FOLLOW ON: Twitter Facebook RSS
Superstore
AUCTIONS
type size: + -

BackJunior is where he wanted, but didn't think it possible (cont'd)

"He's always just had that sort of been that guy that would go out of his way to help other people. ... It's a huge heart he has. I want that to rub off on me a little bit.

Before he agreed to come on board at Hendrick, though, Earnhardt said he entertained strong overtures from Joe Gibbs Racing and Richard Childress Racing. He said both of their operations -- and potential offers -- also were enticing.

"I listened to Joe and Richard. It was really, really tough because there wasn't a wrong answer," Earnhardt said. "[It was] even harder to have to tell them after I made my decision because I had so much respect for them and it matters to me how they feel about me. I made the decision I wanted to make. I can live with that. This is exactly what I wanted to do."

Like Hendrick, Childress told Earnhardt prior to his final decision that he would support him in whatever he decided to do. Dale Earnhardt won six of his seven driver championships while driving for Childress, whom the younger Earnhardt has described as a very close friend of the family, like an uncle.

"Obviously he wanted me to come drive for him. That would have been a very exciting program to be a part of," Earnhardt said.

But in the end, like in so many recent Nextel Cup events, Hendrick Motorsports was in the lead pretty much from start to finish in the race for Earnhardt's services.

"For me, I've always daydreamed about driving for Rick since I started to drive racecars. You have daydreams. It was sort of like when I was a little kid wanting to be a [Washington] Redskin," Earnhardt said. "I guess if I had my choice in a perfect world, he was kind of always in the lead. I wanted to give those other guys an opportunity ... They really wanted to talk to me and I wanted to give them that opportunity to get across the table what they wanted to. I felt like my mind could be changed, or I wouldn't have sat down with them."

At first, though, it didn't appear there was any way it would happen. Contract extension talks between Busch and Hendrick didn't begin to completely stall until about the Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day, suddenly cracking the door at Hendrick Inn open ever so slightly for Earnhardt. It was all he needed to bust on through.

"I didn't think he had a chance," Earnhardt said. "I felt I basically had to look elsewhere because of him having four teams. He told me probably the only thing he could do was help me with a team I had here, but I didn't think a satellite team would be that competitive even with help from Rick. So I told him that was a last resort. So we went and talked to the other guys and listened to what they had to say. Then what happened with Kyle opened the door for me."

The End

Previous12Next

Also

Most Popular

Remember To Check Out

All External sites will open in a new browser window. NASCAR.COM does not endorse external sites.
© 2001-2012 NASCAR | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
NASCAR.COM is part of Turner - SI Digital, part of the Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital Network.