DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — AJ Allmendinger's life changed forever a year ago, in the hours before the race at Daytona International Speedway.
NASCAR officials had just kicked him out of the track, suspending Allmendinger indefinitely for failing a random drug test. As his peers prepared for one of the biggest races of the year, and Sam Hornish Jr. scrambled to get from Charlotte, N.C., back to Daytona to drive his car, Allmendinger was reeling in seclusion.
The failed drug test sidelined Allmendinger for more than three months and ultimately cost him his job with Penske Racing. But it also spurred a great deal of introspection for Allmendinger, who returned to Daytona a year later a different person.
He headed into Saturday night's race happier than he's been in a long time and at peace with the twists and turns of his career.
"I've worked hard to get back in the sport, and I've also worked hard as a person to try to find myself and figure out how to be better," Allmendinger said. "I've said many times, at the end of the day, all you have is being able to look yourself in the mirror and like what you see. By the middle of last year, I didn't like myself. I was stressed.
"Now? The walls are torn down. This is me right now. This is it."
Allmendinger is tired of talking about his "comeback." He wants people to stop dwelling on the biggest mistake of his life, and his long road back into racing.
But he's aware that his audience has grown over the last 12 months, and that he's gained a following of fans eager to root for an underdog getting a second chance. Allmendinger owes much of that to Roger Penske, who stuck by the driver even after firing him.