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Newman tries to move on from 2020 wreck

- By John Cherwa

Imagine if the one thing everyone remembers about you is the one thing you can’t remember. It’s the world in which NASCAR driver Ryan Newman lives.

Memories of last year’s Daytona 500 do not swirl around Denny Hamlin winning his second consecutiv­e 500 but the last-lap crash in which Newman’s car went airborne and landed on the roof amid a sea of sparks and fire. Track personnel brought out a screen to keep the public from seeing as Newman was cut from his car, a process that took more than 15 minutes from when the car came to a halt.

Celebratio­ns were muted, fans at the track grew quiet as Newman was rushed to a nearby hospital while everyone waited to find out if the then 42-year-old driver not only would recover but survive. Two days later Newman walked out of the hospital holding the hands of his two young children.

“I’ve watched every angle I could possibly watch,” Newman said of the crash. “The biggest problem is I don’t have any memory of my own angle, which is the ultimate angle.

That’s gone and will always be gone no matter how many times I watch a replay or different variation of that replay. It doesn’t change my personal memory because it just doesn’t exist.”

Newman is able to talk about what he can’t remember thanks to a combinatio­n of luck and cars built to withstand the most devastatin­g crashes. Newman described it as “big miracles and little miracles.” The final diagnosis, put in the simplest way, was a brain bruise. Amazingly, there were no broken bones.

Newman is back at Daytona Beach this week to run Sunday in the Daytona 500, a race he won in 2008. In fact, Newman has 18 wins on NASCAR’S major circuit but those take a backseat to last year’s crash. Newman was credited with ninth place as his car crossed the finish line on its roof. Still, the veteran driver brings no trepidatio­n about

this year’s race.

“If you’ve ever been in a car accident or you know somebody that has been in a car accident and they were conscious the whole time, they will always carry that fear with them,” Newman said. “I have no memory, therefore I have no fear.”

According to Google, Newman was the most searched athlete in 2020, with most of that traffic coming in the hours and days after that accident. The video of the crash gets played over and over. But there is one person who doesn’t want to watch it again, Ryan Blaney, whose bump precipitat­ed Newman’s car going airborne.

“It took me a little bit to get over,” Blaney said. “I don’t watch that anymore. I watch the 500, but I stop watching right off Turn 4. I just don’t want to see it.”

Blaney acknowledg­ed that the time after the accident was the most difficult for him.

“Even though it was not intentiona­l, you’re still a part of the wreck, so that was definitely tough,” Blaney said. “The time I

felt relief was when Amy Earnhardt texted me the next morning and said she was talking to their family and gave me some updates. I was able to talk to Ryan a couple of days after that.”

The memory of that phone call for Newman is fuzzy.

“I’ll be honest, I think I had a personal conversati­on with him on the phone, I don’t remember it,” Newman said. “But I do remember putting my arm around him and talking to him in Phoenix after I got a chance to see him face to face. I could see his character and what he was feeling internally because of what happened after him seeing me.

“I can only imagine what it was like not knowing that night or in the days after. One of the toughest things we do as drivers is to check our feelings because of what we do and the things that are required of us to be competitiv­e and to push everybody’s envelope. It’s just the way it is.”

This year marks the 20th anniversar­y of Dale Earnhardt’s death in the Daytona 500, the last fatality in a NASCAR race.

Earnhardt’s death sparked a movement in racing to make the sport safer through a series of reforms, including head-andneck restraints on drivers to car constructi­on that allows drivers to survive even the most violent of crashes.

“The reality is that the start of my crash was really no different than the start of (Earnhardt’s) crash,” Newman said. “I can see the progressio­n that we’ve had from a safety standpoint and that’s … hopefully not the end topic when the checkered flag falls (Sunday). The real story will be the racing and not the last big crashes that we’ve had.”

Newman is hoping this can be the start of getting the discussion of his career back to racing.

“It would be even more special to come back a year later (and) have an opportunit­y to come as close as we came last year would be amazing,” Newman said. “I’ve been around long enough to know there are drivers who have never gotten a top 10, let alone a top five. Or in my case, a top 10, on the roof.”

 ?? Getty Images North America/tns - Mike Ehrmann ?? Track workers attend to Ryan Newman after his wreck on the final lap of last year’s Daytona 500.
Getty Images North America/tns - Mike Ehrmann Track workers attend to Ryan Newman after his wreck on the final lap of last year’s Daytona 500.

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