Daytona 500 stopped after fiery explosion with jet drier

The Daytona 500 is under a caution after a car collided with a jet drier on the track.

That car was driven by Juan Pablo Montoya.  He was able to get out of the car, and reports say that everyone is OK.

Montoya was driving well behind the rest of the field when something on his car broke and he slid out of control into the jet drier, setting off an explosion and sending fuel pouring onto the track.

The jet drier holds 200 gallons of jet kerosene.

The driver of the jet drier was helped out of his truck.

The race finally got started under the lights at Daytona International Speedway just after 7 p.m.

And within the first two laps, several drivers were involved in a crash, including Jimmie Johnson, Danica Patrick, Trevor Bayne, David Ragan, Elliott Sadler and Kurt Busch. Jimmie Johnson is out of the race, and Sadler is in while the others are examining their cars to see if they can return.

Bayne won the Daytona 500 last year.

NASCAR officials said the weather forecast has forced them to push the start time to seven hours later from the original noon start today.

Just a week ago, officials at Daytona International Speedway were beaming at the great weather that stuck around for every other event during Speedweeks.

But by Sunday afternoon, that string of good luck finally ran out.

The Daytona 500 has run in the rain before, but never has wet weather postponed the race — until now.

“While we’re suspending the start from noon to 7 ET, we’re not suspending our efforts. We’ll be working all day,” said NASCAR president Mike Helton.

Jet dryers spent about two hours getting the track ready after some early afternoon rain. Fortunately storms are staying off to the south of the track.

Racing teams have to be a little wound up, having been preparing all winter for the first race of the year, only to have to sit around all day.

And if the rain delay wasn’t enough, the next scheduled race is Sunday, March 4, in Phoenix. That gives teams less time to go home and do some laundry before heading west.

The Daytona 500 Champion’s Breakfast has been postponed to a later date.

Carl Edwards, runner-up to Tony Stewart in last year’s championship race, will start from the pole. Former IndyCar star Danica Patrick will make her Daytona 500 debut.

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So what if Tiger Woods can’t win a golf tournament these days — he can now retreat to find some solace in his $60 million South Florida home that was completed recently. Take three putts on number 12 at Augusta National to shoot yourself out of contention at The Masters? It’s OK, just go home and practice on the 3.5-acre, four-hole golf course in your backyard.

Forked over an estimated $100 million to your ex-wife Elin in a messy divorce? Don’t worry, you can work off your frustrations on the indoor running track, a tennis court, a diving pool and Olympic swimming lane at your palace.

And now you can’t get a date because the pesky tabloid media are following your every move? No sweat, your 155-foot yacht, “Privacy,” is docked with your other boats in in your personal harbor.

According to various news websites, online photos and Tiger’s personal website, the Jupiter Island house has 10,000 square feet of space and a view overlooking the Atlantic on one side and the Intracoastal Waterway on the other. Surrounded by trees and a high boundary wall, no one should be able to look inside the gigantic master bedroom with his-and-hers bathrooms. The glass elevator should be out of camera range, too.

Friends can stay at the giant guesthouse, pop a bottle from the basement wine cellar, watch a movie in the theater.

 

Tiger Woods’ new home sits on a spit of land between the Atlantic Ocean, at top, and the Intracoastal Waterway. The four-hole golf course is also visible in this photo.

Tiger said he is ”excited” his place is finished, and noted on this website that his second-story studio even has a spot where he can launch golf balls out onto his backyard course. He can also try to improve at his indoor golf training studio.

So, we can all now breathe a sigh of relief that after all the public humiliation and on-course setbacks, it looks like Tiger is going to land on his paws after all.

 

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LeBron James’ mom charged with assaulting a parking valet

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — The mother of Miami Heat basketball star LeBron James was arrested by Miami Beach police after she reportedly assaulted a valet worker because it was taking too long to have her car delivered.

 

Police said Gloria James had a strong odor of alcohol on her breath and her eyes were bloodshot when officers arrived at the hotel about 4:47 a.m. Thursday.

 

Police said several witnesses supported valet worker Sorel Rockfeller’s account of the alleged assault.

 

Gloria James was taken to the Miami Beach Police Department, where she was issued a Promise to Appear on charges of simple battery and disorderly conduct. A police report says she was released to Miami Heat executive Steve Stowe.

 

Gloria James pleaded no contest to DUI and other charges in 2006.

 

It was a rough night all-around for the James family as LeBron’s Heat lost to the Milwaukee Bucks 90-85.

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Trevor Bayne Becomes Youngest Winner in Daytona 500 History

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — For all the talk of a new track surface, a different style of racing and promises of the “wildest” Daytona 500 ever, Sunday’s much-anticipated NASCAR season-opener still ended up like so many of those that have preceded it — decided in the final laps.

Making his first ever Daytona 500 start, 20-year old rookie Trevor Bayne held off Carl Edwards, David Gilliland and Bobby Labonte earning the venerable Wood Brothers team its fifth Daytona 500 victory and first since David Pearson’s win in 1976.

“Am I dreaming? Is this real,” Bayne exclaimed to his team on the radio as he crossed the finish line and headed to victory circle, where he was too young to even drink the traditional celebratory champagne.

It was wild, all right, in that it easily set a new record for caution flags (16) and lead changes (74), but in the end it was a a great show of poise headed to the checkered flag that made Bayne the youngest winner of NASCAR‘s most prestigious trophy in the history of the sport.

A five-car accident at the front of the field with four laps remaining n the 200-lap regulation period set-up the first of two green-white-checkered overtime periods and all-but-eliminated several of the strongest cars including Ryan Newman, Regan Smith and Clint Bowyer who exchanged the lead in the closing 15 laps.

Robby Gordon’s spin on the first re-start sent cars scrambling and fan favorite Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s No. 88 Chevrolet was collected in the melee setting up the final two lap shootout among Bayne and the veterans.

While two-car “pods” typically led the way, the rest of the field was frequently spread out and three-wide as it had been in previous years. Cars were between 10-20 mph faster when they ran in pairs and the strategy of picking the right partner was fundamentally as important as having a good set of tires.

And it didn’t matter whether you were teammates or even drove the same make of car.

Of course, the options became limited very early on as some of the pre-race favorites were eliminated long before the halfway mark.

On lap 29, a 14-car crash triggered by a collision between teammates Michael Waltrip and David Reutimann collected five-time defending Sprint Cup Series champ Jimmie Johnson and two of his other three Hendrick Motorsports teammates, Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin along with a pair of Roush-Fenway Racing Fords.

Engine failures ended the day early for Richard Childress Racing teammates Kevin Harvick (lap 22) and Jeff Burton (lap 94), who won one of Thursday’s qualifying races and was fastest in the final three practice sessions.

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Hydra Lacy Jr.’s brother: family struggles with questions in cop shooting

The brother of the man who shot and killed two St. Petersburg police officers and injured a U.S. marshal last week says his family still has questions about how the shootout transpired.

“The only thing we have to go by is what they (officials) are saying,” said Darrell Lacy, 38. “They say this happened. They say that happened. I don’t know what happened, but I want to know the truth.”

He said he feels sorry for the families of Officer Jeffrey Yaslowitz and Sgt. Thomas Baitinger, and hopes the community doesn’t blame the Lacy family for what Hydra Lacy Jr. did. He added that there’s much more to be learned about how the Jan. 24 situation played out.

Contrary to what has been reported, Darrell Lacy said Hyrda Lacy Jr. had been living at his home at 3734 28th Ave. S. since he missed a court date and became a fugitive. He said his wife, Christine Lacy, cared for him since Nov. 1, knew he was armed, and knew that he was intent on not returning to prison. Darrell Lacy said his brother had given friends and family his personal possessions in the months leading up to his death. He gave away his tools, the engine and transmission from his old pickup and other items.

He said Christine Lacy’s lawyercontacted him last week and told him the family could claim Hydra Lacy’s body if it would pay for burial, and if family members would not speak ill of Christine Lacy to the news media. Darrell Lacy said he refused to sign a document agreeing to the demands.

He said he viewed Hydra Lacy’s body and observed only two wounds: a bullet wound to his left forearm and a wound to his hip. Both appeared to have shattered bone, he said. Thecoroner has not released Hydra Lacy Jr.’s cause of death.

“I think he bled to death,” said Darrell Lacy. “I don’t think it was an instant kill wound.”


[Last modified: Jan 31, 2011 04:38 PM]

Hydra Lacy Jr.’s brother: family struggles with questions in cop shooting – St. Petersburg Times

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A new year for Tiger, with lingering questions

Tiger Woods has never been humbled like he was last year, when his private failures became so public.

SAN DIEGO – Tiger Woods can’t start a new year without being reminded of the last one.

And the last one wasn’t very good.

Some of his peers couldn’t help but chuckle when the pro-amtee times for the Farmers Insurance Open were posted in the locker room. For more than a decade, Woods had the first available tee time, a perk for being the best player on the PGA Tour, or not far from it. Those pro-am times are determined by the previous year’s money list.

Woods was No. 68 on the money list.

He tees off at 11 a.m., which is about the time he used to finish.

“I can’t imagine he’ll be too thrilled with that,” Pat Perez said.

And then there’s the world ranking.

Woods lost his No. 1 spot nearly three months ago to Lee Westwood, so that’s old news. He dropped yet another spot to No. 3 this week when Martin Kaymer won the Abu Dhabi Championship by eight shots. And if Woods doesn’t return to his former self quickly, it won’t be long before he slips even farther. The last time he was not in the top three was May 11, 1997.

What’s more noteworthy about the world ranking, however, is it’s the first time Woods has been ranked behind someone younger than him. He turned 35 over the holidays.

Woods has known this day was coming, even when his game appeared untouchable. In time, there would be a player — or players, in this case — younger than him and not as intimidated.

Sure, there was a brief challenge from Sergio Garcia. Adam Scott reached as high as No. 3, and Paul Casey did the same a year later.

Now, the youth brigade is coming in bunches.

Ahead of him in the ranking is Kaymer, the 26-year-old German who won the PGA Championship last year to become the youngest major champion since Woods. Kaymer also won the European Tour money title, and started the year with an eight-shot victory over what will be one of the strongest fields the European Tour will see all year.

“He’s probably the most formidable player in the world when he is leading,” Padraig Harrington said.

That’s what they used to say about Woods. But in his most recent tournament, the Chevron World Challenge, Woods blew a four-shot lead in the final round to U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell. It was the first time Woods had lost a lead that large.

“He used to appear invincible,” McDowell said that day. “Of course, he’s made himself appear more human in the last 12 months. But there’s something a bit special about his golf game, and I fully expect that mystique to return.”

McDowell is 31, and right behind Woods in the world ranking at No. 4.

Woods also has to contend with younger players like Rory McIlroy, Paul Casey and perhaps even Luke Donald from Europe, not to mention Dustin Johnson and Anthony Kim from the American side.

So many talented, young players will not make Woods’ task any easier. The bigger question is whether Woods is equipped for the fight.

Some of the answers might arrive this week at Torrey Pines, a public course along the Pacific bluffs that Woods has owned like no other. His epic U.S. Open title in 2008 was the seventh time he had won as pro on Torrey Pines. He has not lost on this golf course since 2004, although he missed the last two years. He has never finished out of the top 10.

But just like last year, no one is quite sure what to expect.

His new swing coach, Sean Foley, said he spent about four hours a week with Woods on the practice range at Isleworth the last few months, and he liked what he saw. He said Woods no longer has to think as much about what he’s doing. The swing repeats more easily. What he feels matches up with the mechanics.

How will that translate with a scorecard in hand?

“If you want to anticipate what happens in the future, look to the past,” Foley suggested. “What people lose touch of, because we’re such a bandwagon society, is that for a decade there, it might have been one of the greatest 10-year runs in the history of athletics. Obviously, he struggled last year. But I look forward to watching him compete.”

When Kaymer won in Abu Dhabi, it was his ninth win in his 100th start on the European Tour. That still doesn’t compare with Woods, who won 28 times — including six majors — in his first 100 starts on the much stronger PGA Tour.

History is easily forgotten, although in this case, it’s understandable.

Woods has overcome swing changes in 1998 and 2004. He has overcome knee surgeries, one at the end of 2002, two during 2008. Even so, he has never been humbled like he was last year, when his private failures became so public, and so embarrassing.

His performance was such that no one fears him.

Ian Poulter had some fun with Woods on Twitter early Tuesday, after seeing that Woods had offered to answer questions from his tweets before leaving Florida for San Diego.

Poulter kept egging on Woods to get involved with Twitter.

“come on tiger when are you going to join the lads for some banter,” said one Poulter tweet. That was followed by Poulter’s message to Westwood that “im not having it that No3 is writing his own tweets. He doesn’t want to play.”

Westwood submitted this question to Woods: “is it true you’ve dyed your hair Ginger,signed a deal with IJP clothing and bought a White Ferrari cos your in awe of poults?”

Woods didn’t take the bait. There were no replies.

Really, the only thing No. 3 can do now is try to play like he did when he was No. 1.

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