DAYTONA BEACH, Florida (Reuters) - IndyCar driver Danica Patrick survived a spinout to finish sixth in her stock car debut at Daytona International Speedway Saturday.
"That was fun," Patrick, the only woman to win an IndyCar race, told reporters after the 80-lap ARCA race on the high-banked speedway.
"I was going side-by-side with people. My car doesn't look very pretty," she said of the dents and scrapes, "but that was fun."
Former Formula One driver Nelson Piquet Jr. and Patrick's car bumped on lap 54, sending her spinning in the grass.
"The guy came down over the front of me," said Patrick, who did not crash and resumed racing in the regional stock car series that uses NASCAR-type cars.
"I thought: 'Shoot, we're not out of it,'" she said. "I was pretty excited to go from last."
American Bobby Gerhart won the race with Piquet Jr. 27th.
Patrick, who plans to run a partial schedule on NASCAR's second tier series this year, could make her debut there next week. A decision is expected Monday.
Story Copyright 2010, Reuters
Photo Copyright 2010, Getty Images
NASCAR team owner Jack Roush was in serious but stable condition one day after a business jet he was piloting crash-landed at an airport in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
Seven-weight world champion Manny Pacquiao made a vow to improve life in his poor southern hometown and to help the Philippines win a first Olympic gold medal.
Josh Tomlin pitched into the eighth inning in his major league debut and Matt LaPorta provided enough support with two RBI, as Cleveland downed the Yankees.