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Craven Plays the Villain at Martinsville
Apr 13, 8:27 PM (ET)
By HANK KURZ Jr.
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - Ricky Craven earned his first career victory at Martinsville Speedway in the fall of 2001, ending a 173-race winless streak and producing one of the most emotional stories of the year.
Craven again sparked many emotions Sunday, but this time for possibly costing Dale Earnhardt Jr. a chance at his second straight victory.
The problem came on a restart with 55 laps to go, when Earnhardt's car was running second behind Bobby Labonte's.
Entering Turns 1 and 2 in the double-line restart, Earnhardt slammed his Chevrolet into the back of Craven's suddenly struggling Chevy, causing them both to slide up the track as three contenders passed by.
"I really couldn't do much about it," Earnhardt said. "We were both real lucky we didn't wreck, or tear our cars up worse than we did."
Both cars eventually raced away, but when Craven came back around into the area of the accident, his car stalled up against the wall, prompting Earnhardt's rabid fans to jeer and point fingers at their newest villain.
Earnhardt rallied again to finish third.
"I like this old track," he said of Martinsville, where his father won six times. "One of these days I'm going to get a win here. Where else can you tear your car all to hell and have everybody be pretty happy about it?"
Craven still had the highest-finishing Pontiac. He was 27th.
Apr 13, 8:27 PM (ET)
By HANK KURZ Jr.
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - Ricky Craven earned his first career victory at Martinsville Speedway in the fall of 2001, ending a 173-race winless streak and producing one of the most emotional stories of the year.
Craven again sparked many emotions Sunday, but this time for possibly costing Dale Earnhardt Jr. a chance at his second straight victory.
The problem came on a restart with 55 laps to go, when Earnhardt's car was running second behind Bobby Labonte's.
Entering Turns 1 and 2 in the double-line restart, Earnhardt slammed his Chevrolet into the back of Craven's suddenly struggling Chevy, causing them both to slide up the track as three contenders passed by.
"I really couldn't do much about it," Earnhardt said. "We were both real lucky we didn't wreck, or tear our cars up worse than we did."
Both cars eventually raced away, but when Craven came back around into the area of the accident, his car stalled up against the wall, prompting Earnhardt's rabid fans to jeer and point fingers at their newest villain.
Earnhardt rallied again to finish third.
"I like this old track," he said of Martinsville, where his father won six times. "One of these days I'm going to get a win here. Where else can you tear your car all to hell and have everybody be pretty happy about it?"
Craven still had the highest-finishing Pontiac. He was 27th.