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IndyCar’s Conor Daly makes Daytona 500 with Mayweather team

IndyCar's Conor Daly open to last-minute Daytona 500 ride


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — IndyCar driver Conor Daly raced Floyd Mayweather Jr. into the Daytona 500 for a second consecutive year by bobbing and weaving his way through myriad issues for the ill-prepared team.

Daly’s attempt to make his first Daytona 500 was announced only last week as part of a deal with his IndyCar sponsor, BitNile, and The Money Team Racing, a fledgling NASCAR team owned by the retired boxer.

Daly will become the 62nd driver in history to race in both the Daytona 500 and the Indy 500. In May, he can become the 29th driver to compete in both races in the same year.

The No. 50 Chevrolet raced its way into the Daytona 500 last year with Kaz Grala and ultimately entered four total Cup races, including Daly’s Cup debut on The Roval at Charlotte Motor Speedway in October. Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves had the first talks with Mayweather’s team about entering Sunday’s Daytona 500 but passed because he didn’t think the entry had time to be properly prepared.

Daly jumped at the opportunity, as did his sponsor, which wants him to run a handful of NASCAR races this year to market the company and motorsports as a whole.

But Daly’s chances seemed on the ropes from the moment Daytona International Speedway opened.

An electrical issue burned a hole in the oil line and prevented him from making a qualifying attempt in Wednesday time trials. It meant the Indiana native had to race his way into the Daytona 500 in one of Thursday night’s qualifying races.

Even that seemed as if Daly wouldn’t go the distance: TMT was thrashing just to get his car ready to start the race, his radio wasn’t working and Daly complained in the garage that “it’s not supposed to be this hard.”

When he pulled off pit road, the vibration was so bad on his Chevy that he was adamant something was wrong with the car.

“I’m not going to lie, man, I don’t know how this can be right,” he radioed. “But I’ll go for it.”

In the end, it was Daniel Suarez spinning Kyle Busch from the lead that got Daly into the race. Busch’s crash collected Austin Hill, the other driver Daly was racing for a spot in the field, and with Hill out of the qualifying race, Daly was in despite essentially racing a jalopy.

“Not how we wanted that, but (Hill) are like family, but holy mackerel, we made our second Daytona 500!!!!” TMT co-owner Willy Auchmoody tweeted before the qualifying race ended.

Daly was stunned.

“We were inherently unlucky for the last 36 hours, but we got lucky,”…

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