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Rain Floods Daytona Speedway

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CONCORD, N.C. - No, there's no racing at Florida's Daytona International Speedway this weekend, but that hasn't stopped the rain from putting the home of the Daytona 500 in the spotlight.

As of Friday morning, the National Weather Service monitoring station at the Daytona International Airport (which sits just outside the 2.5-mile track's backstretch) had recorded some 18.54 inches of rain in the month, with over 17 inches of that coming in the last few days.

The substantial precipitation has created some amazing sights at the track as the infield lake has flooded onto the backstretch and the infield access tunnels have been nearly filled to their brim.

Jeff Gordon on Right Track, For Now

It's quite easy to think that after the season's first two races, Jeff Gordon's 2009 appears headed in one direction.

A direction, that is, that will lead to his four Sprint Cup championship trophies earning a fifth partner on Gordon's mantle.

But lest we get caught up in the hype -- or is it desire? -- of seeing one of the sport's icons rise back to the top before realizing that the No. 24's disappointing 2008 started out in much the same fashion.

Sunday Notes and Quotes: Daytona

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Here's a few rumblings and bumblings from a soggy evening at Daytona:

Are television viewers more important than full races? I think its a very valid question to wonder why NASCAR is so willing to push the snooze button later and later on Sunday afternoons with the start times of its Sprint Cup Series races.

It was just eight years ago that the Daytona 500 started at 12:30pm local time, while Sunday, it started after 3:40pm local time. The reason? Television ratings and commercial advertising rates go up the later in the day thanks to West Coast viewers and the "prime time" effect kicking in on the East Coast.

Tempers Boil After Junior's Daytona Dare

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Dale Earnhardt Jr. was the talk of the Daytona 500 once again.

Only this time it was all about a punt, not a pass.

Contact between his Chevy and Brian Vickers' Toyota on Lap 125 took out eight other cars -- including the race leader -- and left some of his competitors questioning the fairness of how NASCAR doles out penalties.


More Coverage: Daytona 500 Results | Kenseth Wins | Junior Triggers Crash

After Rain, It's Matt Kenseth in Daytona


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- It wasn't a full race, but for the driver from Cambridge, Wisc., it's still the Daytona 500.

Matt Kenseth, driver of the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford, won the rain-shortened 51st running of the Daytona 500 Sunday night after NASCAR stopped the event 48 laps from the scheduled distance.

Live Updates From the Daytona 500


The cars are in motion, and Geoffrey Miller is in Daytona, following all of the action of the Daytona 500.

You might not be getting the full live experience, the roar of the engines, the drama in the air, but you can follow Geoffrey's updates live from the race with FanHouse's Twitter (after the jump) and be closer to the track than anywhere else on the Internet. Lead changes, wrecks, weird sights in the stands -- none of it is off-limits for Geoffrey.

FanHouse Warmup: Daytona 500

The Essentials

Race: 51st Daytona 500
Where: Daytona Int'l Speedway
Time: 3:00 PM/EDT (Green: 3:40pm)
TV/Radio: FOX Sports, MRN Radio
Forecast: Rain, Clouds, High of 68
Distance: 200 laps (500 miles)
Pole Sitter: Martin Truex Jr.
'08 Winner: Ryan Newman



The Storylines


Starting the season with the Super Bowl looks like an incredibly smart idea at the moment. Thanks to an economy that has forced the NASCAR world to talk about the economy, NASCAR racing needed to come back strong from an offseason mired with questions.

Notes and Quotes From Daytona: Saturday

DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. -- After the dust settled in Daytona from Tony Stewart's verbal lashing of Goodyear and later his win in the Nationwide Series race, there were a few other things that are worth noting from the garage area:

Bowyer, Edwards get in some good-natured ribbing

Towards the end of the post-race press conference for second-place and Missouri-native Carl Edwards and third-place Clint Bowyer after Saturday's Nationwide Series race, the two drivers got on the topic of Daytona's plan to resurface the 2.5-mile superspeedway.

"I like the fact that his track gets rougher and slicker and there's different grip levels all over it. I was kind of sad to hear they were going to repave it," said Edwards. "I wish they'd just kind of patch it up or do whatever they do."

After Crash, Tony Stewart Roars Back at Daytona for Nationwide Series Win

DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. -- Off the track Saturday morning at Daytona International Speedway, Tony Stewart was livid.

But following his first victory of 2009 during the Camping World 300 Nationwide Series race at the Florida track, Stewart's spirits seem to have changed.

"I was so frustrated this morning that I couldn't even see straight," said Stewart after the race, talking about how a blown tire on his teammate Ryan Newman's car caught both of his Stewart-Haas Chevrolets in a crash during final practice for tomorrow.

Notes and Quotes From Daytona: Friday

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Here are a few rumblings from Friday, the calm before the storm at Daytona.

DIS: Tournament Fishing Venue
- Friday morning, the Darrell Gwynn Foundation and the Spediatrics unit at Daytona Beach's Halifax Hospital got a nice boost thanks to a nice use of Lake Lloyd -- the six-acre infield lake dug out to produce DIS's high-banked corners.

Featuring drivers like Tony Stewart, Martin Truex Jr., Carl Edwards, Ryan Newman and others, the Hot Rods & Reels NASCAR Drivers Charity Fishing Tournament -- sponsored by Miccosukee Resort & Gaming -- saw NASCAR's wheelmen take to the water in an armada of bass fishing boats.

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