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"I go back to the 1960s, back then when you had guys like Bobby Allison driving, they were driving stock cars," Romney said. "Maybe they'd taken out the passenger seat and the back seat so they can put in a restraint system and a fire extinguisher. But now these cars really are built from the ground up entirely by the teams themselves." Romney spent time talking to team co-owners Chip Ganassi and Felix Sabates, who took Romney over to meet driver Jamie McMurray on pit lane. Driver Brian Vickers walked along with Romney's entourage for most of the morning and spent time talking to Romney. "I'm a supporter of his, and I like his policies," said Vickers, who is not in the Daytona 500 field. With a campaign event scheduled in Michigan later Sunday, Romney wasn't scheduled to stay for the race
-- just as well, because it was postponed until Monday by rain. Earlier Sunday, Santorum discussed his campaign's sponsorship of the No. 26 team and driver Tony Raines on ABC's "This Week." "I talked to (Raines) about a strategy," Santorum said on the show. "I recommended he stay back in the pack, you know, hang back there until the right time, and then bolt to the front when it really counts. So let's watch. I'm hoping that for the first, you know, maybe 300, 400 miles, he's sitting way, way back, letting all the other folks crash and burn, and then sneak up at the end and win this thing."
[Associated
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