USA TODAY US Edition

Race runner-up Wallace misses by 0.28 seconds

- Mike Hembree

“It definitely pulls on your heartstrin­gs a little bit, just to know that you’re being watched by so many greats. They’re the ones you’re looking up to.” Darrell “Bubba” Wallace Jr. Daytona 500 runner-up, on hearing from Lewis Hamilton and Hank Aaron before the race

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – A visitor to the Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway media center Sunday night might have assumed that Darrell “Bubba” Wallace Jr. won the Daytona 500, NASCAR’s biggest race.

Wallace finished second. If he had won, the speedway might have exploded.

Members of Wallace’s immediate family and friends saw him for the first time post-race as he arrived in the media center to discuss his secondplac­e finish. Emotions overflowed.

Wallace’s mother, Desiree, walked to the podium and gave him a long hug. “I’m so proud of you, baby,” she said, over and over again.

“You act like we just won the race,” Wallace said.

“We did,” she said.

They both cried.

Wallace’s sister, Brittany, also stepped forward for a hug, Bubba telling the crowd that she is responsibl­e for his good looks.

“Pull it together, bud, pull it together,” Wallace said as he cried into a towel after sitting down to answer questions.

Wallace fell 0.28 of a second short of outrunning Austin Dillon for the victory and what would have been an upset of colossal proportion­s. Wallace was momentaril­y irritated about that — and about late-race contact with third-place finisher Denny Hamlin — but the good dramatical­ly outweighed the bad for the first full-time African-American driver in NASCAR’s premier series since the 1970s.

Before the race, Wallace received an encouragin­g tweet from Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton and a surprise phone call from baseball Hall of Famer Hank Aaron, who, like Wallace, is from Mobile, Ala.

“That makes you feel good,” Wallace said. “It definitely pulls on your heartstrin­gs a little bit, just to know that you’re being watched by so many greats. They’re the ones you’re looking up to, and they reach out to you and that’s really cool.”

Wallace, driving in his first Daytona 500 and only his fifth Cup race, pushed Dillon in the draft over the closing mile and edged Hamlin for second.

“It’s just wild,” he said. “It’s Daytona. You’ve just got to be relaxed for it the whole time.

“We battled through a lot of adversity.”

 ??  ?? In just his fifth NASCAR Cup race and first Daytona 500, Darrell “Bubba” Wallace Jr. finished second Sunday. JASEN VINLOVE/USA TODAY SPORTS
In just his fifth NASCAR Cup race and first Daytona 500, Darrell “Bubba” Wallace Jr. finished second Sunday. JASEN VINLOVE/USA TODAY SPORTS

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