2001 Daytona 500
Race details[1][2] | |||
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Race 1 of 36 in the 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season | |||
The layout of Daytona International Speedway, where the race was held. | |||
Date | February 18, 2001 | ||
Official name | Daytona 500 by Dodge | ||
Location |
Daytona International Speedway Daytona Beach, Florida, US | ||
Course |
Permanent racing facility 2.5 mi (4.02336 km) | ||
Distance | 200 laps, 500 mi (804.672 km) | ||
Weather | Warm with temperatures reading up to 79 °F (26 °C); wind speeds up to 29.92 miles per hour (48.15 km/h) | ||
Average speed | 161.783 miles per hour (260.365 km/h) | ||
Pole position | |||
Driver | Evernham Motorsports | ||
Time | 49.029 | ||
Qualifying race winners | |||
Duel 1 Winner | Sterling Marlin | Chip Ganassi Racing | |
Duel 2 Winner | Mike Skinner | Richard Childress Racing | |
Most laps led | |||
Driver | Ward Burton | Bill Davis Racing | |
Laps | 53 | ||
Winner | |||
No. 15 | Michael Waltrip | Dale Earnhardt, Inc. | |
Television in the United States | |||
Network | Fox | ||
Announcers | Mike Joy, Darrell Waltrip, and Larry McReynolds | ||
Nielsen Ratings | 10.0 |
The 2001 Daytona 500, the 43rd running of the event, was the first race of the 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup Series schedule. It was held on February 18, 2001 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida, consisting of 200 laps and 500 miles on the 2.5-mile (4 km) asphalt tri-oval. The race was the first ever Winston Cup telecast shown by the Fox network, which had received broadcasting rights along with NBC at the end of the previous season, replacing the two former NASCAR broadcasting channels CBS and ESPN. Bill Elliott won the pole and Michael Waltrip, in his first race in the #15 car for Dale Earnhardt, Inc., won the race. This was the first Winston Cup victory of his career, coming in his 463rd start after 462 races without a win. His teammate Dale Earnhardt, Jr. finished second and Rusty Wallace finished third.
On the final lap, a major accident was triggered by 1998 Daytona 500 winner and seven-time series champion Dale Earnhardt losing control of his car and collecting Ken Schrader in a head-on collision with the outside retaining wall. Three cars were involved in the crash, which caused Earnhardt's death.[3] The race was also marred by an 18-car pileup on lap 173 that began when Ward Burton made contact with Robby Gordon, sending Tony Stewart flipping twice down the backstretch. After Earnhardt's death (as well as other notable deaths of other drivers in other NASCAR national touring series in the previous season), NASCAR implemented rigorous safety improvements in later seasons.
Race summary
Polesitter Bill Elliott led the field to the green flag, but he only led one lap before Sterling Marlin (the winner of the first 125-mile qualifying race three days earlier) passed him for the lead. On lap 29, Rusty Wallace drove into his pit after one of his tires had suddenly gone flat. NASCAR determined that he had exceeded the pit road speed limit on his way in and he was consequently issued with a 15-second penalty. As a result, he went a lap down and attempt making up for it just skipping the first scheduled pit stop. The first caution came out on lap 49 when Jeff Purvis bounced off the wall between turns 3 & 4. The race restarted and stayed under a long green-flag run that lasted 105 laps, in which Ward Burton led the most. On lap 87, Dale Earnhardt and rookie Kurt Busch made door-to-door contact coming out of turn 4 while battling for fifth place. Earnhardt promptly flipped Busch the bird at 185 mph or, as described by lap-by-lap commentator Mike Joy, he simply was saying "Kurt, you're number 1".[4]
The second caution came out on lap 157 when Busch, trying to pass Joe Nemechek, hit the turn 3 wall and slid across the track right through the infield and onto pit road. On lap 167, Steve Park took the lead, only to be passed by his teammate Michael Waltrip on the next lap.
On lap 173, a huge crash eliminated 18 cars in a spectacular fashion. This began when Robby Gordon, coming onto the backstraightaway, turned W. Burton in the outside lane. Ward Burton then hit Tony Stewart, who turned back across the middle of the racetrack, collecting most of the field behind him. Stewart took the worst ride of every driver in that crash, as his car turned against the wall after being hit by W. Burton, caught a pocket of air, got pushed airborne over Robby Gordon and then rolled off of his, flipped over twice, and then landed on top of Jason Leffler before coasting to a stop in the infield. Bobby Labonte's hood broke off and got attached to Stewart's car, causing his engine to catch fire. Stewart's vehicle was instantly described as something similar to Richard Petty's rollover crash in the 1988 race. Mark Martin collided first with the outside wall and then got hit by at least two other cars, destroying the rear end of his. Martin managed to limp his car back to pit road and abandon it. Also involved in this crash were Jeff Gordon, Terry Labonte, Andy Houston, Buckshot Jones, Dale Jarrett (the defending Daytona 500 winner), Jeff Burton, Elliott Sadler, Kenny Wallace, John Andretti, and Jerry Nadeau. Only a few drivers, including Earnhardt; Elliott; Ron Hornaday Jr.; and Ken Schrader, were able to avoid the crash with intact cars. The race was red-flagged for extensive cleanup. When the red flag was over, the race restarted on lap 180, with Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the lead. Marlin led the next three laps before Waltrip took over again.
With less than two laps remaining, Darrell Waltrip in the Fox Sports booth commented that "Sterling [Marlin] ha[d] beat the front end off of that...that ole Dodge just trying to get around Dale [Earnhardt]." As the white flag waved for the final lap, both Earnhardt and his son Dale Earnhardt, Jr. were right behind Waltrip. Earnhardt Jr. was in second-place in front of his father. Heading into turn 3, Earnhardt, holding third-place, ran in the middle lane of the pack. Marlin, who was behind him on his left, ran in the inside one. R. Wallace drove his navy blue #2 Penske Racing Ford directly behind Earnhardt, and Schrader ran in the outside lane driving his yellow #36 Pontiac. But then there came trouble: just as the field headed into turn 4, Marlin came into contact with the left rear on Earnhardt's car, causing the black #3 to slide off the track's steep banking onto the flat apron. Trying to correct at speed, Earnhardt sharply turned it up the track toward the outside retaining wall. Although it briefly looked as if he was going to avoid hitting the retaining wall, Earnhardt went right into Schrader's path and Schrader rammed into him behind the passenger door causing Earnhardt's car to snap, rapidly changing its angle toward the wall. As Schrader came into contact, Earnhardt crashed into the wall nose-first at an estimated speed of 155-160 mph. Both cars slid down the steep banking off the track and into the infield grass.
Seconds later, Waltrip (after 462 races without a win) raced to the checkered flag to claim his first Winston Cup victory, with his teammate Earnhardt, Jr. finishing second. R. Wallace finished third, Ricky Rudd finished fourth, Elliott (the polesitter) finished fifth, R. Wallace's brother Mike finished sixth, Marlin (who got loose after making contact with Earnhardt) finished seventh, Bobby Hamilton finished eighth, Jeremy Mayfield finished ninth, and outside polesitter Stacy Compton came across the line tenth. Nemechek finished 11th on the lead lap. Earnhardt and Schrader were credited finishing 12th and 13th despite not finishing the race. Just after Waltrip won, the caution came out; this shielded them in their finishing spots.[5] After crossing the finish line behind his teammate, Earnhardt, Jr. got out of his car and rushed over to his father's situation. Earnhardt was extricated from his car and was transported by ambulance to the nearby Halifax Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead at 5:16pm EST, reportedly surrounded by his wife Teresa, his team owner and closest friend Richard Childress, and his son Earnhardt, Jr. The official announcement of Earnhardt's death was made at about 7:00pm EST by NASCAR president Mike Helton. The death of the seven-time Winston Cup Champion largely overshadowed Waltrip's first Winston Cup victory as well as the 18-car crash on lap 173.
Results
Notes
- For the remainder of the season, the first two points races of the following season, and the 2011 Daytona 500, racing fans, television, and radio broadcasters would fall silent during lap 3 of every Winston Cup race in Earnhardt's honor. The 2002 Daytona 500, however, had its lap 3's silence broken when Tony Stewart's engine failed.
References
- ↑ "Sprint Cup Series Schedule". ESPN. Retrieved May 10, 2012.
- ↑ "Weather Information for the 2001 Daytona 500". The Old Farmer's Almanac. Archived from the original on 2013-06-22. Retrieved June 20, 2013.
- ↑ CNNSI.com: Earnhardt autopsy report answers, leaves questions
- ↑ Lap114
- ↑ Official results of 2001 Daytona 500 on Racing-Reference.info
- ↑ "2001 Daytona 500 - Racing-Reference.info". Archived from the original on 2001-02-18. Retrieved 2013-06-10.
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