The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Earnhardt’s departure leaves gaping hole

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. » There was a moment during the Bristol Motor Speedway race that captured the essence of Dale Earnhardt Jr.

He was walking briskly to the care center for a mandatory health check after a crash. Flanked by a television reporter on one side, a handler on the other, he was explaining why he wrecked while hustling to his destinatio­n. A fan approached him from behind, Earnhardt turned, and the fan was shoved away when it became clear he just wanted a selfie.

Earnhardt never broke stride. He just gave his awshucks smile and continued on his way. Once cleared by the medical staff, he found the fan and posed for the photo.

Earnhardt is a 14-time winner of NASCAR’s most popular driver award for a reason. He’s personable and authentic and as close to the roots of racing as any driver alive today. When he walks away from NASCAR at the end of this season , he will take a lot more than 26 Cup wins.

He will also take a big, reliable chunk of NASCAR’s identity. The big question is whether hewill also take Earnhardt Nation and its thousands of fans with him, too. It’s the last thing NASCAR needs in a time of transition, both in terms of structure and in its celebrity lineup of drivers.

NASCAR has already lost Jeff Gordon, the driver who took the sport mainstream

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and announced his retirement two years ago at 43, just like Earnhardt. Then a year ago it lost Tony Stewart, the talented, volatile rebel who said what everyone was too scared to say out loud.

Carl Edwards, friendly and a strong ambassador, walked away fromNASCAR at the start of this year.

Now here goes Earnhardt, the blue-collar everyman. A third-generation racer from North Carolina who says “ain’t” and “Daddy” and talks the way the good ol’ boys always did.

So what does NASCAR do now, with itsmost bankable stars rapidly exiting stage left at a time when the sport needs to rebuild its audience?

“It will be an important year for fans to look at what other drivers are out there and who will make them interested in continuing to watch,” said Jill Gregory, chief marketing officer for NASCAR. “We knew these dayswere going to come, we just didn’t know when.”

Gregory said the biggest challenge for NASCAR is introducin­g the current crop

of young talent to fans and giving the drivers a chance to make their own marks rather than pigeonhole them in roles as the next Gordon, Stewart or Earnhardt.

“What is true to them? What is authentic?” asked Gregory. “You look at Kyle Larson, he loves to race. That’s what he is going to do, and allowing him to do what he naturally loves, that’swhatwe want to highlight. I don’t think there’s an effort to say ‘We’re going to make this guy into the next Jeff Gordon.’

“We have to let it come naturally and what do they gravitate toward, because if it’s natural, that’s what makes it real to the fans. If we are trying to manufactur­e it, that’s how it is going to be seen. We have to let it play out.”

Earnhardt didn’t hesitate to name the future of the sport: Larson, the current Monster Energy Cup points leader, and Chase Elliott, his current teammatewh­o replaced Gordon last season.

Elliott is the son of Hall of Famer “Awesome” Bill Elliott, a Georgia native who grew up at NASCAR tracks. Larson is a dirt tracker from California who will race anything at any time

and is likely headed in 2018 for a seat in the Indianapol­is 500. Earnhardt also praised Ryan Blaney, another second-generation NASCAR driver, and Bubba Wallace, who have used social media to show the life of amillennia­l and not been afraid of oversteppi­ng their place.

Although their personalit­ies are often overshadow­ed by the veterans, they are settling into their own niches and engaging a much younger fan base for a series whose origins are steeped in the bootleggin­g days of Prohibitio­n.

“All those guys have great attitudes, great personalit­ies,” Earnhardt said. “I know them well enough to be excited about how fans are going to know them in the future. I feel like that these are the guys that they’re the cream of the crop, andmaybe I’mthe only one that sees it in this room, but I really have a lot of confidence in the personalit­ies that we have.”

“We’ve just got to get them in front of the fans, let the fans get to know them, and I think the rest will take care of itself,” he added.

The new regime has certainly stepped up through the first two months of this

season. Three of the top four drivers in the standings are 27 or younger. Blaney is 10th in the standings, rookie Erik Jones is 13th and although reigning Xfinity Series champion Daniel Suarez is only 22nd in the standings, the rookie driver fromMexico has brought a huge new following to NASCAR.

As teamowner RickHendri­ck prepares to fill a hole in his No. 88 Chevrolet , he’s not worried about the options.

“I’ve never seen so much young talent,” Hendrick said. “They’re here, they’re young, they’re aggressive, they’re fun. I think the sport has got a lot to be excited about, and I think the fans, let’s face it, Dale is unique. You can’t replace Dale.

“But he also is still going to be in and around and visible in the sport, and help tap these young guys on the shoulder and really tutor them. Tell them what they’re doing wrong, what they could do better, because he’s been through all those cycles of life. No one in the garage could be any better than Dale Earnhardt to mentor these guys because he’s been through all the different stages, and every one of them look up to him.”

 ?? CHUCK BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dale Earnhardt Jr. pauses as he speaks during a news conference at Hendrick Motorsport­s in Concord, N.C., Tuesday.
CHUCK BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dale Earnhardt Jr. pauses as he speaks during a news conference at Hendrick Motorsport­s in Concord, N.C., Tuesday.

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