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What if this picture portrayed some rookie driver congratulating Dale Jr. in the 24?

When it comes to Junior no scenario is out of bounds

By David Caraviello, NASCAR.COM
May 17, 2007
11:07 AM EDT
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Here's how it's going to happen. Cerberus, the capital management company that now owns most of Chrysler, slashes the manufacturer's racing budget and sends Dodge teams looking elsewhere for support. After high-level talks with Anheuser-Busch, Ray Evernham writes big checks to Teresa and Dale Earnhardt Jr., and unveils a fleet of Chevrolets sponsored by Budweiser, Bud Light and Bud Select bearing the numbers 8, 9 and 10.

Well, maybe not. But anything seems plausible these days, as the most popular driver in NASCAR looks for a new home. Earnhardt's announcement last week that he will leave Dale Earnhardt Inc. at the end of this season was the first domino to fall in what will surely be a series of them, the sound echoing to all corners of the Nextel Cup garage. It's a charged atmosphere -- one manufacturer struggling, another recently sold, teams seeking to form alliances, drivers in trouble or looking to move. And in the middle of it all is Earnhardt, whom every car owner is interested in, whether they'll admit it or not.

Anything can happen. When a 17-time race winner with the marketing potential and fan base of Earnhardt announces himself a free agent, nothing is sacred. Some teams have conflicts with his sponsor or his choice of car manufacturer. One, Joe Gibbs Racing, has stated a moral objection to the Budweiser logos that will surely follow Junior wherever he goes. Right now everyone is posturing, trying to say the right things in public, trying to smooth things over in their own backyards before calling Earnhardt's people with the pitch.

And the pitches will come, as hard and fast as those thrown by John Smoltz. Richard Childress Racing, the team that for 17 years fielded cars for Earnhardt's late father, seems the strongest early candidate. But so did John McCain once, too. Right now, nothing is out of bounds or out of the realm of possibility. Theories over where Earnhardt will end up waft over Nextel Cup tracks like the campfire smoke at Talladega.

Take, for example, a popular one floating around these days. Earnhardt wants to race for a title contender, and he wants to stay in Chevrolets. That would appear to limit him to three choices -- Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing and RCR. Hendrick is the big dog in the sport right now, its current streak of seven wins in eight races placing it clearly above the rest of the field. If he wants to race for a team that's won six championships and rarely has a down year, that's the place to go.

But Hendrick also has four cars, the maximum allowed under an impending NASCAR limit, and no room to add a fifth for Earnhardt. Ah, but if they want him bad enough, they'll make room. So Hendrick shifts the frustrated and snake bitten Casey Mears off to one of its satellite operations such as Haas CNC Racing, which relies on Hendrick for engines and technical support. Suddenly there's an opening, and the most powerful organization in NASCAR only becomes more powerful. (Continued)

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