Windsor Star

Junior slides his way into broadcast booth

Earnhardt shows he’s a natural on TV as catchphras­e goes viral after one race

- DAN GELSTON

Dale Earnhardt Jr. leaned toward the track in the broadcast booth and hollered like a NASCAR fan at home over a gripping final lap in his debut race behind the microphone. Once Kyle Larson tried to swipe the lead from Kyle Busch with a daring pass at Chicagolan­d, Earnhardt could not harness his enthusiasm.

“Slide job!”

“Slide job!” Earnhardt smiled and clapped his hands at the move and — in a flash — the retired NASCAR star had a signature call.

“I was really surprised that that took off like it did,” Earnhardt said Friday at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway. “I got done with the race, went to the car, drove to the airport. By the time I got to the airport, everybody was texting me, saying it over and over, and I’m hearing it everywhere all week.”

Sure enough, race fans on social media parodied the call and “slide job” was used as a voice-over for other memorable moments in sports. At Daytona, fans cried out “slide job” and they clamoured on Twitter for a business to produce T-shirts with Earnhardt’s image and the quote. Earnhardt could only laugh at the hoopla his excited cries created in a sport desperate for any kind of feel-good buzz. It was exactly what NBC Sports counted on when it hired the outspoken and folksy Earnhardt, a two-time Daytona 500 champion, to work the booth this year.

Take a walk around Daytona and it’s clear the biggest star in the sagging sport is still Earnhardt — who retired at the end of last season on the heels of his 15th straight most popular driver award.

The Daytona fan zone has a billboard-sized ad promoting itself as “The World Center of Racing ” on the same wall as an image of Earnhardt wearing a headset with the caption, “Same Dale. New View.” Earnhardt’s presence looms large in a sport that has failed to create any new stars anywhere nearly as popular as the driver who inspired “Junior Nation.” He hosted a Q&A with drivers such as Austin Dillon and Denny Hamlin in the fan zone before Friday night’s qualifying runs. “He’s like the John Madden of racing,” NBC analyst and former crew chief Steve Letarte said. It was only one race and even Earnhardt conceded the call wasn’t quite ready to join the pantheon of “Holy Cow!” and “Whoa, Nelly!” in enduring catchphras­es in broadcast history.

“I don’t know that that’s a catchphras­e because I don’t know that you can just work it in any time,” Earnhardt said. “That was just a natural reaction to what I was seeing. That’s what my bosses asked me to do: say what I was thinking.” Earnhardt is a bit of a NASCAR everyman and called the action in much the same way a couple of buddies might see it over a couple of beers at a bar.

But fresh off the track, Earnhardt had the experience necessary to describe first-person action for fans at home.

Sam Flood, the NBC Sports executive who hired Earnhardt, said his only advice for the former driver was to be himself. Earnhardt had some broadcast experience as the host of his own podcast and found the tip easy to follow.

“I’m not having to trim as much rough edges as I thought I would,” Earnhardt said.

 ??  ?? Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.

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