Danica speeding toward exit ramp
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Danica Patrick was annoyed with herself. She had trained most of her life for moments like these, but she couldn’t fix the inadvertent mess she had just made.
On the first leg of the “Danica Double,” Patrick was in a scrum of reporters — the last place she wanted to be — in the middle of a long day of media obligations for the Daytona 500. New boyfriend Aaron Rodgers was on his way to the track, the NFL quarterback’s first visit to her motorhome, and her cramped schedule was spoiling Valentine’s Day.
So when asked an innocuous question about preparing for the final laps of her career, at the Indianapolis 500 in May, Patrick casually replied. Too casually. She said she was not yet thinking about the transition to IndyCar because “I didn’t have time to meet up with Ed and the people.”
Patrick immediately recognized the gaffe.
She had accidentally revealed she’ll drive for Ed Carpenter Racing in her final Indy 500. The cat was out of the bag, and a splashy announcement with sponsor GoDaddy in the coming months was ruined. Even worse? In that moment, she was powerless to fix it.
She twice cursed away from the microphone.
“I’ve never done that in my career,” Patrick finally said.
She looked for one of her representatives, to no avail. She complained about how long the interview session was taking, and her answers became clipped, her annoyance apparent. There are 500 miles left in Patrick’s NASCAR career and no one wants them to come faster than Patrick. She turns 36 in March and began racing when she was 10. She moved from Illinois to England alone as a teenager to pursue her career. She became a famous driver and a cunning businesswoman who never before botched a sponsor-related reveal.