2000 Daytona 250

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2000 Daytona 250
Race details
Race 1 of 24 in the 2000 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season
Track map of Daytona International Speedway showing mainly the speedway.
Track map of Daytona International Speedway showing mainly the speedway.
Date February 18, 2000 (2000-February-18)
Official name Daytona 250
Location Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida
Course Permanent racing facility
2.5 mi (4.02336 km)
Distance 100 laps, 250 mi (402.336 km)
Weather Temperatures reaching up to 79 °F (26 °C); wind speeds approaching 20 miles per hour (32 km/h)[1]
Average speed 130.152 miles per hour (209.459 km/h)
Pole position
Driver Bobby Hamilton Racing
Most laps led
Driver Mike Wallace Ultra Motorsports
Laps 59
Winner
No. 2 Mike Wallace Ultra Motorsports
Television in the United States
Network ESPN
ESPN2
Announcers Marty Reid
Benny Parsons
Ray Evernham

The 2000 Daytona 250 was a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race held at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida on February 18, 2000. The inaugural running of the event, Joe Ruttman won the pole, while Mike Wallace won the race, the third win of his Truck Series career.

A quarter of this race was held under the caution flag. The average green flag was nearly 11 laps.[2]

Background

Daytona International Speedway is one of two superspeedways to hold Camping World Truck Series races; the other one is Talladega Superspeedway.[3] Its standard track is a four-turn, 2.5-mile (4.0 km) superspeedway.[4] Daytona's turns are banked at 31 degrees, and the front stretch (the location of the finish line) is banked at 18 degrees.[4]

Race summary

Start

Joe Ruttman, driving the #18 for Bobby Hamilton Racing, was on the pole. He would lead the field to the green flag and led the first lap before Lyndon Amick briefly took the lead for two laps. The lead would then switch between Andy Houston, Mike Wallace, and Bobby Hamilton before the first caution came out for a crash in Turn 2, which began when Geoff Bodine spun after making contact by Amick. Defending Truck champion Jack Sprague, Steve Grissom, Rick Crawford, and Bryan Reffner were also involved. The race restarted, and the lead was taken by a couple more drivers before the second caution came out when Mike Cope cut a tire and spun in turn 4. At the restart, Terry Cook was the leader but Houston, Wallace, and Hamilton again swapped the lead. Wallace had a tire go flat and had to make a pit stop. That same lap, Kurt Busch made contact with Hamilton and spun him out in the tri-oval, collecting Ruttman, Randy Renfrow, Randy Tolsma, and Houston. Renfrow almost flipped over. Wallace managed to stay on the lead lap. The race restarted on Lap 43, and went green until lap 50 when Jimmy Kitchens spun on the backstretch. Most of the leaders made pit stops except for Rob Morgan, who stayed out.

Geoff Bodine crash

On the restart, Rob Morgan led but was quickly overtaken by Mike Wallace, and Morgan began slipping back. On lap 56, rookie Kurt Busch, in his Truck series dubut, was racing three-wide with Geoff Bodine. As he dove underneath Bodine on lap 56, Busch turned Morgan, causing him to spin down to the flat apron and then veer back up the banking. His right-front tire contacted Bodine's left-front tire, catapulting Bodine into the catch-fence at a speed of nearly 190 miles per hour (310 km/h).[5] Upon impact, Bodine's fuel tank exploded and the truck flipped over nine times[6] extremely hard across the track before coming to rest on its roof in turn 1. The truck, now little more than a crushed, mangled roll cage, was struck on the driver's side by Ryan McGlynn, whose truck was damaged from the contact and retired later in the race. Instantly in the annnouncer's reactions, the crash was described as similar to Richard Petty's rollover crash in the 1988 Daytona 500 at the same portion of the track. The red flag was waved as the track was blocked with debris and rescue workers rushed to Bodine's aid. The crash was so violent that the impact ripped the engine out of the truck, found in turn 2 355 feet (0.108 km) from where Bodine's truck came to rest on its lid. The crash collected 12 more trucks, making it the "Big One".

Upon seeing the crash, the fans went silent and called for paramedics to the grandstands. Just 16 minutes later, they and the announcers hardly spoke because they were afraid that Bodine was fatally injured. However, the fans applauded when they heard the announcers say that Bodine was seen talking to medical crews and that he was moving around while he was being taken to the ambulance. Bodine had suffered a broken jaw, wrist, shoulder, and a concussion. After several nights of medical treatment at the nearby Halifax Medical Center, Bodine was in stable condition and eventually returned to race a month later. Fellow driver Jimmy Kitchens was also hospitalized, but he did not suffer any major injuries.[5]

After 55 minutes under the red flag (including slow caution periods before and after it waved), the race restarted. TV coverage moved to ESPN2 due to the length of the red flag period.

Finish

On the final lap, Andy Houston jumped to the lead on a last-lap restart but got loose in turn 3 and Mike Wallace slipped by to take the first truck victory at Daytona as Busch, after barely avoiding Bodine's truck in the lap 56 crash, finished second as a personal best. In victory lane ceremonies Truck Series driver Todd Bodine announced that his brother Geoff had survived the crash and the announcers confirmed that the debris and flames from the collision had injured five fans, who also survived. The most serious injuries were to three fans burned by the fire that engulfed Bodine's truck when it hit the catchfence. The other two were hit by debris.

Race results

File:Mike Wallace Road America 2013.jpg
Mike Wallace (shown in 2013), the winner of the race
  1. 2Mike Wallace, Led 59 of 100 Laps
  2. 99Kurt Busch*
  3. 60Andy Houston, Led 9 Laps
  4. 88Terry Cook, Led 7 Laps
  5. 98Kenny Martin*
  6. 72Randy MacDonald
  7. 66Rick Carelli
  8. 1Dennis Setzer, 1 Lap down
  9. 84–Donnie Neuenberger, 1 Lap down
  10. 43Steve Grissom, 5 Laps Down; Led 5 Laps
  11. 50Greg Biffle, 92 Laps (Accident); Led 1 Lap
  12. 86Mike Cope*, 10 Laps Down
  13. 12Carlos Contreras*, 16 Laps Down
  14. 6Rich Woodland, Jr., 82 Laps (Transmission)
  15. 25Randy Tolsma, 21 Laps Down
  16. 00Ryan McGlynn, 76 Laps (Engine Failure)
  17. 97Ron Barfield, Jr., 66 Laps (Engine Failure)
  18. 75Marty Houston, 65 Laps (Accident); Led 2 Laps
  19. 18Joe Ruttman, 64 Laps (Engine Failure); Led 1 Lap
  20. 26Jamie McMurray*, 60 Laps (Accident)
  21. 31John Young*, 57 Laps (Accident)
  22. 52Lyndon Amick, 56 Laps (Accident); Led 2 Laps
  23. 46Rob Morgan, 56 Laps (Accident); Led 4 Laps
  24. 15Geoff Bodine, 56 Laps (Accident)
  25. 27Lonnie Rush, Jr., 56 Laps (Accident)
  26. 90Lance Norick, 56 Laps (Accident)
  27. 73B. A. Wilson, 56 Laps (Accident)
  28. 42Jimmy Kitchens, 56 Laps (Accident); Led 3 Laps
  29. 16Jimmy Hensley, 55 Laps (Accident)
  30. 4Bobby Hamilton, 36 Laps (Accident); Led 6 Laps
  31. 41Randy Renfrow, 36 Laps (Accident)
  32. 7Morgan Shepherd, 17 Laps (Rocker arm); Led 1 Lap
  33. 24Jack Sprague, 14 Laps (Accident)
  34. 14Rick Crawford, 13 Laps (Accident)
  35. 3Bryan Reffner, 13 Laps (Accident)
  36. 35–David Starr, 10 Laps (Engine Failure)

Failed to qualify

References

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Preceded by NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
2000
Succeeded by
2000 Florida Dodge Dealers 400K