Ryan Newman taken to hospital after last lap crash

From ESPN News Services:


Ryan Newman
 was taken directly to a local hospital after a fiery crash on the final lap of Monday’s Daytona 500.

Newman had surged into the lead on the final lap when runner-up Ryan Blaney‘s bumper caught the back of his Ford and sent Newman hard right into the wall. His car flipped, rolled, was hit on the driver’s side by another car, and finally skidded across the finish line engulfed in flames.

It took several minutes for his car to be rolled back onto its wheels. Newman, 42, was placed in a waiting ambulance and taken directly to Halifax Health Medical Center in Daytona Beach. The damage to his Mustang was extensive; it appeared the entire roll cage designed to protect his head had caved. Newman’s condition was not immediately known.

Drivers were stricken with concern, including a rattled Corey LaJoie, the driver who hit Newman’s car as it was flipping.

“I got a big push there that last coming to the white,” LaJoie said. “I don’t know who was pushing me and I kind of stalled out and I don’t know who hooked Newman. I was hoping he would kind of bounce off the fence to the left, but he didn’t and I hit him … it was some scary stuff. Don’t’ get me wrong. My car was on fire. My seat belts grabbed all sorts of areas, but it was a good day for us. I hope Ryan is OK.”

Denny Hamlin ended up winning the race, becoming the first driver since Sterling Marlinin 1995 to win consecutive Daytona 500s. However, his celebration in victory lane was subdued.

“I think we take for granted sometimes how safe the cars are and No. 1, we are praying for Ryan,” said Hamlin, who was unaware of Newman’s situation when he initially began his celebration.

It wasn’t until Fox Sports told him they would not interview him on the frontstretch after his burnouts that Hamlin learned Newman’s incident was bad.

“It’s a weird balance of excitement and happiness for yourself, but someone’s health and their family is bigger than any win in any sport,“ he said. “We are just hoping for the best.”

Team owner Joe Gibbs apologized after the race for the winning team celebration.

“We didn’t know until victory lane,” Gibbs said. “I know that for a lot of us, participating in sports and being in things where there are some risks, in a way, that’s what they get excited about. Racing, we know what can happen, we just dream it doesn’t happen. We are all just praying now for the outcome on this.”

Blaney said the way the final lap shook out, with Newman surging ahead of Hamlin, that Blaney locked in behind Newman in a move of brand alliance for Ford.

“We pushed Newman there to the lead and then we got a push from the 11 … I was committed to just pushing him to the win and having a Ford win it and got the bumpers hooked up wrong,” he said. “It looked bad.”

NASCAR gave no immediate announcement on Newman’s status and officials moved bystanders away from the crash scene.

Newman, in his 19th season in the NASCAR Cup Series, has 18 Cup wins — including the 2008 Daytona 500 and 2013 Brickyard 400. He was named Rookie of the Year in 2002, beating Jimmie Johnson.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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