DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA
(February 16, 2008) – The
high hopes that veteran
driver Chad Chaffin and his
Key Motorsports race team
had for Friday night’s 2008
NASCAR Craftsman Truck
Series season opener at the
Daytona International
Speedway came crashing down
as the #40 Chevrolet
Silverado was among the
eight race trucks sucked up
in a major backstretch melee
after just 18 laps of the
Chevy Silverado 250.
Eyeing a strong race
performance after recording
the best-ever qualifying run
for a Key Motorsports’ entry
in any race at Daytona,
Chaffin had stormed from his
22nd place starting berth to
within one spot of the top
10 just six laps into the
100-lap affair.
The #40 did slide back a
bit to the 15th position
when Chaffin complained of a
loose handling condition a
few laps later, and when the
first caution flag flew on
lap 10 when Scott Lynch’s
machine spun and hit the
second turn wall, crew chief
Gary Showalter elected to
pit for fuel, four fresh
tires and a wedge
adjustment.
With some teams staying
on the race track and
electing not to pit while
others just got fuel or
changed two tires, the
Showalter decision pushed
Chaffin’s truck back to the
26th spot when the race
re-started on lap 14. With
fresh rubber and the chassis
fix, Chaffin started to
again rumble through the
field and the #40 was
showing in the 21st position
on the 19th lap when all
hell broke loose.
The Toyota driven by
NASCAR Sprint Cup star Kyle
Busch was in the middle of a
three abreast battle at the
front of the field when it
got out of shape and began
to spin. Busch’s truck
struck the on-coming Toyota
of Mike Skinner sending the
Skinner machine and two
others spinning and then
hard into the outside
retaining wall.
Blinded by the tire smoke
of the spinning and crashing
trucks and the fire that
ignited under the hood of
the battered Ford driven by
P.J. Jones, Chaffin was
unable to avoid the wrecked
machinery in front of him
and rammed into the Ford of
Brendan Gaughan. The hit
pushed in the entire front
end of the Key Motorsports
Chevy, breaking the radiator
and moving the engine to end
the night in disappointment.
Even Chaffin’s spotter,
Tommy Morgan, was unable to
give the Key Motorsports
driver a route to take when
the incident occurred
because of the smoke.
“When will we ever catch
a break at this place,” is
all team owner Curtis W.
Key, Sr. had to say as he
again saw his entry crash
out early for the fourth
time in as many Daytona
starts dating back to the
2005 season, two of them
coming last year when Mike
Bliss and Larry Foyt both
were involved in accidents
not of their choosing after
running near the front of
the field.
“It’s tough to stop
quickly when you’re running
190 miles an hour here
(Daytona), and when you
can’t see where you are
going, things happen to you
like it did to us tonight.
It’s really disheartening,”
said Chaffin who entered the
race with the third highest
overall driver rating for
drivers competing in Daytona
International Speedway NCTS
races since 2005 when NASCAR
implemented its new loop
scoring program.
“We definitely had a top
ten truck tonight, but you
have to be there at the end
to do that and we
unfortunately weren’t. We
made that pit stop to make
an adjustment and changed
tires as well because we had
an extra set that we did not
use during practice. We were
coming back to the front
when that accident started
and I just had no way to
avoid the trucks that had
already wrecked,” Chaffin
added.
It was the third time in
his last nine races with Key
Motorsports that Chaffin has
crashed out early and
finished 36th and last in
the field, and it certainly
is not what everyone was
expecting to kick off the
new season.
“We practiced really well
and the truck was stable and
consistent, and we had a
really good engine under the
hood. We were looking for a
finish close to or better
than the one we had with
this same truck at Talladega
last October (the #40
finished eighth then),” said
Showalter. “But you have to
have some luck to accomplish
that and luck wasn’t on our
side tonight,” he ended.
The lap 19 incident that
collected the #40 and the
trucks of Skinner, Jones and
Gaughan and began with
Busch’s part spin also
involved the trucks of Ted
Musgrave, Jon Wood, Matt
Crafton and Scott Lagasse,
Jr. with only Chaffin, Jones
and Gaughan unable to return
to battle.
“We have to work really
hard now to erase this
memory and play some catch
up in the race next weekend
in California,” Chaffin
stated. “I have always run
well in Fontana, and if we
are to remain a factor in
this year’s point’s race we
have to re-group and come
away with a good finish
there,” the 39-year-old
Tennessee pilot added.
Next week’s race will be
run at noon, California time
on Saturday as a prelude to
the running of the NASCAR
Nationwide Series race on
California Speedway’s
2-mile, D-shaped oval at
4:30. The NCTS race will be
televised live by the FOX-TV
network while ESPN2 will
televise the Nationwide
event. Both races will be
broadcast nationally over
syndicated radio by the
Motor Racing Network.