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"To find the right drafting partners out there, make different things happen, you're learning every lap," said Busch, who worked with Regan Smith through most of his qualifying win.
"It's amazing what partnerships can do out on the racetrack, and when two guys can think the same way without saying a word, things are going to happen for those two guys."
But others are still trying to figure it out.
"Guys, it don't compare to anything," said two-time Daytona 500 winner Bill Elliott, who raced his way into the field in the first qualifying race. "I've never experienced anything like what you have to do to make it work. It's the craziest thing I've ever seen. It's like a bunch of kids playing leapfrog, but they were doing it in pairs."
Elliott was one of seven drivers to earn a spot in the field during Thursday's races. He was joined by two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip, who is racing in a paint scheme that commemorates the car he drove to victory in the 2001 race -- when Dale Earnhardt was killed in a last-lap accident. Friday marks the 10-year anniversary.
"I wanted to celebrate Dale's life," Waltrip said, relieved at making the race.
Also earning spots in the field were J.J. Yeley, Travis Kvapil, Dave Blaney, Joe Nemechek and Brian Keselowski, who used help from his little brother, Brad, to earn his first career Sprint Cup start.
The Keselowski hookup was the feel-good story of the day, as the 29-year-old journeyman raced his way into the field driving a 5-year-old car that he prepared with his father. He recruited his uncle to Daytona to help this week, then needed a huge push from Brad, a star for deep-pocketed Penske Racing, to get into NASCAR's biggest race.
"It still goes to show you that you've got a chance no matter what," Brian Keselowski said. "You find a guy to push you -- thank God it was my brother, I don't know if anybody else would have stuck with me that long. It gives everybody a shot at it and says that the independent guy that can go out and find a racecar, put it together, get a good push, everybody's got a chance."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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