
The good news for Dale Earnhardt Jr. is that the legions of his believers are still just that -- massive in number and faithful to his cause.
But even many of the most loyal are astounded that their beloved "Junior," NASCAR's most famous driver, isn't more than a footnote in this year's Chase for the Championship.
The most-talked about driver in NASCAR isn't being talked about when it matters most.
Earnhardt, 34, is currently ranked 21st and is winless since last summer, with only a pair of top-five efforts on the season. It is the second time in three years that he hasn't been among the 12 top drivers vying for the Sprint Cup title, when the 10-race playoff beginning Sunday in New Hampshire.
This year's tumultuous and under-achieving effort may represent the biggest crossroads in Earnhardt's career. At the very least, it's gut-check time.
"I think if his dad were here, he'd tell him, 'Now you have to buckle down, we've all been through these things,' " said longtime Earnhardt family friend, and ESPN NASCAR analyst, Dale Jarrett.
"The ones that come out of it are the ones that really want to. It's the same advice I'd give him.''
Jarrett has little doubt that Earnhardt will get on track, but he and others in the garage area acknowledge it will take some genuine effort on Earnhardt's part.
"I get the feeling listening to interviews that it's the people's perception of him that is bugging him,'' said FOX Sports NASCAR analyst Larry McReynolds, who was crew chief on the late Dale Earnhardt Sr.'s 1998 Daytona 500 winning team.
"He's concerned that people think he has too many irons in the fire or they question his focus or how physically fit he is.''
Said Jarrett, the 1999 Cup champion, ''The biggest thing is he has to get his focus back on what's important to him and what makes him happy and that's driving a race car and competing.''
Jarrett said, the perception that Earnhardt is not meeting expectations, "is not something that just happened this year or last year even. He's always been pulled in so many directions. ...''
Right now, the direction he needs to find, is up.
Earnhardt's five top-10 finishes in the No. 88 AMP Energy Chevrolet this season are the fewest since his 2000 rookie year when he won two races. He's never had fewer than 12 top-10s a season since and his career average is 15 per year.
Instead, in 2009, Earnhardt has 14 finishes of 20th place or worse and five of 30th place of worse.
He's led races only five times for a total of 96 of the 7,336 laps possible -- and 83 of his 96 lead laps came in just two races (Talladega, Ala. where he notched a season-best runner-up finish and Phoenix).
Team owner Rick Hendrick replaced Earnhardt's cousin Tony Eury Jr. as crew chief in June, hoping that a change in chemistry might invigorate the team. Since Lance McGrew took over, Earnhardt's had only two top-10 runs, and dropped to a season low ranking of 25th just last month before climbing back up to 21st.
He's never been a factor in the championship.
"I don't know if anyone knows what's going on with Junior, but Junior,'' said McReynolds, who thinks part of Junior's "fix" may be as simple as fine tuning his communication skills.
"I don't think you win two Nationwide Series championships and all the races he's won in Cup without talent. Dale Junior's weakness is not driving a race car,'' McReynolds said.
"I say this cautiously but with confidence, it's relaying to the crew chief what the car is doing.
"His dad was the same way. And when I listen to him on the radio, if I close my eyes, it's like I'm listening to his father. You have to be very confident when you tell your crew chief what is wrong: short, confident and concise.''
A harder challenge may be overcoming perception.
"People are hard on him because they think he should be like his dad, they treat him like a name, not a person,'' said Debbie Wilson, 42, who was at Richmond International Raceway over the weekend dressed in full "Junior gear" to cheer on her favorite driver.
Jarrett, whose father Ned is a two-time Cup champion, understands the pressures of maintaining an accomplished legacy. It opens up doors and raises the bar.
"None us us can put ourselves in the spot he's in, him coming into his own just as his dad's untimely death,'' said Jarrett, referring to the seven-time champ Earnhardt's death on the last lap of the 2001 Daytona 500.
"But I don't know that he really signed up for everything that's been thrown on him as far as being "the guy" in the sport.''
Two years ago Earnhardt took a big professional risk, leaving the team his father started and heading to Hendrick Motorsports -- a risk because he knew the expectations would increase exponentially, as would his chances to win.
Hendrick drivers have won four of the last eight Cup championships, including the previous three straight with driver Jimmie Johnson.
Earnhardt's newest teammate, 50-year old Mark Martin is now leading the standings by virtue of being the winningest driver of the season (four victories). Tony Stewart, whose Stewart-Haas Racing team uses Hendrick Cheverolet engines and chassis, handily led the points up until the standings were re-set for the playoff.
Three of Hendrick's four drivers plus its two satellite teams qualified for the Chase.
The only things that match the expectations at Hendrick are the resources. And Earnhardt has always been the first to say there are no excuses.
So ... where does he go from here?
First of all, the pressure is off.
Earnhardt won't "have to" do the formal media interviews mandated by NASCAR for each of the top-12 drivers at each week's race, his demand at the race track lessened compared to the drivers who are actually challenging for the championship.
His only commitments now will be those to his race team and those he's made to his personal marketing pursuits, which keep his souvenir sales tops in the sport.
And there was a time when effort spent on the former, produced the latter.
No matter his current struggles on-track, Earnhardt is a proven commodity. He won back-to-back Nationwide Series championships in 1998-99 and his 18 Cup wins provide him as stellar and diverse a resume as any elite driver complete with the 2004 Daytona 500 crown, and wins on super-speedways, intermediate and short tracks.
And his name didn't drive the car. He did.
"I think they can stay below the radar now, but they need to get this fixed,'' McReynolds said. "Dale Earnhardt Junior needs to be a contender and a winner on a regular basis just like all his teammates are competing and winning on a regular basis. Next year is pretty pivotal for him and that 88 team.
"What does he need to do? I think he needs to win a race this year.''
Stressed Jarrett, "He does have the talent to be a winning and championship driver, he's proven that.
"But the next thing he has to prove is that he as the desire to pick it up when things are not going so good.
"And I believe he will."










Comments (Page 1 of 9)
What a great article! As always, Dale Jarret is a class act! I agree with much of the article. Dale Earnhardt Jr. has the talent, it's the focus and the direction he is lacking. I agree that he is being pulled in too many directions all at once. I also agree that he didn't ask for nor probably wnat to be the "Golden Boy" of NASCAR. Dale Jr. has never seemed comfortable with all the press and the huge fan following he gets and receives. He seems uncomfortable at times in his own skin. I feel sorry for him. The talent is there, he just needs to find his fire.
It is also nice to see a former crew chief of his late father, echo some of the very statements I have said on these boards many times. I have listened to Dale Jr. on the radio as well as many other drivers. Compared to the others, Jr. just doesn't communicate as effectively with his crew chiefs about the car and what it is doing, what it needs and so on. He needs to learn how to be more effective in that aspect, and the rest should fall into place. Hopefully the number 88 team can put this negative year behind them and come back with a vengence next!
Kim
EXCUSES,EXCUSES AND MORE EXCUSES.
WHAT A LOSER? DON'T THE MEDIA EVER GET IT?
AND ABOUT YOU ROYAL FANS?
JUNIOR IS A WASTE, HE WILL NEVER BE A CHAMPION.
HE HAS 18 WINS AND 20 WILL BE HIS LIMIT.
dale jarrett is daydreaming.
KYLE BUSCH AND NOW EVEN MARK MARTIN HAS BEEN SHOWING THIS FAKE HOW TO DRIVE!!!.
IDIOT!!!!
I don't see Kyle in the Championship race. Yeah he might be ahead of JR. in points but he had just as bad of a season. JR don't whine when he loses like Kyle. I can't even believe you put them in the same league. Kyle is a baby and will always be a poor loser.
kyle busch is a candyass wimp
YOU ARE SOOO RIGHT!!!!!!!!
WHO ARE THESE LOOOSERS THAT KEEP THINKING HE IS A GREAT DRIVER, WHAT HAS HE DONE, AND WHAT ABOUT THE PERSONALITY OF A RED STOP LIGHT, IF I WAS A SPONSOR, I WOULS LOOK FOR RESULTS, CLASS AND PERSONALITY. JR HAS NONE OF THAT
JR IS A LOOOOOOOOSER!!!!!!!!!!!!!
CAMELA #4 JUNIOR IS EVEN MORE IDIOT THAN YOU.
KATHELEEN #5 KYLE IS A BABY AND A PUNK THAT KNOWS HOW TO DRIVE AND WIN.JUNIOR IS AN ADULT BUT A LOSER AND CLUEELESS DRIVER LIVING ON HIS DADDY NAME.
BOOBEY BARHOPPER #7 YOU MOST BE DRUNK ON CHEAP WILD IRISH ROSE' AND MD-40 AND YOUR EARS REESEMBLE MICKEY MOUSE SAUTETED IN RED PEPPERS PULP AND JUICE.LMAO.
EGG SPECIAL #8,THANK YOU FOR AGREEING ABOUT JUNIOR WORTHELESS DRIVING BUT YOUR EGGS QUALITY ARE 50/50. JUNIOR HAS CLASS AND PERSONALITY BUT, NO PERFORMANCE RESULTS.KYLE HAS THE PERFORMANCE RESULTS BUT OBNOXIOUS PERSONALITY AND LOW LIFE CLASS.SORRY BUT THOSE ARE THE FACTS.
kyle bush is the real loser what a punk if the other dale was here he would send him in a wall at about 200 mph then kyle would fade away fast
spoken like a true IDIOT!!! you must be a kyle bush fan....ha ha ha!
you peole who said dale jr.is a loser , the only loser in here is you....
you must have a great life. you sound like everything is going great for you and all of your loved ones. what an ass you are even to talk like that you sound like you live on 5th ave in ny city what a happy guy or girl.
It's always 'next year' with this guy. He's 34 years old! Diddy had 2 championships, and 45 wins at that age. Face it folks, somewhere along the way, Sr. crushed this kid's spirit. He's a good dude, but he'll never win a championship..
stop crying moron? didnt you see what happened to gordon when he spun in his own tears?
You people (and by you people I mean journalists and blind loyalist fans) have some weird obsession with this guy. You all want him to return to “greatness”.....but he would have had to have been great at one time to return to it. Here’s something for you reality-skewed delusionists- maybe he can return to average-ness? It seems like the worse he does the more trinkets you buy. He’s never a factor at any race yet still gets written about weekly or worse daily. The best anyone can say is that he won two championships in the minors 10 years ago and he won some races in the big league....years ago. Oh, and that he’s still the most popular driver, as if that means anything. It’s absurd. Every commercial for the next week’s race shows a snapshot of drivers who actually have a shot at winning...and this guy. He doesn’t belong with the A-listers. I can’t wait until someone else finally takes over the stupid “most popular driver” moniker, someone who actually wins and deserves the attention. Until then, this is insufferable.
Mic, I have to agree with everything you said. A lot of Jr's fans will try tear you a new ass but, I'd like them to point out anything in what you wrote, that isn't 100% the truth.
Mic:
Wonderful post. Those JR fans that can read will hate it because nothing hurts like the truth. Its painful to watch these delusional people hope for a return to something that was never there to begin with. If you ever wonder what kind of people followed Jim Jones to Jonestown and drank his kool-aid, look no farther than JR fans. The only thing more painful than watching them is knowing that one day they will wake up and realize what a waste JR has been. Poor, poor people.
Good article Holly. I will say that as far as the pressure being off because Jr will not HAVE to do any Nascar mandated interiews, he has only HAD to do two interviews this year. The two races where he finished in the top 3. Other than that he has not HAD to do any. He has always been gracious and done them for his fans.
mbl
First of all. Jr does have some talent as proven in the past. However, his big mistake was letting the fans dictate his driving style. In his efforts to please them, he has often run his car into the ground just to get to the front and lead a few laps. This made his rabid fans happy, but played hell with his career. The pressure has worn him down and taken away his desire to race as he should. As for this year, I'm not sure that his nose dive after Tony Jr left isn't of his own doing to show his loyalty to his former crew chief. If he wins under the new crew chief, it proves the critics right in their condemnation of Tony Jr. By going further into a slump, maybe he's trying to show that replacing Eury was a mistake. he is the only one who knows the truth. Works for me...
Daddy was a Champ!! Junior is a Chump!!!
Dale Jr's fans think he is his daddy. He's not.