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CONCORD, N.C. — History repeated itself for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the Contender Round opener of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
The opening race of this round may have been at a different track this year, (Charlotte Motor Speedway as opposed to 2014’s Kansas Speedway) but the end result, a 28th-place finish in the Bank of America 500, left Earnhardt looking up at 10 drivers in the standings when the afternoon was complete — the same standings position he was in after a 39th-place finish at Kansas last year in the opening race of this round in 2014.
The driver of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet summed up his day pretty succinctly.
“Yeah, I lost count of how many time we hit it (the wall) today,” Earnhardt said on pit road after the race.
Earnhardt’s trouble began on Lap 69 when he made contact with the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Carl Edwards. At the time, Junior was running ninth.
“Carl got a great run on us and drove down into 1 and got into the back of us a little bit. I don’t know if I cut him off or not. He drove in there pretty hard and ran over the left-rear quarter panel of the car and (I) got in the fence.”
Edwards, who went on to score a sixth-place finish, explained his end of things.
“It stinks he ended up hitting the wall,” Edwards said. “I felt like he blocked me real hard the first time and so the second time I got up there when he came down I just held my ground and we got together. He did an amazing job saving it and I have a ton of respect for him so it stinks that it ruined his day. I have to hold my ground when I’ve got my nose in there. Like I said, it stinks that it ruined their day.”
Earnhardt, a two-time winner this year, eventually got into the wall again a few laps later on Lap 75 to bring out the fourth caution of the race. His team went to work on the right side of his car and the crush panel. From there, Earnhardt worked hard to get in position for the free pass and had managed to climb to one lap down.
However, just after the Lap 190 restart, he found the wall once again due to what Earnhardt said was oil on the track — something several other drivers echoed during the race.
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“There was oil down there. It wasn’t speedy dry. I’ve raced this (expletive) for 20 years, I know what oil and speedy dry is. We hit fluid, flew into the freaking wall hard. That’s not speedy dry. There was oil up there.”
He later added, “I hit the (expletive) wall. I know I hit oil. I hit it. I promise.”
Now, Earnhardt turns his attention to making up ground at Kansas and Talladega Superspeedway, the final two races of the Chase’s Contender Round, the same three-race series that eliminated Earnhardt last year. Both of Earnhardt’s 2015 wins have come at restrictor-plate tracks, including a May win at Talladega.
“It ain’t over. Don’t worry about that,” Earnhardt said. “I mean, we don’t have to go to Talladega and be nervous like those guys that are going to have to play it safe. We can just go hard. So, we’ve got a great car that can win that race. We can go to Kansas and run great. I like that track and don’t see why we can’t run great there and maybe win the race there. It ain’t over.”
Earnhardt raced his way into this round thanks to a third-place result at Dover International Speedway in the Challenger Round finale, holding off Jamie McMurray for the final transfer spot. So he is familiar with the ground he has to cover.
“We were in this situation in the first round. We can be aggressive, go to Kansas, run hard. When we’re in the top 10, just inside the bubble, you might not run the high side so hard, so aggressive. You might not drive the whole race as aggressive.
“At Kansas, you can run the top and I like running the top there. I think we can be fast up there and I ain’t got to worry about skinning the side of it, knocking us out of the Chase. We’re out of it. It’s our turn to fall back in and we’ll try.”
And while other drivers earlier in the week indicated they were not looking forward to a Talladega race with their Chase position on the line, the six-time winner at the 2.66-mile Alabama track said he feels the exact opposite.
“I’m looking forward to Talladega even more now.”