Posted on 11/20/2006 4:55:50 AM PST by WestCoastGal
Ping for Jr/DEI fans
Dale Earnhardt Inc. team owner Teresa Earnhardt appears to be questioning stepson Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s commitment to racing in an interview with the Wall Street Journal.
The story in Thursday's edition says Earnhardt Jr.'s contract with the team founded by his father, the late Dale Earnhardt, expires after the 2007 season, but Teresa Earnhardt expressed uncertainty about his future
Source: http://www.scenedaily.com
Here's what it actually said............
Mr. Siegel arrives at DEI as the company approaches a crossroads. Mr. Earnhardt Jr., who ranked as the fourth-most popular active U.S. athlete by a phone poll by ESPN last year, could leave the team when his contract ends after the 2007 season. He increasingly has branched into other areas of entertainment, hosting a satellite radio show and appearing in a commercial with rapper Jay-Z.
Mother and stepson don't always see eye to eye: "Right now the ball's in his court to decide on whether he wants to be a Nascar driver or whether he wants to be a public personality," she says. Mr. Earnhardt Jr. was unavailable to comment.
The other day at work a buddy gave me a cartoon, clipped from a paper, for my young one....
A young boy is asking his Dad, "Dad why is Santa's suit red?" The next panel shows Santa sitting in his comfy chair, nothing but posters of Dale Jr and the 8 car on the wall behind him.....
Hi WCG. I've made it this far through the withdrawal season. I really don't think this deal about Junior is a big thing. I'm not really sure Theresa has a very good grip on things at DEI. Also, the "media" loves to blow everything out of proportion. Around the time of November's Phoenix race, the bozos in the "media" were saying that the season was too long, whaaaannnhh! and whining about the races being too long, whaaaaannnnhhhh!. It got ridiculous. The pretty boys in the "media" used some comments they attributed to Dale Jr. as support for their claims. Then, before the Homestead race, Junior was interviewed by the network. The interviewer told Junior that he looked kind of depressed. Junior stated that he was depressed because he hated to see the season come to an end and was looking forward to testing in Daytona during the first week of January. Junior is the sort of person who says what is on his mind. Many times what he says comes out in a way that leaves what he said open to interpretation. Junior frequently says some things that I find very deep and profound. The problem is, sometimes, I think that HE doesn't even understand the profoundness of his comments.
Junior has stated that he won't leave DEI until he wins a championship for the company. I believe that. Also during the Phoenix race last year, NASCAR big whigs were dropping like flies when Junior said that he would take a year off if he won the championship. I didn't believe that for a minute. I think he sometimes makes comments like that just to push peoples' panic buttons. When Dale Earnhardt Jr. talks, people listen. I think he inherited a hidden mean streak from his old man that causes him to like to tweak people.
I think I like the blue one better. Can you get him to trade it?
BACK IN THE DAY.............I enjoyed many a race at Riverside!!
snip~
Never mind that the pacecar was actually motionless, and well off of the track (as the replay would clearly show), for Rusty's live comments put the blame on NASCAR, and before the green flag would come back out NASCAR put Wallace and Rudd back out in front. For some strange reason, NASCAR awarded 3rd place on the restart to Parsons leaving Earnhardt in fourth, followed by Labonte.
Restarts at Riverside actually took place at the exit of turn eight where the pacecar would pull off to the right side of the track. Upon the restart, and now with only a handful of laps left, Earnhardt took turn eight VERY wide, and left the bottom open for Labonte to slip into fourth. It's said that Dale was busy making "gestures" to the pacecar with his right hand as he passed the Corvette.
Meanwhile, Labonte got a good run down the backstretch, and slipped under Parsons for third as the cars entered the long and sweeping turn nine. At this moment, the TV commentators began interviewing Earnhardt's crew chief Kirk Shelmerdine. It was apparent from the discussion that Earnhardt was at the boiling point, and this even more obvious as the camera began to follow the #3 car. Earnhardt dove into turn nine hard and deep and closed in dramatically on Parsons. Now just behind and above Parsons, Earnhardt gave one of his more delicate bump-and-runs. Parsons collected his car just before the exit of turn nine, but Dale had dove underneath him and was headed off for Labonte. Just after the start-finish line, the cars snaked to the left in front of the pits and then began their way into the "esses."
The "esses" at Riverside were a series of six quick, uphill, high-speed turns in right-left, right-left, right-left succession. Each turn had curb-mounds paved on the inside to keep drivers from taking a "shortcut" through the desert. There were no guardrails or jersey barriers nearby, as there were no grandstands anywhere in proximity. If you went off of the track, you would just be swallowed up by dust and rocks. Rollovers in this area of the track were not uncommon.
By the time they entered the esses, Earnhardt was foaming at the mouth. Through the first turn in the series, Earnhardt had made up nearly five car lengths on the rest of the leaders. Entering the first left-hander, Dale's left-front tire was well to the inside of the curb. When he hit the curb the left entire left side of his car went airborne, with the left-front tire a full two feet into the air. By the time the car had landed, it was pointed about 30 degrees to the right of Terry Labonte's car, which Dale almost landed on. The upcoming turn was a right, and unfortunately this was in the middle of a right-left-right combination that came up on you as quick as the current "chicane" at Watkins Glen.
There was no way Earnhardt was about to lift. It just wasn't in his DNA. His car bounced as it landed, but Dale stood on it even though he was about to miss the entry of the next turn by a good ten feet. Fish-tailing crazily through the sand and rocks, by the time they arrived in the middle of the right-hander, Earnhardt was still in the desert, but was now three-wide with a startled Rudd and Labonte and throwing up a 30-foot tall rooster tail of sand. He lost momentum as well as traction in the sand, and Labonte pulled out into second with Dale trailing Rudd by a few car lengths at the end of the esses.
As they entered turn six, Earnhardt charged hard again, this time on the outside of Rudd. The cars touched, and Earnhardt's tires began to climb up on the outside of Rudd's car ever so slightly. As his car lifted, it became unsettled, and Rudd began to crowd Earnhardt high up in the groove. As they finished turn six, Rudd would not yield and smashed Earnhardt's Chevy two feet off of the course on exit. They headed downhill on the short, steep chute before turn seven, with Rudd pulling out roughly four lengths. As they were about to enter the turn Earnhardt stabbed the brakes violently, and the rear of his car lifted up as if it was about to flip over on its roof. He ended up fish-tailing again wildly into the turn. The Goodyears were about to give up, but not before he gave Rudd another nudge in the middle of seven.
He wouldn't win the race, and he wouldn't even make another pass in the remaining three laps.
His rampage had lasted a little over a minute, but in that one minute, in just one lap, you knew you were seeing something utterly unbelievable. I have my old VHS tape that I've been rewinding here for the last two hours as I've been writing, and I still get goose bumps watching it in astonishment.
When you hear of people describing Dale Earnhardt as the "greatest ever," and you want to see why, watch an old tape of a nondescript fourth-place finish at an old, now-abandoned track standing on its last legs.
June 12,1988 at Riverside, lap 90.
Dale Earnhardt's finest symphony.
http://insiderracingnews.com/LC/121506.html
Junior started a new web community.
http://www.infieldparking.com/
If this is old news, please disregard.
Go #8!!!!!!
Did you get a parking place yet? I've been in since the first day. :)
Dale Earnhardt Jr. leaves Stocks for Tots in Mooresville Tuesday night before every fan wanting his autograph is satisfied.
Earnhardt Jr. did come to the event, which raises money for the Stop Child Abuse Now network and other charities that help abused children. He signed for just over 200 fans in about an hour and a quarter before leaving for another commitment.
The problem is that about 350 wristbands were distributed for Earnhardt Jr.s room. So not everybody who thought theyd be getting to meet Earnhardt Jr. actually did.
Some of them who didnt told me I should write about how the sports most popular driver disappointed a lot of people. I thought the real point was that he came in the first place. Not every driver did.
I understand the frustrations. But Stocks for Tots organizers said clearly in pre-event publicity that not all drivers were committed to staying for the full scheduled two hours.
Certainly, a better job could have been done of matching the number of wristbands to the time alloted to sign. Its bad if around 150 people went home feeling misled.
This is why some athletes dont sign autographs at all. Earnhardt Jr. could have been there until 2 a.m. and people would have still been in line. Athletes know if they sign for 2,000 people and then leave, the 2,001st person will believe that hes the biggest jerk in the world. So they dont sign at all, and thats wrong.
Again, its a bad deal that some people left unhappy. Stocks for Tots is a great event and it would be terrible if their disappointment leads to people not attending and supporting its great causes. Things could have been handled better.
But Earnhardt Jr. was there and that means he did more than he had to do.
http://www.thatsracin.com/mld/thatsracin/16256384.htm
Why would Brains go to the Chart House to buy a burger and Coke to go?
Yeah. Finally. Today.
Jeff Gordon Children's Hospital Opens
http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news?slug=ap-nascar-gordon-childrenshospital&prov=ap&type=lgns
By JENNA FRYER, AP Auto Racing Writer
December 16, 2006
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -- Jeff Gordon saw firsthand the strain and heartache childhood illnesses bring early in his career when Ray Evernham's young son was diagnosed with leukemia.
Watching his crew chief battle to find top-notch care for Ray J. stuck with Gordon, who made children's charities a top priority of his foundation. His largest contribution yet came to fruition Saturday when the ribbon was cut at the Jeff Gordon Children's Hospital, a 28-bed pediatric unit at Northeast Medical Center.
``I was introduced to these illnesses through Ray Evernham and Ray J., and after you see somebody go through that it makes you want to give your time to things like Make-A-Wish Foundation and the Riley Hospital for Children (in Indianapolis),'' Gordon said.
``Then you are meeting the kids and meeting the doctors and you become so educated that you are just drawn into it and you can't help but want to give whatever you can.''
So when Northeast officials approached the Jeff Gordon Foundation about helping their efforts to build a children's hospital, Gordon immediately pledged $1 million of the roughly $11 million needed for the project. The donation is on top of the annual fundraising he does for the Riley hospital and the work he does almost every weekend during the NASCAR season for Make-A-Wish.
Located not far from Lowe's Motor Speedway and many of NASCAR's race shops, the hospital will serve six counties and eliminate the need to travel to Charlotte for specialized pediatric care.
Gordon, who is expecting his first child in July, said helping Northeast was a logical fit.
``One, Cabarrus County had a need for it and Northeast is a top-notch center,'' Gordon said. ``But two, so many of our employees at Hendrick Motorsports and just in racing in general live around this county. It made perfect sense for this foundation and for the families who need it.''
Despite the hospital's name, it doesn't have an overwhelming racing theme. In fact, aside from an autographed children's rocking chair, there is almost nothing else racing related.
Instead, Gordon's personal touch centers around four photographs he took during an African safari last year. He asked the hospital to exhibit the pictures of a gazelle, elephant, lion and giraffe, but the hospital took it one step further.
Northeast administrator Donna Craft turned the photos into images that can be found throughout the entire wing and are used as ``way-finding icons'' to identify which part of the hospital a patient is in.
In addition to five intensive care beds, the hospital has only private, single rooms with sofa-beds for parents, sleeping rooms for family members that are equipped with showers, an Internet Cafe for teens, and a child-advocacy center.
The hospital is equipped to handle everything but transplants.
``Every child that needed a higher level of care before this had to go to Charlotte, Winston-Salem or Chapel Hill,'' said administrator Colleen Hole. ``Now we have everything they need right here.''
It's about time he admitted it.
Personally I have no respect for anyone who drinks and drives!! He's damn lucky he didn't hurt someone.
Also, why is it because he has a famous name he got special treatment?
Great thing Jeff did there.
HOMEWORK - Be ready to see a lot of new faces and car numbers in February.
RacingOne continues our annual "Fan Awards" with a look back at some of the worst television shows devoted to racing from the 2006 season.
RacingOne's Selection
The airwaves were literally full of racing programming in 2006, but one show stands out as the worst of the bunch and that's Trading Paint with Michael Waltrip and a media member going "head-to-head" on a variety of issues. That's not a bad concept for a show, but this program has two things against it - deep and controversial topics are never discussed and of course it provides yet another on-air slot for Michael Waltrip.
Other candidates include the Speed Report, SPEED's overly-glossy Sunday night wrap-up show that employs two of the most plastic hosts in television history and completely ignores 80 percent of the racing world outside of NASCAR, Raceline, a syndicated program that has the production values of a high school broadcast and Inside NEXTEL Cup, which has de-volved into the Michael Waltrip Un-Comedy Hour.
http://racingone.com/article.aspx?artnum=32610
NASCAR channel on Sirius reports that the Toyota engines are generating 30 more HP than Chevy, Ford or Dodge and they are legal within the rules that Nascar has set up.
Now if their drivers and pitcrews etc. can do the same we may be in trouble. I'm hoping the GM engineers have come up with the solution they were looking for.
Documentary Traces NASCAR's Roots
Friday, December 15, 2006 7:41 PM EST
The Associated Press
By JENNA FRYER
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) John Warner set out to make a simple movie about NASCAR driver Wendell Scott.
By the time Warner was finished, the filmmaker had spent $3 million of his own money to create a four-part DVD documentary that traces NASCAR from its early days of racing all the way through the 1960s.
Warner knew "The Golden Era of NASCAR" was a film he could be proud of. Narrated by his father, Virginia Sen. John W. Warner, the film is truly a labor of love.
But when he received a thank you letter from a U.S. soldier serving in Afghanistan who used the film to fill his idle time, Warner realized just how special it was.
Now he's donating 10,000 copies of the set which retails for $79.95 to Operation Gratitude. The nonprofit will include the DVD in holiday packages it sends to deployed U.S. troops.
"Documentaries by nature are very passion driven, and to get the whole story on film is a very powerful thing," Warner said in a telephone interview. "And then I got this letter from the brother of a friend of mine who really enjoyed the story, and it really touches you to know that something you have done can bring joy to other people."
Warner enlisted help for his donation from his stepmother, Elizabeth Taylor, who penned a letter that will be included with the DVD sets. She also included one handwritten letter to commemorate the 200,000th care package that Operation Gratitude will mail out.
"Millions of people around the world are remembering you each day in their prayers. I want you to know that I am one of them," Taylor wrote in the three paragraph letter.
"Please believe that as you travel through harm's way, you are valiant, loved and respected. I wish you safety in the days ahead and a warm reunion with those you love."
Getting Taylor to contribute to the gift "only took a phone call," Warner said, as the actress was pleased to help.
"This was something that is important to me, especially since the films touch on all the World War II veterans who helped create NASCAR," Warner said. "This is just one way that a civilian like myself can give back."
A Virginia native, Warner was introduced to NASCAR when his father stumped for votes at stock car races with Taylor, his second wife.
The racing interested Warner, who launched a career of modest success racing sports cars. But when he retired four years ago, he needed a new project and turned his attention to telling the story of Scott, the first black driver to win a NASCAR race.
"There was no book written on him there still isn't which is very unusual for a man who is the Jackie Robinson of racing," Warner said. "So I called up his daughter and we talked for hours and it really became a passion of mine to tell his story."
But in researching Scott, Warner uncovered story upon story of other NASCAR pioneers. He interviewed more than 50 old-timers and their families, and interspersed it throughout the film with Sen. Warner's narration, which is done in a perfect Southern drawl.
Warner didn't make "Golden Era" to get rich, and with a willingness to give copies of the set to any serviceman who asks, his profits are continually shrinking. But that won't shy him away from another project he'd like to focus on NASCAR through the 1970s next and it won't spoil the joy "Golden Era" brought him.
"The one thing that was amazing is that Southern people by nature like to tell tall tales, and a lot of them are what had gotten me interested in the project," Warner said. "And they all turned out to be true. That was the amazing thing every one of them was true. I was just astounded."
Alabama to become home to Earnhardt's $600M race track
Dec. 15, 2006
CBS SportsLine.com wire reports
MOBILE, Ala. -- A $600 million Dale Earnhardt race track and entertainment complex will be built on 2,500 acres just north of Mobile, the track's investors announced on Friday.
It could take about two years to build the four-track motorsports park off Alabama 158, near Interstate 65, with a full season of activity expected in 2010, track spokesman Bill Futterer said. The site faces the University of Mobile campus.
A 5,000-space RV park, a theme park, and a 7,000-seat arena also are planned, along with hotels, retail, restaurants and music theaters. The site would benefit from its proximity to the east-west Interstate 10 on Mobile's southern edge.
Investors in the track include NASCAR Nextel Cup driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.; his brother, Kerry Earnhardt, a driver in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series; and sister Kelley Earnhardt Elledge.
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