- Associated Press - Wednesday, February 16, 2011

DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. (AP) - Dale Earnhardt Jr. wrecked his pole-winning car in practice Wednesday and will have to start at the back of the pack for the Daytona 500.

Earnhardt was pushing Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson in practice when Johnson had to slow down for slower-moving traffic in front of him. Earnhardt plowed into Johnson’s back bumper and turned him sideways.

A second pack of cars led by Martin Truex Jr. closed quickly on Earnhardt’s bumper, causing the No. 88 Chevrolet to spin across the track and into the inside wall.

Johnson said he had to slow down suddenly when a pack of three cars ahead of them on the track _ driven by Robby Gordon, Michael Waltrip and David Gilliland _ drifted high from the bottom of the track toward the top.

“I was running out of space, and I thought that hole was going to close, and I lifted, and I got turned sideways from behind,” Johnson said.

The accident was a function of the two-car drafting that has become the fastest way around Daytona International Speedway this year. Working together, two cars are so much faster than a single car or a larger pack that Earnhardt says other drivers have to watch the closing speed of the cars coming up behind them.

“You’ve got to pay attention out there, man,” Earnhardt said. “You want to come out here and race, you’ve got to pay attention.”

Hendrick Motorsports immediately pulled out a backup car for Earnhardt. He will have to forfeit the top starting spot in his qualifying race Thursday and Sunday’s season opener.

It is the third car Earnhardt has used during Daytona Speedweeks. He also wrecked one in last weekend’s exhibition Budweiser Shootout.

The team will repair the Shootout car, and it will become his backup car for Sunday.

“We’ve got plenty of race cars,” Earnhardt said. “I ain’t worried about how fast we’ll be or whether we’ll be as good. We’ll be fine. But it never feels good tearing them up. I’m just disappointed in myself. I didn’t feel good about getting out there practicing, and didn’t think I needed to be out there practicing. I just had a bad feeling about it. We come running up on some guys that didn’t have their heads on straight and got into an accident.”

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.