Regina Leader-Post

KENNINGTON ENJOYS TASTE OF SUCCESS

Veteran Canadian NASCAR driver thirsts for another chance to face top drivers after Daytona 500 debut, writes Nick Faris.

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TORONTO For all the profession­al blessings directed his way in the last several months, D.J. Kennington has had his share of foul luck.

Take Canada Day, when the Ontario NASCAR driver jaunted to Florida for a race in the toptier Monster Energy Cup Series and watched his engine give out after 14 laps. Take early May, when he travelled to Talladega Superspeed­way in Alabama and beat three opponents in qualifying, but missed the cut for the GEICO 500.

Or take Feb. 26, when Kennington realized a decades-old dream by raring off the starting line of the Daytona 500 — only for more prolific drivers to spin out on the 127th of 200 laps and claim his trailing Toyota Camry as collateral damage.

Still, he’s not exactly sweating those details.

“It’s still kind of surreal. I love talking about it,” Kennington said Wednesday. “I’m just a small-town kid from St. Thomas, Ont., that used to race go-karts on the dirt and made it to the Daytona 500. It’s a pretty cool story.”

Kennington is here this week for the Pinty’s Grand Prix of Toronto — the fifth stop of the Canadian NASCAR season, bookended by visits to Mirabel, Que., and Saskatoon. The Grand Prix, set for Saturday afternoon, is a prelude to the open-wheel Honda Indy Toronto, which IndyCar drivers will contest Sunday on the same segment of downtown streets near Lake Ontario.

It’s a track Kennington knows well, the byproduct of showing up for 208 straight races on NASCAR’s Canadian circuit, the Pinty’s Series. Coincident­ally, that streak will tick to 209 on his 40th birthday. He has competed profession­ally in Canada for half his life with 26 wins, 117 top-five finishes and season championsh­ips in 2010 and 2012 to show for it.

He has also driven 55 times in NASCAR’s minor American tiers, the Xfinity Series and the Camping World Truck Series. Last November, he made the first Cup Series start of his career. And when he qualified for the Daytona 500 a few months later, he became the first Canadian to do so in almost three decades.

“I don’t consider myself better than anybody else here in Canada. I don’t claim to be. I was just the lucky guy that was in the right spot at the right time, put the right program together and got an opportunit­y,” said Kennington, who clinched his spot at Daytona by passing Elliott Sadler in the final straightaw­ay of a door-die qualifying race.

“I still play it back in my mind: it was like the seas parted,” he said. “I shot up the middle in the last 150 metres and got ahead of him by a nose.”

From a cynic’s vantage point, it seems like a memory he’ll never be able to duplicate. Kennington says it has only left him wanting more.

“At the end of the day, when you sit down and you think about it, obviously you would think you’ve done it all,” he said. “But now I want to go (back to Daytona) and do better. I want to win more NASCAR championsh­ips here in Canada.”

Kennington plans to drive in three more top American races this fall at Talladega, Martinsvil­le, Va., and Phoenix. And if he can lock down sponsorshi­p for next February, he’d love to take another shot at Daytona, NASCAR’s answer to the Super Bowl.

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D.J. Kennington

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