| From 
			battlefield to race track, Day has seen it all 
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			 [August 25, 2016] 
			By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service 
 Distributed by The Sports Xchangeut
 
 Ask Alon Day if he was involved in 
			other sports besides racing as a child, and he'll give you a 
			one-word answer: "War."
 
 Day, 24, grew up in Israel, where war is an everyday reality.
 
 "You get used to it," Day told the NASCAR Wire Service. "As a 
			sportsman, I try not to involve political things and sports. I think 
			sports should be completely clear of political things.
 
 "But I grew up in that country, so I don't know anything else. For 
			me, that's normal. I'm here since 1991. The country exists since 
			1948. That's how I grew up. That's how my parents grew up. That's 
			how everyone in Israel grew up, in that kind of situation. That's 
			normal for us."
 
 Now Day is fighting a different sort of war, one without 
			life-and-death consequences. He hopes to find sufficient sponsorship 
			to compete in the NASCAR XFINITY Series full-time near year, after 
			running a handful of races in 2016.
 
 The first Israeli driver to compete in a NASCAR national series 
			race, Day distinguished himself in his XFINITY Series debut in rainy 
			conditions on Aug. 13 at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. From the 
			22nd starting spot, Day drove up to third before finishing 13th in a 
			Dodge fielded by Carl Long.
 
 Day gets another chance on Saturday at Road America in Elkhart Lake, 
			Wis. (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN), where he'll drive an XFINITY car on a 
			road course for the second time. His road-racing background should 
			stand him in good stead there.
 
			
			 But stock cars are relatively new to the Israeli driver, who was 
			weaned on go-karts and aspired to Formula One before the realities 
			of budgets and sponsorship sent him in a different direction. After 
			running Indy Lights in 2012, he drove a Mercedes in the FIA GT 
			Series before discovering the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series in 2015.
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			"After two years (in GT racing), I was at the lowest point of my 
			career," Day said. "I really felt like I was going to stop racing. 
			Then suddenly someone came and said, 'Hey, look at this Euro Series, 
			the NASCAR Euro Series.'
 "I went for a test, and it was fantastic. The car was perfect. Since 
			then, my whole world completely changed. For months, I didn't watch 
			Formula One. My goal was to be in Formula One -- now my goal is to 
			be in (Sprint) Cup."
 
			
			 
			A member of the NASCAR Next program, Day hopes to compete in his 
			first XFINITY Series oval race before the end of the season, and he 
			hopes his appearance at Road America this weekend will lead to 
			additional opportunities.
 Once again, he'll be driving Long's 2015 Dodge. And Day wouldn't 
			mind a little help from the heavens.
 
 "I hope it also rains at Road America," he said with a laugh.
 
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