Rome News-Tribune

Jr. reflects on Talladega, Spencer cheating claim

- By Jenna Fryer AP Auto Racing Writer

TALLADEGA, Ala. — At each of his final stops on the #Appreci88i­on tour, Dale Earnhardt Jr. receives a retirement gift from the track. They are supposed to be designed to create an impact in the local community because, after all, there’s nothing NASCAR’s most popular driver actually needs.

Then Talladega Superspeed­way discovered it had something Earnhardt wanted.

Talladega officials presented Earnhardt with the Chevrolet Monte Carlo that his father raced during his 1979 rookie season, as well as some races during his 1980 championsh­ip season. The gift was to mark Earnhardt Jr.’s final scheduled Cup race today at Talladega, the track where his fans are as rabid as anywhere on the circuit.

Earnhardt asked if the brakes worked, climbed inside and eventually got it to start. Then he took his late father’s car for a spin around Talladega.

“I love being able to sit in the car just to see the perspectiv­e of what the view is like,” Earnhardt said. “It’s so different than our cars today. No headrest or nothing like that. You kind of see everything. There’s a lot of wind moving around.”

Earnhardt is a racing historian, as well as a car collector. The gift, which included bottles of champagne from the cases he celebrated with in victory lane during his first Talladega win in 2001 and his father’s final Talladega win in 2000, was a touching reminder of how much the Earnhardt family and this Alabama track mean to each other.

Dale Earnhardt won 10 races on this highbanked superspeed­way. Earnhardt Jr. has six wins, including a streak of four-straight from 2001-03. He’s not been very reflective just yet of his Talladega memories, and remember, he’s had his fair share of frights at this track. He was left dazed after a 2012 crash, and doctors later found he’d suffered one of the many concussion­s that have played into his decision to retire at the end of the season.

Earnhardt doesn’t dwell on those bad days, just the many outstandin­g memories at Talladega and that sensation when he charges to the lead and the roar from the crowd is deafening. He wanted to wear a camera on his helmet today to give fans a

birds-eye view of how he handles the draft, but he couldn’t get comfortabl­e with it during Friday practices and scrapped the idea.

“When we come here for example, people want to see us go to the front. Our fans want to see us take the lead as fast as we can possibly take it,” he said. “They want to see us in the lead every lap. And I can see in the grandstand­s the reaction when we have taken the lead and come around Turn 4 on the front straightaw­ay. That pushes me all day at these plate tracks to do as much as I can to get into the lead and stay there.”

He’s always driven plate races that way, learned it from watching his daddy, and has been a factor if not the favorite nearly every time NASCAR races at

Talladega or Daytona. So in this time of reflection, Earnhardt has not been looking back at his time at Talladega of late, but rather his 2001 victory at Daytona that came nearly five months after his father died in a crash on the last lap of the Daytona 500.

Immediatel­y after crossing the finish line on an emotional victory that is stamped in NASCAR history, fellow competitor Jimmy Spencer openly wondered if Earnhardt’s car was legal. It may have been the starting point of a conspiracy theory that lingers to this day about the legitimacy of Earnhardt’s car.

Earnhardt was angered days after the race by the comments, calling them “a slap in my face, a slap in my father’s face,” and 16 years later he’s still bothered.

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 ?? Bob Crisp / The Daily Home via AP ?? Dale Earnhardt Jr. will start out front in today’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeed­way.
Bob Crisp / The Daily Home via AP Dale Earnhardt Jr. will start out front in today’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeed­way.
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