Allmendinger’s 3rd In Points But Forced To “Go or Go Home”

AJ Allmendinger prepares to qualify for the Auto Club 500 at Auto Club Speedway

AJ Allmendinger prepares to qualify for the Auto Club 500 at Auto Club Speedway

Todd Warshaw/Getty Images for NASCAR


At the beginning of the season, the back of the Sprint Cup garage is always an odd assortment of promising, hopeful new teams and assorted lightly funded also-rans, but this year that real estate is downright surreal.

Car-owner points determine a lot in NASCAR, from who has a guaranteed free pass into the show to where crews physically park their haulers and work on their cars.

The garages farthest away from the entrance to pit road go to teams that are struggling. These stalls are not glamorous and, worse still, instead of the positive energy that surrounds last year’s success stories, there is a feeling of loud desperation as 13 teams required to make the show on time compete for only eight open slots.

That’s why the likes of past champion Tony Stewart, Clint Bowyer and Ryan Newman are crammed shoulder to shoulder with part-time teams and organizations that were cobbled together at the last minute. These superstars make improbable roommates for Mike Garvey, David Starr and Todd Bodine, who were among those trying to make the Cup show this weekend at Auto Club Speedway for Sunday’s Auto Club 500.

Sitting smack dab in the middle of this eclectic group of racers is perhaps the unlikeliest feel-good story of Daytona’s Speedweeks: A.J. Allmendinger.

Allmendinger sits third in the points, but that doesn’t make a bit of difference this week since last year’s owner points determine the 35 guaranteed starting spots for the first five races of the season. He still had to qualify Friday, and he did—he took eighth, on the outside of the fourth row, and was the fastest “go or go home” driver.

“It’s one of those things that you celebrate on Sunday night,” Allmendinger said about his strong Daytona run. “I was happy about it but woke up Monday and was ready to get here and focus because now the season really starts.”

Allmendinger’s rapid development in the second half of 2008 was instrumental in elevating one of the two Red Bull Racing Toyotas into the top 35 in owner points, but he was edged from the seat of that car in favor of rookie Scott Speed. That means that the young former Formula One driver could rest easy before Friday’s qualification session while Allmendinger continued to sweat.

Is there a rivalry between Allmendinger and the racer who took his ride? “We hated each other when we came up through racing,” Allmendinger said. “There’s no medium about it. As we got older, everyone seemed to pit us against each other as the two Americans that are going to Formula One, that are going to fight to be the American in Formula One.”

For the record, Speed made it to motorsports’ top open-wheel level, while Allmendinger did not—although he had a successful open-wheel career in the Champ Car series.

“We’ve always had a lot of respect for each other,” Allmendinger said of Speed. “If we wrecked, we wanted the other person to wreck harder. Whether it was battling for first or second or 21st or 22nd, if we could beat each other, it was a good day. It was a lot of fun. It was a tough rivalry.”

During the offseason, Allmendinger was penciled in to take over the No. 19 Richard Petty Motorsports ride (formerly known as Gillette Evernham Motorsports) of Elliott Sadler. But when Sadler, who signed a three-year contract extension last spring, started talking lawsuit, he was quickly put back in the No. 19, which he drove to a 24th-place finish in last year’s standings.

Allmendinger even had one final chance to get into the guaranteed starting positions when it appeared that several top-35 cars were not going to show up at Daytona. Then NASCAR blessed a pair of 11th-hour deals that elevated Bowyer and John Andretti above him, and Allmendinger found himself in the all-too-familiar position of having to qualify on time at the start of the year—the third straight season he’s had to do that.

“I was definitely more nervous last week,” Allmendinger said Friday morning. “But there are some nerves here because anything can happen out there. I’ve been doing this for 2 1/2 years now, but the nerves are always there.”

No matter how strained his nerves may be, all of the cars outside the top 35 in points are in a tenuous position. The slightest mistake in qualifying can send them home, and that could have a drastic effect on Allmendinger’s hopes to run a full season.

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