Patrick at peace after final NASCAR race
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[February 19, 2018]
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- There was
no mistaking the love.
Danica Patrick got one of the largest applauses when introduced for
Sunday's Daytona 500 -- her last NASCAR race. She then made her
ceremonial lap around the famous Daytona International Speedway
soaking in the cheers and good wishes and genuinely moved by the
standing ovation she received from the sold-out crowd.
Unfortunately for Patrick, her time in the race car ended a lap past
the halfway mark of NASCAR's greatest race as she was collected in a
multicar crash that also ended the day for race favorites Chase
Elliott, Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick, among others.
Patrick was uncharacteristically emotional, wiping away tears, when
she announced last November that she would run this final Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup race. But ever the focused competitor, she managed
a smile and logical dissection of her day when speaking to the media
after her crash.
She seemed at peace.
"It just wasn't meant to be today," Patrick said after getting the
"all-clear" from Daytona's infield care center. "I am proud. We
raced the whole race other than a little bit at the end of that
first stage when it looked silly with all the cars with tires and no
tires.
"Other than that, we raced it and the car was competitive. That is
all you can do. That is the gamble at Daytona. It can go so well,
and it can go so awful.
"I'm grateful for everything. Thank you to all the fans. Still have
one more. It is not a stock car, but still have one more."
Her crew chief Tony Eury Jr. came out off the sideline specifically
to work with Patrick again as she closed out her NASCAR career -- a
proper bookend to the pairing. The two had been together when
Patrick first started racing stock cars, even as she was completing
her IndyCar career.
"We didn't want things to end like that," Eury said, standing in the
garage with the Premium Motorsports crew next to Patrick's damaged
car. "Definitely one of our biggest goals was just to come in here
and finish the race and if we could get a solid top-10 that was
great, a win -- that's a story.
"The first wreck they had, she was running in the back of the field
and I saw them dicing and I told her, 'Get away from them, they're
getting ready to do something,' and they did."
Eury said he was touched that Patrick asked him to lead her final
NASCAR effort -- officially a 35th-place finish, for the record.
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NASCAR driver DanicaPatrick greets
fans during driver introductions prior to the Daytona 500 at Daytona
International Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY
Sports
"It just shows me I made an impact on her driving career in NASCAR
and it makes me feel really good," Eury said. "I told her I was
really honored that she asked me to come to do this deal.
"The whole deal coming down here was we're going to have fun and try
to run the best we can and she had a lot of confidence I would bring
her a good Daytona 500 car and everybody here at Premium is really
good as far as making this happen really quick.
"We were right where we needed to be but had to finish to pull it
off."
As pre-race festivities winded down earlier in the day before
Patrick's final NASCAR green flag, Patrick stood alongside her
bright green No. 7 GoDaddy Chevrolet on the starting grid,
surrounded by family and close friends. Her parents Bev and TJ were
there, as was her new boyfriend, Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron
Rogers, her sister Brooke and Brooke's two young daughters.
Patrick enthusiastically posed for photographs with her loved ones
in front of her car and seemed truly at ease with the big day.
Rogers gave her a kiss just before she slid her long hair into a
ponytail and climbed into the car.
"Funny story is when she first started at 10, I told my wife, ‘She's
going to change racing,'" her proud father said while standing
beside her car on the starting grid. "I've been in racing my whole
life and I saw that she was different. She's done a lot. Would we
like to have better results? I think every driver would.
"Hopefully, this has opened the door for some little kids, but
mainly what I feel is, you don't have to be a girl, it could be the
boys, but [she's shown] you can do whatever you like if you really,
really, really try.''
--Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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