Los Angeles Times

Stewart wins in wild finish at Daytona

Stewart comes from back of the pack. Allmending­er is suspended before race for a failed drug test.

- Gdiaz@orlandosen­tinel.com

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Tony Stewart laughed facetiousl­y after his car got bumped back to the rear of the field following a failed inspection for Saturday’s restrictor-plate scrum at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

“So my reward is I get a Coke Zero for this?” Stewart joked Friday night.

The following evening, Stewart had the last laugh as he came from 42nd place to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Coke Zero 400.

Stewart ducked in front of the dominant Ford tagteam of Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle to emerge as the winner for the third time this season. Stewart now has 18 victories at Daytona, second only to the late Dale Earnhardt.

After a wreck with nine laps to go involving 14 cars, Stewart won a frantic twolap sprint, thanks to a push from Kasey Kahne with a lap to go. After Stewart slid by the Roush teammates, Biffle got collected in a huge wreck involving 15 cars. Stewart won as cars were flying all over the track.

“I don’t even remember that last lap,” Stewart said. “Just a weird day.”

Jeff Burton was second, followed by Kenseth.

“I just got turned down in front of the 29 [Kevin Harvick],” Biffle said. “That’s the way it goes.”

The first big wreck involved seven drivers, including Hendrick Motorsport­s teammates Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon, and finally shook things up in a race that had been more of a monotonous drone. Up until then, the return of big-pack restrictor-plate racing for the second time this season wasn’t exactly a tale of suspense. More like a long, boring novel.

The first caution didn’t come until after the race was more than half over, unusual for the usual scrum of bumper cars at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway. But the three big wrecks at the end changed those dynamics.

Up until then, all the early drama was pre-race.

A.J. Allmending­er, driving for Roger Penske, got busted by NASCAR after failing a routine drug test. Even though the test was last week, NASCAR officials announced a “temporary” suspension less than two hours before the race was set to start, sending the Penske gang scrambling to find a replacemen­t.

They flew in Penske Nationwide driver Sam Hornish from Charlotte, N.C., in a private plane. He landed at Daytona Beach Airport, next to the track, at 7:27 p.m., and managed to scramble into the seat 23 minutes later.

Kenny Wallace was prepared to jump into the seat had Hornish not arrived in time.

“Glad I was able to come down here for you guys,” Hornish said via radio a few laps into the race. “Little bit of a different day for me.”

Yes it was. The crew had to make major adjustment­s on the fly, particular­ly because Hornish is six inches taller than Allmending­er.

It became a longer night for Penske Racing when Hornish’s car lost control along the backstretc­h on Lap 85, bringing out the first caution of the night.

That led to the first “big one” of the night — a chain reaction involving Gordon, Ryan Newman, Kahne and Brad Keselowski’s cars along pit road.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States