RELATED: Junior announces retirement after ’17 season | Reaction to news

 

The pressure was probably there from the first time he slid behind the wheel of a race car.

Before that, he was just "Dale’s kid." No real burdens, few expectations. Hanging out at the track on occasion, playing with the kids of other competitors. He was a child, the son of a racer for sure, but just a child and nothing more.

But once he became Dale Earnhardt Jr., racer, everything changed.

Once he became a racer, he became the son of a seven-time champion, the son of one of NASCAR’s most legendary figures. Once he became a racer, nearly every single thing took on an entirely different meaning.

Expectations didn’t grow, they exploded.

He raced and he won and his popularity grew, in part because of folks that were also fans of his father, but maybe more because he was new and fresh and cutting edge, and younger fans in the sport found someone with whom they could relate.

He listened to Nirvana. He was featured in "Rolling Stone" and "Playboy." MTV featured him on its popular "MTV Cribs" show.

He was the new face for the sport.

And then the horrific 2001 accident took the life of his father and fans of his dad flocked to Earnhardt Jr., hoping to keep the memory of their hero alive, hoping to keep "their" sport alive through the son.


MORE: Dale and Dale: Pictures of father and son


Earnhardt Jr. never, ever discounted those who came to him as fans of his father. He embraced them, understood them and welcomed them. They were old school and as Earnhardt Jr. matured and grew and became more and more involved in all aspects of the sport, he became old school, too.

Maybe he didn’t "become" old school as much as he began to embrace it. You want a history lesson on NASCAR? Earnhardt might not be a professor, but his depth of knowledge and his love of the sport’s colorful past are unrivaled.

Now he’s stepping out of the driver’s seat after winning two XFINITY Series championships in 1998 and ’99, 26 career races in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and two Daytona 500 victories.


RELATED: Recap every win | Full Dale Jr. stats


It’s been an incredible journey for Earnhardt Jr., who in addition to his duties as driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports is also co-owner of an XFINITY Series operation — JR Motorsports — that fields four full-time entries.

But it’s been an incredible journey for his fans as well, who have voted him the series most popular driver for 14 consecutive years.

Most saw him win for the first time in the top series at Texas in 2000 and then weeks later when he got the big ol’ bear hug from his father in Victory Lane after winning the series’ All-Star Race at Charlotte. Fifteen years later he was still winning, and who knows, perhaps his winning hasn’t stopped just yet.

His father’s passing and the eventual surprise move to Hendrick Motorsports, and through it all the winning and contending for wins and his fans yearning and hoping and wishing for a championship that has yet to arrive.

He’s been a kid and a son and a racer and a champion and fan favorite. And now a husband and he’s talked about children so yeah, he may be a father some day, too.


MORE: Dale and Amy through the years | Wedding album


He’s a brand and a spokesperson and there are many in the garage that share their time and talent and resources with those less fortunate, but Earnhardt is among those at the top of the list.

And the entire time he’s let everyone in, let ’em come along for the ride, because the kid who used to change oil in cars at his father’s dealership knows race fans about as well as he knows himself.

He’s traveled his own path and enjoyed a racing career and at the end of the day you look back and say, well, that’s life.

One chapter ends and another begins.

 

Dale Earnhardt Jr. wears his heart on his sleeve, a fact that has endeared him to fans, competitors, NASCAR industry insiders, sponsors and possibly the toughest crowd of all: NASCAR writers.

 

Junior’s announcement Tuesday that he will give up full-time driving duties after the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season brought accolades and emotion from the press corps. Here’s a sampling of what they’re writing.


"As Junior wheels his final laps, we’ll all spend the next seven months recalling the good times — the victory at that 2001 Daytona summer race, for instance, or the way he became the most accessible athlete on Twitter. But let’s not forget one simple fact: 
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is the toughest athlete in sports history." — Jay Busbee, Yahoo Sports | Read more

 

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"There is no question — none — that Dale Earnhardt Jr. will be voted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame during his first year of eligibility. On numbers alone, Earnhardt should get in." — Tom Jensen, Fox Sports | Read more

 

—–

 

"On a personal and professional level, I’m really going to miss covering Earnhardt. There’s something about his combination of candor, wit and humility that makes him the best interview in sports (at least that I’ve seen), and you really can’t replace a guy like that.

 

"Dale Jr. is a normal dude trapped in a superstar’s life, and his fans identify with him because he acts and talks like they would if they found themselves in a similar situation." — Jeff Gluck, JeffGluck.com | Read more

 

—–

 

"Dale Earnhardt, Jr., you continue to defy convention, and define yourself. Born into advantage but forced to earn every opportunity and hone every inherited skill by a demanding father and namesake, you took up the family vocation with the scrutiny that comes as part of the deal. You were Elvis’ boy who took up guitar and knew that comparison was inevitable." –Brant James, USA Today | Read more

 

—–

 

Thanks to Stef Schrader at Jalopnik for bringing back a late-night TV gem: Junior doing donuts on a New York street as a segment with David Letterman. | Read more

 

 

This story will be updated

RELATED: Junior announces retirement | Reaction | Analysis

MORE: Junior as a kid, a son, a racer, a fan

"Dale Earnhardt Jr. is among the most recognizable athletes in the world, unequivocally serving as the sport’s most popular driver for more than a decade. His passion for the sport will leave an impact on NASCAR that will be felt over its entire history. Over his 20-plus year career, Dale has proven himself a leader with a deep commitment to so many areas of the sport — all the way to its roots. We’re excited about the next chapter of his NASCAR career and wish him success for the remainder of 2017."

 

RELATED: Blaney on Dale Jr.’s influence on him


CONCORD, N.C. — High-profile departures have been a recent trend in NASCAR’s top division, a development that began with transcendent four-time champion Jeff Gordon’s retirement at the end of the 2015 season.



Popular three-time champ Tony Stewart followed after 2016, then fellow star Carl Edwards stepped away just before this season. That list will include the most popular of all — Dale Earnhardt Jr. — at the end of 2017, a move he signaled in a Tuesday announcement at the Hendrick Motorsports compound.



But instead of sounding an alarm about a possible void, Earnhardt issued a strong vote of confidence for the sport’s future with positive remarks about the stock-car racing’s recent influx of spellbinding talent, a group of young stars that have the potential to dazzle fans for future generations.


RELATED: Larson, Elliott top point standings



"We definitely have tons of talent. There is no question, but I love the people they are," Earnhardt said, naming 21-year-old teammate Chase Elliott and current Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series points leader Kyle Larson, 24, as two brilliant examples. Being marketable, approachable and having a level of savvy with social media certainly hasn’t hurt.



"These guys are effortless at it," he added. "So once they start to pick it up and understand the power of what they have at their fingertips, the sky’s the limit for NASCAR.  I’m super excited about the future."



MORE: Dale Jr. announces retirement | Vote: Favorite Junior win

Earnhardt has done plenty himself to help cultivate the next crop of stock-car prodigies, fielding JR Motorsports’ four-car effort in the NASCAR XFINITY Series as a developmental program for next-gen stars. Among those is 19-year-old William Byron, a product of the NASCAR Next youth initiative and a top prospect for success at the sport’s highest level.



It’s why team owner Rick Hendrick was quick to echo Earnhardt’s sentiment.



"I’ve never seen so much young talent," the 67-year-old team owner said. "I can remember when the question was all of our drivers are in their 40s or they’re going to be, what are we going to do when they retire? I think we’ve got the answer. They’re here, they’re young, they’re aggressive, they’re fun."


RELATED: Hendrick: Dale Jr. is ‘like a son’ to me


The current group of 20-somethings — or younger — includes a diverse group of Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidates in the Monster Energy Series. Erik Jones, 20, was the first to throw his hat into the rookie race with a full-time jump hitched to a newly expanded Furniture Row Racing operation. Ty Dillon and Daniel Suarez, both 25, followed with their offseason announcements.



Their task now: To become better acquainted with fans who have long-running associations of support for Gordon, Stewart, Edwards and Earnhardt. Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer, said that transition and exposure to a broader stage will come in time.



"It’s something that evolves," O’Donnell said. "That’s you getting to know them more, them being in Victory Lane more. People like winners. … As they win and compete for top fives and are exposed more, we have no doubt that people will see their personalities and then it’ll be up to them as well to take those personalities outside the sport also."


RELATED: Race lineup | Monday schedule

 

When the skies clear and the green flag drops today (1 p.m. ET, FOX), Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers will face a different type of Bristol.

 

Pounded by rain over the past 24 hours, all of the rubber that accumulated onto the track, giving it grip, has been washed away. All of the resin-based VHT applied to the bottom of the track in an attempt to create a full-blown groove on the bottom? Who knows?

 

What we do know: Some drivers and teams will adapt better than others.

 

We studied the results of last year’s four races that were delayed a day due to rain — both Pocono races, the fall race at Charlotte Motor Speedway and the Bristol Night Race, which ran Sunday afternoon rather than the typical Saturday night. Some drivers excelled a day later more than others.

 

With those results in mind, here are our six drivers to monitor today as you watch the race on FOX or as you make final tweaks to your Fantasy Live lineup. | Full fantasy preview here

 

RELATED: Fantasy Live homepage

 

1. Kevin Harvick, Stewart-Haas Racing. He tops the list because of his win last year at Bristol in a rain-delayed race run the following day in overcast conditions … the exact forecast for Monday, as it turns out. Harvick also notched a fourth and a ninth at Pocono. He is one of just three drivers who finished in the top 10 in three of the four delayed races from 2016.

 

2. Brad Keselowski, Team Penske. Two top-five finishes at Pocono plus a seventh at Charlotte in the fall equal a team that understands how to adapt to ever-changing conditions. Crew chief Paul Wolfe is one of the sport’s best strategists.

 

3. Kurt Busch, Stewart-Haas Racing. In addition to winning Pocono last year in the summer, Busch finished 10th at Pocono in August and eighth at Charlotte. Given his Bristol history and a veteran crew chief in Tony Gibson who’s done this delayed race thing a time or two, this year’s Daytona 500 champ makes the list.

RELATED: Go deeper on driver stats

4. Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs Racing. Busch finished in the top 10 in two of last year’s four postponed races — sixth at Charlotte and ninth at Pocono-2. We’re giving him additional credit for his Bristol performance last year, though, where he led 256 of 500 laps but had to take his car to the garage with a broken suspension.

 

5. Kasey Kahne, Hendrick Motorsports. Kahne’s top-10 performances in last year’s delayed races came at the bigger tracks (Charlotte, Pocono), but they were strong finishes — third and sixth, respectively. Plus, his 10-consecutive lap averages during Saturday’s practices were among the best in the field.

 

6. Chris Buescher, JTG Daugherty Racing. Yes, a wild card. Buescher’s Pocono-2 win was based off great strategy and intuition, but don’t discount that he finished fifth at Bristol while driving for Front Row Motorsports.

RELATED: Read more Inside Groove

 

Today’s race at Bristol (1 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) happens to fall during a workday. No worries. We’ve got you covered with a full index of ways to get out of your shift today, courtesy of @nascarcasm and Steve Luvender.

 

Here’s how @nascarcasm suggests getting out of work:

 

1. Tell your supervisor you’ll be taking all five of your lunch breaks for the week back-to-back at 1 p.m. ET.

 

2. Ask Landon Cassill how many retweets it will take for Landon to personally call your boss and inform him or her that you’ll be leaving around noon.

 

3. Claim you have jury duty. If your boss asks "What case?" do not yell "Ol’ Junebug vs. the World’s Fastest Half Mile! Wooooo!" While tempting, that’s a dead giveaway.

 

4. Just find an empty bathroom stall and hang out in there and follow the race on social media. This common practice is known as "shwittering."

 

5. Tell your boss you have someone who will fill in for you while you’re watching the race. When your replacement shows up, explain to your boss that Alex Bowman is very skilled at Microsoft Excel.

 

6. Use the Jeff Gordon method. Say you’ve decided it’s time to retire, then just show up back to work the next day like it never happened.

 

And if you’re looking for excuses that technically aren’t untrue, Steve Luvender has your back.

 

• "I’m sick."
Sick of not being able to watch the race while I’m working, that is.

 

• "There’s been a family hardship."
Your family had to deal with you instead of watching the race yesterday afternoon. That might have been hard for them if they’re used to a few hours of peace and quiet.

 

• "I have an appointment."
An appointment with the TV at approximately 1 p.m. ET, that is. (But don’t tell your boss that part.)

 

• "I’m having car problems."
The problem is that you couldn’t watch race cars zoom around Bristol’s high banks.

 

• "I’m expecting a delivery to my house."
While your boss might expect a major appliance being delivered to your house within a five-hour window, maybe you’re actually having a pizza or two delivered to your house around the end of Stage 1 or so. Technically not lying.

 

• "I’ve been arrested."
Sometimes you have to get really creative. It’s not a good idea to pull out the "I’ve been arrested" card frequently, lest you arouse suspicion of your co-workers, but it’s not lying if you’ve been arrested by the allure of NASCAR.

Four Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series teams will travel to Indianapolis Motor Speedway this week for a two-day Goodyear tire test at the legendary 2.5-mile facility.

 

Drivers scheduled to take part in the test, set for Tuesday and Wednesday, are Brad Keselowski (No. 2 Team Penske Ford), Denny Hamlin (No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota), David Ragan (No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford) and Jimmie Johnson (No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet).

 

The Brickyard 400 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race is scheduled for July 23.

 

"It seems like the last couple of years (Indy) has fairly well stabilized after the grinding that they did," Goodyear’s Greg Stucker told NASCAR.com. "Kind of knocked the edges off the grooves in the surface. But the last couple of years we’ve felt like we were getting to the point that we could look at adding a little bit of grip. Particularly with the move from ’16 to ’17 with a little less downforce."

 

NASCAR’s 2017 rules package created less overall downforce (from 2,100 to 1,600 pounds) on the cars through changes to the rear spoiler, front splitter and deck fin. Modifications to rear steer settings and a new tire rule (teams must start the race using the tires on which they qualified) were also made.

 

While significant, the changes were an evolution of the initial package that debuted in ’15 at select events when the sanctioning body began the move to take downforce away from the cars. Those changes were implemented for all races (excluding superspeedway events at Daytona and Talladega) in ’16.

 

Stucker, Goodyear’s director of race tire sales, said an XFINITY Series test last October at Indy opened the door for a possible tire change in the Monster Energy Series.

 

"When we tested with the XFINITY cars last year in preparation for their new configuration, we actually were running a little bit softer left side. It’s the left side (tire) that we run at Pocono," he said. "So that gave us an indication, ‘Hey, this might be something that we can standardize between Pocono and Indy, give the Cup cars a little more grip.’ So that’s one of the main goals, to look at that and see if that’s a good move for Indianapolis this year and add a little bit more left-side grip."

 

Stucker said the continued evolution of the rules package has not "significantly" impacted tire selection. The big bump, he said, came between ’15 and ’16 as the initial lower-downforce package was rolled out.

 

"Because that was the plan," he said. "The big step from ’15 to ’16 (was) ‘let’s figure out where we land with tires and if we feel like we’re in a good spot, even though we’re taking more downforce off as we go to ’17, let’s leave tires alone.’"

 

But as the cars have evolved and tracks age and undergo repaves, Goodyear continues to monitor the situation and addresses the changing needs.

 

"There are a couple of areas we wanted to work on," he said. "Kansas at the end of last year, obviously we’re going to come with a little bit softer left side (tire), because we felt we were in that position even with the ’16 package as we went to ’17 and less downforce, that was a good move. Obviously Martinsville (was) a different focus, to rubber in the race track. Texas with the repave; Kentucky with a new top coat on now. Las Vegas, trying to generate a little more wear on a surface that generally doesn’t create wear.

 

"We had a few things to work on but it wasn’t a significant move in grip like I would call the ’15 to ’16 move. Overall things are pretty stable and we’re kind of fine-tuning specific race tracks that we feel like we can help a little bit."

 

There currently are no plans to test at Texas, which was repaved and reconfigured prior to this month’s race. Due to time constraints, there was no tire test at the 1.5-mile track.

 

Stucker said officials were pleased with the Texas tire selection, which was the same left-side tire code used by teams at Kentucky in 2016 (Kentucky underwent a similar repave and Goodyear did conduct tire tests prior to that race). The right-side Texas tire featured the same tread compound as Kentucky but with a minor construction change.

 

"You have to be cautious," he said. "With the (Texas) repave, we raced on it right after it was done. It’s not going to change significantly as we get into the fall. I think the race track was very happy. … We certainly are.

 

"Again, hat’s off to the race track and to SMI for doing everything they could to put some rubber down with the Tire Dragon and trying to work the groove in. I think that was huge. And I think that was complimented with a pretty racy package from what we had."

Chris Buescher is a man of the people.

Not only did the JTG Daugherty Racing driver offer up a couple of cookie cakes to his teammates for forcing them to bring out the backup car for the first time in his career, the genial Buescher took it upon himself to help out some rain-soaked fans stuck on the soggy campgrounds at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday night.

With Sunday’s Food City 500 being postponed to Monday (1 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), a weekend of inclement weather put some fans in a soggy position. Buses and RVs were getting stuck in the campground mud, so leave it to the native Texan — who likely has dealt with a flood or two in his day — to lend a helping hand.

 

That Chris Buescher, he’s all right.

Perhaps @nascarcasm summed up the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver’s good deed best.

What channel is NASCAR programming on this week? We answer that and provide all the weekly NASCAR television listings here.

RELATED: Find NBCSN in your area | See Richmond races live

All times ET

Monday, April 24
12:30 p.m., Empty Cup: Quest for the 1992 NASCAR Championship (re-air), FS2
1 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Food City 500, FOX
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Tuesday, April 25
Midnight, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Food City 500 (re-air), FS1
6:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Food City 500 (re-air), FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, April 26

6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Thursday, April 27

6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
11 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series East: Bristol (taped), NBCSN

Friday, April 28
11:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, FS1
1 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, FS1
3 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, FS1
4 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition, FS1
4:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FS1
8 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice (re-air), FS2
9:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), FS2

Saturday, April 29
4:30 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice (re-air), FS1
5:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice (re-air), FS1
9 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, FS1
10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FS1
11 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition, FS1
11:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, FS1
12:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: XFINITY, FS1
1 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series ToyotaCare 250, FS1
3:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Post-Race: Richmond, FS1

Sunday, April 30

1 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series ToyotaCare 250 (re-air), FS1
3:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice (re-air), FS1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR on FOX Pre-Race Show, FOX
2 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series: Toyota Owners 400, FOX
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FS1