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Earnhardt Jr. standing out for all the wrong reasons (cont'd)
"I go in with a real good attitude," Earnhardt said. "When you go into something with a good attitude, you normally get good results. Dad was real good at it. We always just put a little extra attention into those races and those race cars that we took to those tracks. We spent a little more time with them, and we just take it very, very seriously."
For Earnhardt, at Talladega and everywhere else, there's always pressure to win. His massive fan base expects it. The media is always asking him why he hasn't won more than just once in his last 106 Cup starts, questions that Earnhardt, to his credit, always tries to answer. The legacy of his father and his last name are always there. And now you have the exploits of the other Hendrick drivers the last three races, competitors using parts and equipment virtually identical to those used in Earnhardt's No. 88 car. And it becomes quite clear that the greatest pressure Earnhardt may face -- other than that which he places on himself -- comes from inside the walls of his own shop.

Some think Dale Earnhardt Jr. would be better with a different crew chief but team owner Rick Hendrick says Tony Eury Jr. is the right guy for the job.
Now, that's not to say Rick Hendrick is lording over Junior, demanding to know when he's going to win. If anything, the car owner has been exceedingly patient with Earnhardt, understanding of the burdens that go along with his fame and his last name, showing a touch that's almost fatherly -- understandable, given the close relationship between Earnhardt and Hendrick going back to Junior's maternal grandfather, the great car builder Robert Gee. But like all professional athletes, race car drivers are inherently competitive, and these days Hendrick has looked like a game of "can you top this?" Gordon has won. Johnson has won. Even Martin, years past his planned retirement, has won. In that kind of environment, nobody wants to be the last driver waiting to return to Victory Lane.
But that's the situation Earnhardt finds himself in today. Many members of Junior Nation rejoiced when their man signed with Hendrick Motorsports two years ago. He was finally out from under stepmother Teresa's thumb, clear of all that family bickering over at DEI, racing for an organization that consistently fields stellar equipment and has won more races and championships than any other team competing today. That's all well and good -- if you win. If you don't, and everyone around you gets their turn spraying champagne and kissing trophies, any shortcomings are magnified. And suddenly, you become noticeable for all the wrong reasons.
The breakthrough could very well come this week. Of course, many thought the breakthrough could come at Phoenix, or at Bristol, or at Atlanta, tracks where Earnhardt has been traditionally strong but this time around yielded only mediocrity. Should something go awry at Talladega, everyone will wonder if the breakthrough will come next week at Richmond, a place where last year Earnhardt had the spring race nearly won until Kyle Busch's front fender intervened. But Gordon is the points leader. Johnson is hot on his heels. Martin is storming up the standings. They all have race victories and seem bound for the Chase. Meanwhile Earnhardt is 19th in points, and trying to make something happen. The longer it takes, and the more success his Hendrick teammates continue to enjoy, the greater the pressure becomes.
Surely, Earnhardt knows this. He's a smart, savvy guy who understands the sport and his place it in, who fully grasps the phalanx of expectations pointed at him each time he steps into a race car. And somewhere in there is the driver who won 17 races between 2000 and 2006, who finished inside the top five in final points three times, who showed every indication of living up to the hopes so many had for him. As people like Gordon and Martin and Jeff Burton would surely attest, dry spells don't mean drivers have simply forgotten how to drive. But sometimes, Victory Lane can seem a lot farther away. And it's getting there, not the journey, that ultimately matters.
The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.