USA TODAY International Edition

Daytona ‘ W’ comes late for McDowell

- Michelle R. Martinelli

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Veteran NASCAR driver Michael McDowell was 0- for- 357 races across his 13 Cup Series seasons. No wins and just three top- 5 finishes in more than a decade at the sport’s top level.

But in Sunday’s Daytona 500, the No. 34 Front Row Motorsport­s Ford driver opened his 14th year by pulling off an incredible upset, taking his first career checkered flag in the series’ season opener at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway. He did it despite leading the biggest race of the year for only part of the final lap, which included a fiery, eight- car wreck.

And he said he didn’t know for the whole cool- down lap that he actually won it.

“When I came across the line, I just thought, ‘ Oh my gosh, is this possible?’ ” McDowell said. “I mean, ‘ It’s possible that we just won the race. I don’t know if it is.’ And then immediatel­y, it sunk in that if we didn’t, I’m going to be so upset.”

Luckily for the 36- year- old driver, it didn’t come to that. But the brief mystery over who won the race was the result of a caution flag coming out on that final lap.

With less than a lap to go, McDowell was running third behind leader Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski. But when Keselowski went to make a move on the backstretc­h, he and Logano violently wrecked going into Turn 3, allowing McDowell to capitalize and pull ahead.

Because McDowell was the leader when NASCAR threw the caution flag out for the multiple- car crash, he was declared the winner, edging out reigning Cup Series champion Chase Elliott and 2018 Daytona 500 winner Austin Dillon.

“It was a long ( cool- down) lap,” said McDowell, who is in his fourth season with Front Row Motorsport­s. “And it really became a blur when they said that we won and to go to the start- finish line. It really was. It’s just overwhelmi­ng.”

Understand­ably, McDowell was in disbelief, at first.

But his crew chief, Drew Blickensde­rfer, credits McDowell for knowing how to position himself in superspeed­way races – which can be chaotic with multiple- car wrecks – to at least contend for a strong finish.

Although this was McDowell’s first win, he’s had some success before at Daytona with teams that don’t typically contend for checkered flags. He had six top- 10 finishes and two top- 5s, most recently finishing fifth in the 2019 Daytona 500 behind Denny Hamlin.

“Michael has done a really good job his entire career at ( superspeed­way) racing of wedging himself in with probably a subpar car and making sure he was there at the end,” said Blickensde­rfer, who also won the 2009 Daytona 500 with driver Matt Kenseth. “And that never wins races, but he’s always come out on the better part of that.”

Well, never until just after midnight, following a nearly six- hour rain delay after only the first 15 laps Sunday afternoon.

McDowell said his disbelief shifted to a more humble train of thought about 90 minutes after the race, after he finally had time to consider how he etched his place in NASCAR history after so many years of pushing through grueling, ninemonth seasons with a zero in the win column.

“When you show up to the racetrack,” McDowell explained, “and you know that you’re – I don’t even know how to say it – you’re just in the way, taking up space, it’s hard to do that year after year and week after week. So you’ve got to have a bigger purpose than that. For me, it was knowing that I would get an opportunit­y eventually.”

With the checkered flag, McDowell and the No. 34 Ford team are automatica­lly qualified for the 16- driver, 10- race playoffs in the fall.

Some of his competitor­s acknowledg­ed he earned the win. Of course, winning any NASCAR race – and especially one as prestigiou­s and challengin­g as the Daytona 500 – takes a little bit of luck, like McDowell had in avoiding the massive, 16- car wreck on Lap 14.

But as Hamlin – who dominated with a race- high 98 laps led before finishing fifth – noted, McDowell’s win “was no fluke,” considerin­g some of his success on superspeed­ways, particular­ly Daytona’s 2.5- mile oval. Logano congratula­ted him too.

Disappoint­ment from finishing second aside, Elliott also credited McDowell for grinding forward, especially when he’s behind the wheel of a car that can seldom compete with the powerhouse teams.

“He certainly has stuck around over the years and battled hard through the course of his career,” Elliott said. “You can’t help but respect the fact that he’s still pushing and trying to have success here at this level. Yeah, I respect it.

“I’m happy for him, and I hope he enjoys it.”

 ?? MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Before his Daytona 500 win, Michael McDowell was 0- for- 357 in Cup races.
MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS Before his Daytona 500 win, Michael McDowell was 0- for- 357 in Cup races.

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