stenhouse said. “Man, this is unbelievab­le. This was the site of my

last win back in 2017. We’ve worked really hard. We had a couple shots last year to get a win and fell short.

“It was a tough season, but man, we got it done, Daytona 500.”

Kyle Larson was collected in the race-ending crash after he jumped out of line too early in an attempt to win the race. His disappoint­ment was alleviated by Stenhouse’s victory.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ricky Stenhouse Jr. celebrates a career milestone in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Daytona 500 auto race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway on Sunday in Daytona Beach, Fla.
JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ricky Stenhouse Jr. celebrates a career milestone in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Daytona 500 auto race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway on Sunday in Daytona Beach, Fla.

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