Albany Times Union

Wrecking isn’t racing, leads to messy Daytona

Another fireball finish raises questions of the importance of opener

- By Jenna Fryer

Brad Keselowski stomped through the smoke-filled haze and eyed the destructio­n from another disastrous Daytona 500. His car had been sheared when it pinballed into the wall and then back into traffic after a go-for-broke run for the win that ended with Keselowski pacing in anger.

Keselowski took two steps and heaved his helmet at the carcass of his race car.

“My body is fine but my heart is broken,” Keselowski wrote on social media. He noted that “months of studying, months of tremendous car prep” and positionin­g himself to make a last-lap pass was still not enough to win his first Daytona 500.

This is NASCAR’S crown jewel event, the race that pays the most money and carries the most prestige. But after another fireball finish endangered drivers and ruined millions of dollars in race cars, it’s hard not to wonder if the carnage is worth all this effort.

It certainly was for journey

man Michael Mcdowell, a 100-1 underdog who slipped through the chaos for the first victory of his 13-year career. Mcdowell led for only a quarter of a lap at Daytona and snapped a 357-race losing streak.

For his team, tiny Front Row Motorsport­s, it was just the third victory in 17 seasons.

So yes, victory validated Mcdowell, a well-respected racer who always may wonder what his career might have been if he’d had a shot driving topnotch equipment. But it won’t change the race-to-race fortunes for Front Row, which plods along each season knowing it can’t routinely slug it out with NASCAR’S elite.

NASCAR drivers are taught to believe the Daytona 500 is the most important race in their world, but it’s hard to find a recent scenario in which “The Great American Race” was a make or break for anyone.

The 500, of course, matters to Denny Hamlin, who has won it three times but has never captured a Cup Series championsh­ip. But did the 500 do much for Trevor Bayne? He was the last driver to pull off an upset, back in 2011, and he ran just three full Cup seasons after the Daytona 500 win.

Bayne now owns and operates a pair of coffee shops in Tennessee; he ran eight Truck Series races last season.

Richard Childress Racing didn’t become an overnight powerhouse after Austin Dillon’s win in 2018, and Ward

Burton had just two more full seasons following his 2002 win.

So much time and energy dedicated to one single event — it is just one race out of 36 each year! The racing is completely different at almost every other track on the schedule! — and so little to show at the end.

NASCAR made it only 14 laps into the 63rd running of the race before early aggression wiped out 16 cars. The rain started minutes later and anyone who waited through a nearly six-hour delay was rewarded with mostly follow-the-leader racing until the early Monday finish.

Superspeed­way strategy is one of survival. The goal is simply to be running still on the final lap, when everyone shows their cards and makes a play for the win.

Keselowski leapfrogge­d from 14th place to second over the closing 25 laps, then readied himself for the winning move. He stalked teammate Joey Logano down the backstretc­h and with a huge push from Mcdowell — his peers agree that Mcdowell was the strongest pusher at Daytona — Keselowski ducked underneath Logano while pulling all of Mcdowell’s momentum with him.

Logano threw a block — some argue the defensive move was too late — and it wrecked both Team Penske cars. Mcdowell was able to charge through the crash scene, but eight other drivers could not.

The Daytona 500 then ended under caution because of a 10car pileup.

But that wasn’t good racing. It was instead a waste of time.

 ?? James Gilbert / Getty Images ?? Brad Keselowski, left, Bubba Wallace (23) and Kyle Busch (18) were part of the big crash on the final lap at the Daytona 500 on Sunday.
James Gilbert / Getty Images Brad Keselowski, left, Bubba Wallace (23) and Kyle Busch (18) were part of the big crash on the final lap at the Daytona 500 on Sunday.

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