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Jimmie Johnson has more at the finish, wins Daytona 500

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Patrick herself was subdued afterward, saying, “Today is a day I can look at and be happy for certain things and learn from others. Nothing super-duper eventful.”

She acknowledged being uncertain as to how to press for the win at the finish, “so I feel like maybe that’s just my inexperience. Maybe that’s me not thinking hard enough. I don’t know.

“It was a solid day, steady day,” she said. And Patrick downplayed her latest milestones as a female driver, saying “These are things that just happen along the way.”

Patrick, a former IndyCar driver who first gained fame by nearly winning the Indianapolis 500 in 2005, said, “The stat that I found more interesting is only 13 people, including me now, have led Indy and Daytona.”

Although this was Johnson’s second Daytona 500 win, it was the first in person for his longtime crew chief, Chad Knaus.

When Johnson won the race in 2006, Knaus was at home serving a suspension after inspectors found an illegal modification to Johnson’s car during qualifying.

“I eat, sleep and breathe 48,” Knaus said. “Any time that I’m taken away from that race car, I’m pretty sad. To finally be able to come down here and win and be a part of this is definitely a huge dream come true.”

Sunday’s race also was the first test of NASCAR’s new car, dubbed the Gen 6. It was unclear if the parade-style racing that abated only at the end resulted from the new car, or whether it reflected the quirkiness of Daytona, where NASCAR restricts speeds and the cars always travel in packs.

Either way, drivers were afraid to pass until the end, fearful that if they got out of line they’d lose too many positions.

“The car is doing everything we hoped it would do,” Earnhardt said. “You hate to give up any track position.”

Despite so much single-file racing, there were two major wrecks.

Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick and Juan Pablo Montoya were among the drivers involved in the first, and the second collected Carl Edwards and former Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne, among others.

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