Earnhardt Sr. dies after last-lap crash
February 18, 2001
7:12 PM EST (0012 GMT)
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Dale Earnhardt,
one of the greatest stars in auto racing history, died
Sunday from injuries in a last-lap crash at the
Daytona 500.
The seven-time Winston Cup champion had to be
cut out of his car after slamming into the wall on
the final turn of the race while fighting for position.
He was taken to the hospital accompanied by his
son, Dale Jr., a young NASCAR star who finished
second in the race.
The Earnhardts were whisked away in an
ambulance after The Intimidator got tangled up in a
nasty wreck on the last lap.
The accident happened a half-mile from the finish
of the NASCAR season opener when Earnhardt, running fourth, hit Sterling
Marlin, hit the wall in the high-banked fourth turn and was smacked hard by Ken
Schrader.
"We were three deep and he hit me," Marlin said. "Then he turned around."
It was the second major wreck in five years in the race for Earnhardt. He flipped
wildly on the backstretch near the end of the race in 1997 but was not seriously
hurt. He came back to win the race the next year on his 20th try.
The crash was not as spectacular as a 19-car wreck 25 laps earlier that took out
18 cars. Tony Stewart was injured in that accident, but the track said he did not
have life-threatening injuries.
Stewart did have a concussion and was undergoing a CT scan.
Earnhardt was a factor in the race throughout, and spent the final laps in close
proximity to his son and Waltrip, trying to block Marlin. The Dodge driver had just
passed Earnhardt, who was trying to get back by him on the low side of the track
when there was slight contact that set his Chevrolet spinning up the 31-degree
banking.
It turned to the right, and Schrader could not avoid hitting it.
Both cars slowly began to slide down the banking to the bottom of the track as
the rest of the field race by, but there was no further contact.
Earnhardt Jr. quickly left the postrace celebration for Waltrip, and sprinted to the
infield care center to be with his father. It took several minutes to get the elder
Earnhardt out of the car, and he was quickly taken to the hospital.
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