DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Casey Mears spun on pit road, got briefly stuck in the infield grass and missed a last-lap crash by mere inches. After all that, he finished eighth a qualifying race Thursday night for the Daytona 500, good enough to get him into ''The Great American Race.''
Mears choked back tears three separate times after squeezing into the 41-car field as the highest-finishing ''open'' car in the first of two 150-mile qualifying races.
''I was worried when we got stuck. I was worried about going two laps down,'' Mears said. ''Actually got on the radio and asked all the guys to stay calm, said, ‘We still got a shot here.' For sure when we were sitting in the grass, that wasn't pretty.
''I can't believe it. After all that, being sitting in position to go race the Daytona 500 on Sunday, pretty much the whole race I was thinking that was out of our grasp.''
Anthony Alfredo initially earned the final spot in the starting lineup in the second qualifier, but NASCAR disqualified his car and the berth went to B.J. McLeod.
Joey Logano of Team Penske won the first race and Chase Elliott of Hendrick Motorsports took the second. Both were already assured of spots in NASCAR's season opener and will start on the second row Sunday.
Mears is driving for Garage 66, a team owned by former driver Carl Long with just 10 employees on hand in Daytona. The 47-year-old driver is in pursuit of 500 career Cup Series starts and received financial assistance from former NASCAR team owner Bob Germain to enter Daytona.
Mears, who last competed full-time in 2016, will make his 495th start Sunday. With his fate uncertain, his wife and 14-year-old son booked two separate plane tickets from their home in Phoenix. His daughter has a cheerleading competition in Las Vegas, and they were either headed to see her or to Florida to watch Mears in the Daytona 500.