Dale Earnhardt Jr.

























































































Dale Earnhardt Jr.

DaleJrRVA2018.png
Earnhardt Jr. at Richmond Raceway in 2018

Born Ralph Dale Earnhardt Jr.
(1974-10-10) October 10, 1974 (age 44)
Kannapolis, North Carolina
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight 165 lb (75 kg)
Achievements
1998, 1999 Busch Series Champion
2004, 2014 Daytona 500 Winner
2000 The Winston Winner
2003, 2008 Budweiser Shootout Winner
2003, 2004, 2008, 2015, 2016 Can-Am Duel Winner,
4 straight wins at Talladega Superspeedway (Fall 2001-Spring 2003), 5 time NASCAR Xfinity Series Champion as owner: 2004, 2005, 2014, 2017, 2018
Awards
Bill France Award of Excellence (2017)
Texas Motorsports Hall of Fame inductee (2017)
2003–2017 Monster Energy Cup Series Most Popular Driver (15 times)
1999 Busch Series Most Popular Driver

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career
631 races run over 19 years

2017 position
21st
Best finish 3rd (2003)
First race
1999 Coca-Cola 600 (Charlotte)
Last race
2017 Ford EcoBoost 400 (Homestead)
First win
2000 DirecTV 500 (Texas)
Last win
2015 Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 (Phoenix)











Wins Top tens Poles
26 260 15


NASCAR Xfinity Series career
140 races run over 22 years
Car no., team No. 88 (JR Motorsports)

2018 position
50th
Best finish 1st (1998, 1999)
First race
1996 Carolina Pride / Red Dog 250 (Myrtle Beach)
Last race
2018 Go Bowling 250 (Richmond)
First win
1998 Coca-Cola 300 (Texas)
Last win
2016 ToyotaCare 250 (Richmond)











Wins Top tens Poles
24 92 10

Statistics current as of November 17, 2018.

Ralph Dale Earnhardt Jr. (born October 10, 1974), known professionally as Dale Earnhardt Jr., Dale Jr., or just Junior, is an American semi-retired professional stock car racing driver, team owner, and is currently an analyst for NASCAR on NBC. He currently competes part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 88 Chevrolet Camaro for his team JR Motorsports. He is the son of NASCAR Hall of Fame member Dale Earnhardt Sr. He is also the grandson of both NASCAR driver Ralph Earnhardt and stock car fabricator Robert Gee, the brother of Kelley Earnhardt-Miller, the half-brother of former driver Kerry Earnhardt, the uncle of driver Jeffrey Earnhardt, the stepson of Teresa Earnhardt, and the older half-brother of Taylor Nicole Earnhardt-Putnam.


Earnhardt's success at Daytona International Speedway throughout his career has earned him the nickname "Pied Piper" of Daytona.[1] He is a two-time Daytona 500 winner, having won the races exactly 10 years apart (2004 and 2014), and has won the Most Popular Driver Award fifteen times (consecutively from 2003–2017).[2] He has an estimated net worth of $400 million.


After driving the No. 8 Chevrolet for Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI), his father's team in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, for much of his early Cup career, he moved to Hendrick Motorsports to drive the No. 88 in 2008. He remained with HMS until his retirement in 2017. Earnhardt retired with 26 wins in the Cup Series, a total which put him in the top 40 in NASCAR history.




Contents






  • 1 Racing career


    • 1.1 Early life and career


    • 1.2 2000


    • 1.3 2001


    • 1.4 2002–03


    • 1.5 2004–06


    • 1.6 2007


    • 1.7 Move to Hendrick Motorsports


    • 1.8 2008


    • 1.9 2009


    • 1.10 2010


    • 1.11 2011


    • 1.12 2012


      • 1.12.1 Sidelined by a concussion




    • 1.13 2013


    • 1.14 2014


    • 1.15 2015


    • 1.16 2016


      • 1.16.1 Missing races due to concussions




    • 1.17 2017: Final year


      • 1.17.1 2018




    • 1.18 Other racing




  • 2 Team ownership


    • 2.1 JR Motorsports


    • 2.2 Chance 2 Motorsports




  • 3 Broadcasting career


  • 4 Business interests


  • 5 In popular media


    • 5.1 Films


    • 5.2 Television


    • 5.3 Voice acting


    • 5.4 Music


      • 5.4.1 Music video appearances




    • 5.5 Radio


    • 5.6 Video games




  • 6 Politics


  • 7 Personal life


  • 8 Racing record


    • 8.1 NASCAR


      • 8.1.1 Monster Energy Cup Series


        • 8.1.1.1 Daytona 500




      • 8.1.2 Xfinity Series




    • 8.2 International Race of Champions


    • 8.3 24 Hours of Daytona




  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





Racing career



Early life and career


Dale Earnhardt Jr. was born and raised in Kannapolis, North Carolina, the son of Brenda Lorraine (née Gee; born January 2, 1952) and Dale Earnhardt Sr.[3] His maternal grandfather, Robert Gee Sr., was a NASCAR car builder. He has an elder sister, Kelley; an elder half-brother, Kerry, from his father's first marriage; and a younger half-sister, Taylor Earnhardt-Putnam, from his father's third marriage. Earnhardt Jr. is of part German ancestry.[3] His parents divorced shortly after he was born, and he and Kelley lived with Brenda until their house was destroyed in a fire when he was six years old. As Brenda had no financial support after the fire, she gave up custody of the two children to Earnhardt Sr. prior to his marriage to Teresa Houston. During Earnhardt Jr.'s childhood, Kelley took care of him while their father and Teresa were busy with the race seasons. When he became a delinquent at the age of 12, he was sent by his father and Teresa to a military school; three weeks later, Kelley quit high school to join him.[4][5]


Earnhardt Jr. attended the high performance driving school run by Andy Hillenburg[6] and began his racing career at the late age of 17 with his father, competing in the Street Stock division at Concord, North Carolina's Motorsport Park. His first race car was a 1979 Monte Carlo that he co-owned with Kerry. By age 19, after two seasons of driving Street Stock Division, Earnhardt Jr. had honed his driving abilities to the point of joining the Late Model Stock Car Division. He competed on the North and South Carolina short tracks driving a No. 3 Chevrolet. While he did run various tracks during this time, Earnhardt Jr. primarily focused his efforts at the Myrtle Beach Speedway in South Carolina and the East Carolina Motor Speedway in Robersonville, North Carolina, where he captured the pole for the Greenville Merchants 300 on October 28, 1994. There, he developed an in-depth knowledge of chassis setup and car preparation, while racing against his siblings. He worked at his father's dealership as a mechanic while he went to Mitchell Community College to earn an associate degree in automotive technology.[7]


Earnhardt Jr. ran nine Busch Series races between 1996 and 1997 for Dale Earnhardt, Inc., and Ed Whitaker, respectively, before driving for his father's team in the Busch Series full-time in 1998, in which he started the season with an amazing blowover after contact with Dick Trickle and Buckshot Jones at Daytona, on the same weekend that his father had his first and only Daytona 500 win. Earnhardt won consecutive NASCAR Busch Series Championships in 1998 and 1999 barely edging Matt Kenseth. In 1998, he made his first start in the Winston Cup Series, at the exhibition race held at the Twin Ring Motegi in Japan. Also in 1999, he drove in five Winston Cup races in the No. 8 Budweiser-sponsored Chevrolet for DEI, and then in 2000, he went full-time in the Winston Cup series.[8]



2000




Earnhardt (far right) racing alongside Mike Skinner and Jerry Nadeau (left) at the 2000 Coca-Cola 600


2000 was Earnhardt's breakout year in the Cup Series, he competed for the Raybestos NASCAR Rookie of the Year Award in 2000. His primary competitor for the award was Matt Kenseth. Kenseth outran Earnhardt in the season-opening Daytona 500. Earnhardt scored his first win in the DirecTV 500 at Texas Motor Speedway, breaking the record held by his father Earnhardt Sr. for fewest starts by a driver to earn his first victory in NASCAR's "modern era" by winning in his 12th start, and also at Richmond International Raceway. He became the first rookie to win The Winston.


Earnhardt played a part in recreating one Winston Cup milestone in 2000 when he competed with his father and half-brother Kerry in the Pepsi 400 at Michigan International Speedway. That occasion was only the second time that a father had raced against two sons – Lee Petty and his two sons Richard and Maurice had previously accomplished the feat.[9]


Earnhardt ended the year with two wins, three top-5s, five top-10s, and two poles.



2001


In 2001, the major event of the season occurred on February 18, in the final corner of the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. As Earnhardt and his teammate Michael Waltrip raced to the finish line, he finished second to Waltrip. His father had crashed in turn 4 after Sterling Marlin made contact with his left rear bumper. Earnhardt Sr. shot up the track into the outside wall behind Waltrip and his son and collected Ken Schrader in the process. Earnhardt Sr. was pronounced dead at 5:16 pm due to a basilar skull fracture.


In the aftermath, many disgruntled fans sent death threats to Marlin and his family, blaming him for the crash; Earnhardt and Waltrip both requested that fans stopped blaming anybody for Earnhardt Sr.'s death and both the local police and NASCAR investigations into the crash cleared Marlin of any involvement. Earnhardt raced at Rockingham the following weekend, but finished in 43rd-place after a wreck on the first lap that looked eerily similar to his father's wreck just a week earlier. Later in the season, Earnhardt made a comeback, beginning with an emotional win at the Pepsi 400, which was also the first race held at Daytona since his father's death.


Earnhardt had the dominant car of the race, leading 115 out of 160 laps. On the last restart, he managed to make a move from sixth to first place in the span of two laps, with Waltrip holding off the field as Earnhardt took the checkered flag. He won the MBNA Cal Ripken Jr. 400 at Dover, which was the first Cup race following the September 11 attacks as the original scheduled race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway was postponed until the end of the season. After the race, he performed a Polish victory lap while holding a large American flag out the driver's side window.


In the Fall, Earnhardt took his second restrictor plate win as he won the EA Sports 500 at Talladega as a crash unfolded on the back straightaway that caused Bobby Labonte to flip over and also collected 15 other cars. The Talladega victory earned Earnhardt a Winston No Bull 5 $1 million bonus. He was docked 25 points, however, after his car failed post-race inspection. With this win, DEI swept three of the four restrictor plate races for 2001, only failing to win the spring Talladega race. He finished the 2001 season eighth in the points standings with three wins, nine Top 5s, and 15 Top 10s, as well as two poles.[10]



2002–03




Earnhardt at the Pepsi 400 in 2002


In 2002, Earnhardt Jr. had a roller-coaster season. He struggled after enduring a concussion from a head-on collision to the outside wall at the California race in April – an injury he did not admit to until mid-September. In the three races following California, he finished no better than 30th. However, Earnhardt Jr. rallied to sweep both Talladega races (leading a dominating 133 of 188 laps in the spring race), a pair of Bud Pole Awards and an 11th-place finish in the standings with 11 top-fives and 16 top-10 finishes.


In 2003, Earnhardt Jr. became a true title contender, scoring a record-breaking fourth consecutive win at Talladega, after being involved in a 27-car crash on lap 4. He struggled for most of the race, and was at points a half-lap down, only catching back up to the pack through a caution. The win was controversial because with 5 laps to go, it appeared that Earnhardt went below the yellow line to gain position, but NASCAR ruled that Matt Kenseth had forced him below the line, making it a clean pass.


He later scored a victory at Phoenix in October, recording a career best 3rd-place effort in the standings, with thirteen Top 5s and twenty-one Top 10 finishes. He also took home the NMPA Most Popular Driver award for the first time in his career.[8]



2004–06




Earnhardt in the pits at the spring 2006 Bristol race


In 2004, Earnhardt won the Daytona 500, six years to the day after his father won his only title in the Great American Race (and 3 years after his father was killed in the 2001 race). Earnhardt came very close to sweeping Speedweeks, as in addition to the Daytona 500, he also won his Gatorade Duel and the Busch Series race. However, he finished 2nd in the Budweiser Shootout to Dale Jarrett.


On July 18, during the summer off-weekend, Earnhardt crashed a Chevrolet Corvette C5-R during a practice for the American Le Mans Series Grand Prix of Sonoma at Infineon Raceway. The car slid off course and hit a concrete barrier during warm-up the day of the race, rupturing a fuel line and causing the car to burst into flames with him still inside. He suffered second and third degree burns on his neck, chin, and legs partially due to not wearing a protective balaclava with his helmet. The burns prevented him from finishing two races where he was relieved by Martin Truex Jr. (at New Hampshire) and his DEI teammate John Andretti (at Pocono) in the middle of the races. In the fall, Earnhardt became the first driver to sweep a weekend at Bristol by winning both the Busch and Cup races in the same weekend.[citation needed]




Earnhardt and his team in victory lane


Earnhardt was able to qualify for the NASCAR 10-race playoff, and had his 5th NEXTEL Cup win of the season (a career high) at Talladega. However, he was penalized 25 points for use of an obscenity during the television broadcast, in violation of a new NASCAR rule prohibiting participants from using obscene language[11] (the rule had been created the week after the Daytona 500, in the wake of the Super Bowl half-time show controversy). That incident, combined with two consecutive DNF's in the Chase, eventually dropped him out of the running, and he finished fifth in the 2004 NEXTEL Cup Chase despite a career-high 6 wins at Daytona, Atlanta, Richmond, Bristol, Talladega and defending his fall win at Phoenix (though under the non-Chase points system, Earnhardt would have tied his third-place points finish of the previous year). He closed off the 2004 season with 6 wins, sixteen Top 5s, and twenty-one Top 10 finishes. He also picked up his 2nd consecutive Most Popular Driver Award.[citation needed]


At the close of the 2004 season, it was revealed that Tony Eury Sr. would be promoted to the team manager position for the DEI corporation, while Tony Eury Jr. became the crew chief for Michael Waltrip for the 2005 season. Peter Rondeau, a Chance 2 employee who also helped Earnhardt win the Busch Series race at Bristol in August, became the crew chief for Earnhardt in 2005. Rondeau served as Earnhardt's crew chief until the Coca Cola 600 weekend, when he was replaced with DEI chief engineer Steve Hmiel, who helped Earnhardt score his lone win of 2005 at Chicagoland in July, when he took the lead from Matt Kenseth on the last cycle of pit stops. Earnhardt was eliminated from any possible competition for the NEXTEL Cup championship after suffering an engine failure at the California Speedway. Earnhardt was reunited with his cousin, Tony Eury Jr., after the fall Richmond weekend, and results improved immediately. Earnhardt finished the season 19th in points. For the 3rd straight year, he took home the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award.




An Earnhardt merchandise hauler


Earnhardt's proficiency as a car owner continued. His race team outside of DEI, JR Motorsports, in 2005 fielded a car in the USAR Hooters ProCup Series, winning once and qualifying for the Four Champions playoff. Mark McFarland moved to the Busch Series in 2006, driving the No. 88 JR Motorsports US Navy Chevrolet, with Richard Childress Racing providing assistance; however, he was fired before the fall Michigan race, the Carfax 250. He was replaced by Robby Gordon and Martin Truex Jr. for the rest of the year. Long-time short track racer Shane Huffman drove Earnhardt's USAR Hooters ProCup car in 2006. In 2006, during the spring weekend at Talladega Superspeedway, Earnhardt and other DEI drivers drove with special black paint schemes on their cars, reminiscent of his late father's famous No. 3 paint scheme. On Father's Day in 2006, he drove a vintage Budweiser car at Michigan International Speedway to honor both his grandfather (Ralph Earnhardt) and his father, who at one point in both their careers used the No. 8 car. After rain caused the race to be ended early, Earnhardt finished 3rd with Kasey Kahne winning the race. After 17 races in the 2006 season, Earnhardt sat 3rd in the championship standings with 1 win, coming at Richmond in May 2006.[citation needed]


During the race at New Hampshire, he experienced the second engine failure of his 2006 season, ultimately leading to a 43rd-place finish. Following New Hampshire was the race at Pocono, where he was running in the middle of the pack when he crashed in turn 2. These two events catapulted him to 11th in the points standing, out of the Chase for the Cup. At Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Earnhardt and his crew made a critical decision to stay out on the final pit stop to get a much needed Top 10 finish to move him up to 10th in the points. He made the 2006 Chase for the NEXTEL Cup after finishing 17th in the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 at Richmond International Raceway on September 9, 2006. He came close to winning at Talladega, and was leading on the last lap when Brian Vickers made contact with Earnhardt's future teammate Jimmie Johnson, sending Johnson into Earnhardt and spinning both of them out. His points position going into the Chase was 6th. He finished the season 5th in the point standings, 147 points behind leader Jimmie Johnson.[citation needed]



2007




Earnhardt turning into the garage at Texas Motor Speedway in 2007




Dale Jr.'s No. 8 Sharpie Busch car at the Sharpie display at the 2007 Ford Championship Weekend at the Homestead-Miami Speedway


Earnhardt began the 2007 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season by finishing 32nd at the Daytona 500 as the result of a late race crash. His first Top 10 came at Bristol Motor Speedway in the Food City 500, where he finished 7th. His first Top 5 came at Martinsville Speedway in the Goody's Cool Orange 500. He led 136 laps and finished 5th. He collected his third Top 10 of the season and his 8th at Talladega Superspeedway with his 7th-place performance in the 2007 Aaron's 499. On May 14, 2007, he was docked 100 driver championship points, car owner Teresa Earnhardt was docked 100 owner points, and his crew chief, Tony Eury Jr., was fined $100,000 and suspended for 6 races due to the use of illegal mounting brackets used to attach the wing to his car. During the April race at Texas Motor Speedway he drove the last 10 laps in the No. 5 car of Kyle Busch owned by Rick Hendrick.[12]


On May 27, 2007, Earnhardt rode a camouflage No. 8 car in the Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day to raise money for the families of military troops. Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Greg Biffle, Mark Martin, Ward Burton, Denny Hamlin, Casey Mears, Shane Huffman and Bill Elliott also changed their paint schemes for the occasion.[13] He finished eighth, after leading with seven laps to go, but he had to pit for fuel and Casey Mears finished with the win.[14]


On August 5, 2007, Earnhardt earned his first pole position in a race since 2002 at Pocono Raceway. Although Kurt Busch won the race, Earnhardt had a dramatic comeback to finish 2nd after spinning out and experiencing shock troubles. Earnhardt led for eight laps before Busch took over.[15] On August 12 at Watkins Glen International, Earnhardt was making the push into the Top 12 of the Nextel Cup standings from his No. 13 position. After being at the No. 2 position during the race, Earnhardt had engine problems on lap 64 and had to end his race day. After the Glen, he tried furiously to reach the 12th spot in standings. However, a resurgence by Kurt Busch and a blown engine during the final race at Richmond ended his Chase hopes. That was his last chance to participate for the Championship at Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI). After the 2007 season, Dale Jr. won the NMPA Chex Most Popular Driver award for the 5th consecutive time.[16]



Move to Hendrick Motorsports


After much speculation, Earnhardt announced on May 10, 2007, that he would leave Dale Earnhardt Inc., the company founded by his father, to drive for another team in 2008. Earnhardt expressed that his decision was based entirely on his desires to achieve his career goal of a Sprint Cup Championship, and his apparent belief that he would not be able to attain that objective while driving for DEI. He said that unless he could gain majority ownership, and therefore control, of DEI, that he was not confident in the organization's ability to field the elite level equipment that would yield the elusive title.[17]




Dale Earnhardt Jr. (left) standing between two different paint schemes for the No. 88 Chevy, with Lt. Gen. Clyde A. Vaughn, director of the Army National Guard, and Rick Hendrick, in Dallas where the announcement was made on September 19, 2007


On June 13, 2007, he announced at a press conference that he had signed a five-year contract with Hendrick Motorsports, replacing Kyle Busch. At the time, Hendrick consisted of Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, and Casey Mears.
One month later on July 13, 2007, it was announced that his long-time primary sponsor Budweiser would not be with Earnhardt when he made the move to Hendrick. Other contractual agreements in place at Hendrick Motorsports are said to have prevented a relationship with Bud.[18]


On August 15, 2007, it was announced that Earnhardt would not be taking his familiar No. 8 with him to Hendrick Motorsports in 2008. His late grandfather, Ralph Earnhardt, used that number, while Earnhardt picked it when he entered the Cup Series in 1999. His father also used No. 8 early in his career. Earnhardt Jr. blamed his stepmother for not allowing the No. 8 to move with him to Hendrick Motorsports. Earnhardt said negotiations broke down when Teresa Earnhardt asked for part of the licensing revenue, along with wanting the number back after he retired.[19] (The No. 8 team, after a successful season in 2008 with co-drivers Mark Martin and Aric Almirola, would end up being shut down in 2009 after DEI's merger with Ganassi Racing.)


Earnhardt moved to the No. 88 car with Tony Eury Jr. coming to Hendrick to remain as his crew chief.[20] On September 19, the official announcement was made that Earnhardt would be driving the No. 88 Mountain Dew AMP/National Guard Chevrolet Impala for the 2008 season.[21]


The No. 88, according to NASCAR archives, was driven by Ralph Earnhardt, his paternal grandfather, in 1957. His maternal grandfather, Robert Gee, was one of the first employees of All Star Racing, initially a Late Model Sportsman (now Xfinity Series) team with Gee as Hendrick's partner, which is now Hendrick Motorsports. Hendrick said about Earnhardt and his uncles, "I can look at Robert Gee Jr., or Jimmy Gee, or Dale Jr., and all I see is Robert Gee. They're the spitting image of him. I go back and look and pictures from when we did things together, and I have to say, I owe Robert a lot."[22] Starting in the 2008 season, Hendrick Motorsports merged its Nationwide Series team to Earnhardt's JR Motorsports, with the cars coming from Earnhardt's shop, which employs his mother and uncles.



2008




Earnhardt addresses the media at Hendrick Motorsports headquarters on January 23, 2008




Earnhardt Jr. and the No. 83 NAVY Chevrolet in the 2008 NASCAR Nationwide Series.




Earnhardt Jr at Daytona


Earnhardt started the 2008 season by winning the Budweiser Shootout a non-points paying exhibition. It was his first race for Hendrick. He led for a total of 47 out of 70 laps, a Budweiser Shootout record. He followed that up five days later with a win in the first of the Gatorade Duels. This was his third career win in the duels, however he was unable to follow it up with victory in the Daytona 500, finishing 9th. Ryan Newman was the winner of the event.


Earnhardt was docked 50 points because his rear spoiler did not meet the specified height in the Nationwide Series. His crew chief Chad Walter was fined $35,000, suspended for 6 races and was placed on probation until December 31, 2008. Team owner Rick Hendrick was also docked 50 owner points along with Earnhardt.[23]


At Michigan, Earnhardt broke his 76-race winless streak, managing to stretch his fuel mileage enough to allow him to win under a caution on the last lap of a green-white-checkered (overtime) finish. He did not find much success after the Michigan win. He then went back to Talladega Superspeedway for the AMP Energy 500 where he was en route to a possible win before being caught up in "The Big One" late in the race. He headed to Martinsville Speedway where he finished 2nd to teammate Jimmie Johnson. He ended the season in the garage area at Homestead Miami Speedway in The Ford 400 after losing his brakes with just a few laps to go in the race. Earnhardt finished the season 12th in points, 557 points behind champion Jimmie Johnson.[citation needed]



2009


In the season-opening Daytona 500, Earnhardt began well, even leading for a lap. However multiple misfortunes, including a missed pit stop and a 1-lap penalty for pitting outside of his pit box, sent him far into the back of the running order. Earnhardt was then directly involved in a controversial crash on lap 124, when, while fighting to return to the lead lap, he came in contact with Brian Vickers while fighting to be the first driver one lap down (who gets a free pass should the caution flag come out), causing a 10-car pileup which included Denny Hamlin, Scott Speed, Jimmie Johnson, Kyle and Kurt Busch, Robby Gordon, Jamie McMurray, and Carl Edwards. Vickers and Kyle Busch later criticized Earnhardt, who denied purposely clipping Vickers. Earnhardt criticized Vickers for blocking him on the inside. When the race concluded early due to the rain, Earnhardt ended with a 27th-place finish. Earnhardt later apologized for his actions but maintains to this day that he never intended to wreck Vickers.


After a blown engine at California and falling to 35th in the owners points, he finished 10th at Las Vegas and reached 29th place in points. He finished 8th at Martinsville. He had a string of poor finishes including 20th at Texas, and 31st at Phoenix after being spun out by Casey Mears. He gained confidence in his team with a very strong performance at Talladega, leading for 20 laps, and finishing 2nd to his protege Brad Keselowski after Keselowski sent Carl Edwards flying into the catch fence in one of the year's biggest upsets. However, two weeks later at Richmond, Earnhardt finished 27th. He was again spun out late in the race at Darlington and ended the race in 27th place. He then finished 10th in the All-Star race at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Earnhardt's poor performance continued as he finished in 40th at the Coca Cola 600 due to an ill-handling race car.


On May 28, 2009, Tony Eury Jr. was let go as crew chief of the No. 88 team. Lance McGrew was named interim crew chief and was scheduled to take over, starting with the June 2009 Pocono Race with team manager Brian Whitesell calling the shots at Dover the previous week.[24] McGrew was scheduled to work with Brad Keselowski at Dover, but after a failed qualifying attempt by Keselowski, was able to take on his duties for the No. 88 team a week early. Dale Jr. managed to finish 12th at Dover for the Autism Speaks 400 with his new crew chief after contending for the lead. At Pocono Raceway, however, he again ended with a 27th-place finish. After the change in crew chiefs, Earnhardt was consistently better, finishing fifteenth at Chicagoland Speedway; however, during that time he also had one DNF at Daytona International Speedway where he was taken out of the race early in a large pileup.


At the Carfax 400 at Michigan, Earnhardt charged to the front near the end of the race and managed to finish 3rd; he also earned his second Top 5 finish this season in the same race. One week later at Bristol, Earnhardt finished 9th in the Sharpie 500, but his bad luck continued at the Auto Club Speedway, when he was involved in a multi-car incident. After a 39th qualifying run at Lowe's Motor Speedway, he said "I'm about to the end of my rope".[25] At the fall Talladega race, Earnhardt had a solid run, including leading several laps, before finishing in 11th place. Lance McGrew had the "interim" taken off of his title, and he continued working with the No. 88 team through the end of the 2010 season.[26] Earnhardt ended 2009 winless, and finished a career low 25th in the standings.



2010


On Saturday, February 6, 2010, Earnhardt qualified second overall for the 52nd Daytona 500 after losing the pole position to teammate Mark Martin. He started 1st in the Gatorade Duel No. 2 on February 11 of that year. He finished 11th in the 2010 Budweiser Shootout after struggling with an ill-handling car for most of the race.


On February 13, 2010, while running in the front of the pack at the Daytona Nationwide Series race, Earnhardt was caught up in a multi-car wreck, causing his car to flip upside down on the backstretch. He walked away from the wreck uninjured. His driver Danica Patrick was caught up in another wreck before Earnhardt flipped. The next day during the 2010 Daytona 500 Jr. made a late charge to the front of the pack coming from 6th to 2nd in one turn but his run was foiled by Jamie McMurray as Earnhardt Jr, finished 2nd. It was his best run all year. His only other Top 5s came at the July Daytona race and Loudon in September. He finished the year with eight top 10s and 1 pole as consistency plagued the team.


On July 2, 2010, Earnhardt raced the No. 3 blue and yellow Wrangler Chevrolet (painted to pay tribute to his father and fans) and drove it to victory lane in the Nationwide Series Subway Jalepeño 250 at Daytona. He finished the 2010 Season on November 21, 2010, ranking 21st. Hendrick Motorsports then did a major crew chief shuffle, pairing Earnhardt's crew chief McGrew with Mark Martin, while Gordon's crew chief Steve Letarte moved to the 88 team, and Gordon got Martin's crew chief, Alan Gustafson. On December 2, 2010, it was announced that Earnhardt won the NMPA Most Popular Driver award for the 8th consecutive time.[citation needed]



2011




Earnhardt at Bristol


He began the season by drawing the pole position at the 2011 Budweiser Shootout, where he finished 19th in the race.[27] On February 13, he earned his first pole position at Daytona International Speedway, as well as his first at a track that uses restrictor plates. Due to a practice crash, he had to start at the back of the field for both the duel race and the 500. He finished 24th in the Daytona 500 after being wrecked with 4 laps to go.[28] Over the next seven races, Earnhardt would achieve five Top 10 finishes, including a 2nd-place finish at Martinsville after losing the lead to Kevin Harvick with 4 laps to go, and a 4th-place finish at Talladega in a photo finish with Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Mark Martin, Clint Bowyer, and Kevin Harvick. Earnhardt came within half a lap of snapping his then-104 race winless streak at the Coca-Cola 600 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway, when he ran out of fuel during a green-white-checkered finish,[29] finishing 7th. The following week at Kansas, Earnhardt finished 2nd to Brad Keselowski. He followed this up with a solid 6th-place finish at Pocono. Over the course of the next three races, Earnhardt would slide to 7th in the Championship points, finishing 21st at Michigan, 41st at Infineon, and 19th at Daytona. On September 1, 2011 Earnhardt announced he had signed a 5-year contract extension with Hendrick Motorsports to drive the No. 88 until 2017. On September 19, 2011, Earnhardt made his first Chase for the Sprint Cup appearance since 2008 at Chicagoland. At the season finale at Homestead, he finished 11th and finished 7th in the final points standings. On December 1, 2011, it was announced that Earnhardt won the Most Popular Driver award for the 9th consecutive time.



2012


Earnhardt started 8th in the Budweiser Shootout, led for several laps, and finished 20th after being caught up in a six-car crash on lap 55 that also involved Matt Kenseth, Joey Logano and Kevin Harvick. In the Gatorade Duel, Earnhardt performed strong, starting on the outside pole in the first duel race. He led a few laps in the early part of the race before finishing second to Tony Stewart after his Nationwide Series teammate Danica Patrick smashed hard into the inside wall in a last lap crash on the back straightaway. In the postponed Daytona 500, he finished in 2nd place behind Matt Kenseth, after passing Greg Biffle on the last lap. At Phoenix, Earnhardt's car struggled most of the race and came out with a 14th-place finish.


At Las Vegas, Earnhardt led 70 laps early but finished 10th based on bad pit strategy. At Bristol, Earnhardt finished 15th following a late race contact with teammate Jeff Gordon, and a speeding penalty. Earnhardt would back this up with a pair of back to back 3rd-place finishes at Auto Club and Martinsville Speedway, leaving him second in the standings.


In the following weeks, Earnhardt would bring a string of Top 10s: 10th at Texas, 7th at Kansas, 2nd at Richmond, and 9th at Talladega, where he led 10 laps. The following week, Earnhardt struggled for most of the race at Darlington, and had to settle with a 17th-place finish. At the All-Star Race, Earnhardt won the Sprint Showdown, leading all 40 laps to race his way into the big event. In the event, Earnhardt won the 4th segment and in the final 10 lap shootout, had to settle for a 5th-place finish. The following two weeks, Earnhardt would post of finishes of 6th at Charlotte and 4th at Dover heading into the summer months. At the newly repaved Pocono Raceway, Earnhardt led 36 laps during the race, but made a late race fuel pit stop from 3rd place with just over 20 laps to go, finishing 8th and standing 2nd in points. At the 2012 Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan, Earnhardt dominated the race, leading 95 laps, and won, snapping a 143-race winless streak, almost four years to the day after his last win on June 15, 2008.[30] Earnhardt would suffer a 23rd-place finish at Sonoma after being wrecked in a green-white-checkered finish, but was still able to cross the finish line intact and on the lead lap, continuing his streak of being the only driver to finish all races on the lead lap. He would back this up with a fourth-place finish in the Quaker State 400 at Kentucky Speedway.


The following week at Daytona, a last lap crash resulted in a 15th-place finish for Earnhardt but still kept his streak of being the only driver to finish every single lap in every race. Earnhardt backed up with a couple of Top 5 finishes, finishing 4th at both Loudon and Indianapolis, where he gained the points lead for the first time since 2004, after points leader Matt Kenseth was taken out in a late race crash. Back at Pocono, Earnhardt was running in the 2nd position, but a break in the transmission sent the 88 to the garage, but he came back out 18 laps down and finished 32nd, due to rain that came and ended the race and a late race wreck involving Jimmie Johnson, Matt Kenseth, and Denny Hamlin. His streak of completing on the lead lap came to an end, but he still maintained the points lead with 5 races until the chase cutoff. At Watkins Glen, Earnhardt had a steady Top 10 going in the final laps but a late race spin resulted in a 28th-place finish, this would drop the 88 team from 1st to 4th in the points.


Returning to Michigan for the Pure Michigan 400, Earnhardt had to start in 42nd place after a crash in practice forced him to move to a backup car. He led for a number of laps mid-race and finished on the lead lap in 4th place. Earnhardt; Ryan Newman; and Kasey Kahne also escaped engine difficulties that plagued Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, and Tony Stewart. At Bristol Motor Speedway, Earnhardt started 16th after a qualifying rainout; he led 13 laps in the race before pit road penalties resulted in a 12th-place finish. The finish locked him into the 2012 Chase for the Sprint Cup, alongside Greg Biffle, and teammate Jimmie Johnson. At Atlanta Motor Speedway, Earnhardt went a lap down early but recovered to earn a 7th-place finish. The following week at Richmond International Raceway, Earnhardt earned his first pole of the season. He would go on to lead 69 laps, but a late race pit stop resulted in the 88 team getting a 14th-place finish, and being seeded 7th in the standings. In the first race of the chase at Chicagoland Speedway, Earnhardt finished 8th despite having to start at the rear of the field due to an engine change. Finishes of 13th and 11th at Loudon and Dover left the 88 team 7th in the standings.



Sidelined by a concussion


On the morning of October 11, Hendrick Motorsports announced that Earnhardt would have to sit out the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte and the Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas due to a concussion from a 23-car crash on the last lap at Talladega on October 7. That weekend, Earnhardt finished 20th at Talladega when he took a hard lick in a crash after making contact with Bobby Labonte. Prior to this, Earnhardt had suffered a concussion during an August 29 test at Kansas Speedway. Regan Smith was announced to replace him at those two races.[31] Prior to the concussion, Earnhardt had competed in 461 consecutive races, dating back to the 1999 Atlanta event. The 2012 Bank of America 500 marked the first race since the 1979 Southern 500 that an Earnhardt had not competed in the Sprint Cup Series as Dale Earnhardt had competed in every race from that one up until his death in the 2001 Daytona 500.[32] On October 23, Earnhardt was cleared for the Tums Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville after missing two races. He started strong in the race, but a late race spin with Carl Edwards placed for a 21st-place finish.[33] His first top ten finish after returning to the track was a seventh-place finish at Texas. At Phoenix, Earnhardt fought an ill-handling car, and finished 21st. At the season finale, at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Earnhardt would finish 10th. This is his first top 10 finish at the 1.5-mile track, and his 20th this season. He closed the season 12th in the final standings. On November 29, 2012, it was announced that Earnhardt won the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award for the 10th consecutive year. This tied Bill Elliott's streak of 10 consecutive wins in the award.



2013




Earnhardt during practice for the 2013 NRA 500 at Texas Motor Speedway




Earnhardt on pit road during the 2013 STP Gas Booster 500 at Martinsville Speedway


Earnhardt started the 2013 season with an 8th-place finish in the rechristened Sprint Unlimited. He qualified 11th for the Budweiser Duel, but he blew an engine in practice, he was forced to drop to the rear of the field. After narrowly missing a 3-car wreck between Carl Edwards, Trevor Bayne, and Regan Smith, he finished 9th. He finished fourth at the DRIVE4COPD 300 after submarining under Alex Bowman's car in a violent last lap wreck.


In the Sprint Cup Series, Earnhardt hit a slight resurgence, and in the first five races of the season recorded three Top 5s and five Top 10 finishes. It began with a second-place finish to teammate Jimmie Johnson at the Daytona 500, Earnhardt's third runner up finish in the 500 since 2010. The following week at Phoenix, he led for 47 laps, but was shuffled back in traffic during a cycle caution flag pit stops, which allowed Carl Edwards to assume the lead while Junior finished in fifth place. This was followed by two more Top 10 finishes: 7th at Las Vegas and 6th at Bristol. At Fontana, Earnhardt started mid-pack and after a couple of mistakes including a lengthy pit stop caused by missed lug nuts on a right rear tire, he came home in 2nd-place finish, assuming the points lead as a result of Brad Keselowski going off pace and falling back. Two weeks later in Martinsville, Earnhardt struggled throughout the race, and spun out after Danica Patrick was hit by Brian Vickers and sent into Earnhardt and ended up finishing 24th, 2 laps down, losing the points lead to Jimmie Johnson.[34]


At Texas, Earnhardt ran near the front until lap 187, when his battery alternator quit and he ended up finishing 29th. At Kansas, he ran near the front until a debris caution happened while he, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and Carl Edwards were all on pit road. Earnhardt would go a lap down, take the wave-around, and finish 16th. At Richmond, he finished 10th. At Talladega, he went a lap down early after some banging with Joe Nemechek. However, with a caution for a crash on lap 43, Earnhardt got the free pass to get back on the lead lap. He made his way back up through the field to the Top 5, but slipped back to 17th at the end.


The following week at Darlington, Earnhardt raced inside the Top 10 much of the night before settling for a 9th-place finish. He was one of only a few cars who were able to avoid being put a lap down by Kyle Busch.


The following week in the Sprint All-Star Race, Earnhardt battled a tight handling car much of that night before finishing 7th. The following week for the Coca-Cola 600, Earnhardt lost an engine and finished 39th, giving him his first DNF since 2011. The next two weeks saw a rebound, with finishes of 10th at Dover and 3rd at Pocono. At the Quicken Loans 400, Earnhardt led 23 laps but suffered an engine failure, and finished 37th in what was the lowest point of the season for the Hendrick Motorsports teams as a whole (Kasey Kahne and Jeff Gordon both had DNFs due to crashes, and Jimmie Johnson cut a tire with 5 laps to go).[35] After the low of Michigan, Earnhardt had a 12th-place finish at Sonoma.


At Kentucky, Earnhardt won the pole and set a new track qualifying speed record with lap time of 29.406 seconds and a speed of 183.636 miles per hour (295.533 km/h).[36] Though he started on the pole, he lost the lead to Carl Edwards early. However, while Earnhardt was leading after the restart from a competition caution (due to a rain delay), Denny Hamlin cut a tire and the carcass came up the track and was struck by Earnhardt's splitter and also by Jimmie Johnson's car, causing significant damage. Earnhardt had to make several charges through the field to salvage a 12th-place finish. He then took an 8th-place finish at the Coke Zero 400. He, Johnson, and Ryan Newman were the only three drivers to sweep the Top 10 in both Daytona races.


Earnhardt then battled a struggling car at New Hampshire, where he finished 14th. After the final off week, he found some consistency with finishes of 6th at Indianapolis and 5th at Pocono, while battling loose wheels and vibrations in a span of two weeks.


The No. 88 team then had two bad weeks, with a 30th-place finish at Watkins Glen due to a late race crash with Kasey Kahne. The next week, Earnhardt blew a right front tire while running in the Top 10. The damage was enough that he finished 26 laps down, in 36th place. This evaporated his Chase cushion, but with finishes of 10th at Bristol and 8th at Atlanta, he was able to rebuild this cushion. At Richmond, the last race of the regular season, Earnhardt only needed to finish 32nd or better to make the Chase. A 13th-place finish did this, and he entered the Chase seeded in ninth place. This was the first time in Earnhardt's career that he had made three straight Chase appearances. In the first Chase race at Chicagoland Speedway, Earnhardt suffered an engine failure, placing him last in Chase competition. He bounced back at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, leading 17 laps and finishing 6th. The result was good enough to move Earnhardt up to 11th in Chase for the Sprint Cup standings with eight races left in the season.


At Dover, Earnhardt won his second pole of the season, setting a new qualifying speed record of 161.849 mph. This was the first time since 2002 that he had recorded more than one pole during a season. During the race, Earnhardt would lead 80 laps, but would finish 2nd to Jimmie Johnson. The following week at Kansas, he finished 8th. Making his 500th Cup start at Charlotte, Earnhardt led 19 laps early, but finished 15th while battling a tight race car. The following week at Talladega, Earnhardt led 38 laps and was about to receive a push from Austin Dillon to overtake Jamie McMurray on the last lap when Ricky Stenhouse Jr. tapped Dillon, causing that driver to spin out and then get hit by Casey Mears, leaving Earnhardt with a 2nd-place finish. The following week at Martinville, Earnhardt earned an 8th-place finish. The next week at Texas, he had a solid night, finishing 2nd to Johnson for the third time in the season (after Daytona and Dover). The next week at Phoenix, Earnhardt started by being forced to pit with a loose wheel early, putting him a lap down. However, a caution allowed him to use the free pass to get back on the lead lap and salvage a 4th-place finish.


At the season finale, the last 67 laps saw a tight battle for the lead between Earnhardt; Matt Kenseth; and Denny Hamlin. Hamlin won while Earnhardt finished 3rd, giving him his first Top 5 at Homestead. He finished off the season 5th in the points, with two pole positions, ten Top 5s, and a career-high 22 Top 10 finishes.[37]


On December 5, 2013, Earnhardt won the Most Popular Driver Award for the 11th consecutive year, breaking Bill Elliott's record, who scored 10 straight awards from 1991 to 2000.



2014




Earnhardt Jr. at Las Vegas Motor Speedway


The No. 88 team made headlines even before the start of the season. During the regular Daytona Winter test in January, it was announced that crew chief Steve Letarte would step down from the pit box after the season to become a full-time member of the upcoming NASCAR on NBC broadcast team, alongside Jeff Burton and Rick Allen. Earnhardt and Letarte reassured that this move would not interfere from them winning races and competing for the championship at season's end. In the Sprint Unlimited, Earnhardt led for 7 laps, but in the last segment, contact with Marcos Ambrose caused him to hit the wall in turn 1, finishing 9th. In the first Budweiser Duel, Earnhardt started 4th, and led 14 laps, before fading back to finish where he started.


In the Daytona 500, Earnhardt started 9th. His car hung around mid-pack for most of the first quarter of the race. After a six-hour and 22-minute red flag, Earnhardt's car came alive, taking the lead with 70 laps remaining. He led 54 of the last 70 laps and he held off Denny Hamlin and Brad Keselowski to win his second Daytona 500, just 10 years after his first one.[38] The following week at Phoenix, Earnhardt continued his momentum, finishing 2nd to Kevin Harvick. At Las Vegas, Earnhardt gambled on fuel in the remaining 40 laps, but he ran out of gas while leading on the last lap, finishing 2nd to eventual race winner Brad Keselowski. At Bristol, he was strong early, and had a chance to become the first driver since Richard Petty to start a season with four straight Top 2 finishes, until tire problems forced him to make an unscheduled stop, leaving him to finish 24th, four laps down.


At Auto Club Speedway, Earnhardt started 15th. However, on lap 44, his car lost a right front tire and hit the outside wall in turn 2, bringing out a caution, making him one of several victims of tire failures that plagued the race. After being repaired and falling to the back of the lead lap, Earnhardt made several charges through the field to salvage a 12th-place finish, keeping him at 2nd place in the points. The following week at Martinsville, Earnhardt battled inside the Top 5 all day, leading 25 laps, and finished 3rd, giving him his 4th Top 3 finish of the season, and regained the points lead. At Texas, he crashed on Lap 13 and caught on fire. He finished last and fell 5 positions in points and dropped to 31 points behind new points leader Jeff Gordon. The following week at Darlington, Earnhardt raced among the Top 5 all night, and was leading on a green-white-checkered finish, before finishing 2nd to Kevin Harvick.


At Richmond, after the Easter off week, Earnhardt was strong in the race, racing among the Top 3 late, and led 7 laps, but a green-white-checkered, and bad brakes forced Earnhardt to a 7th-place finish. The following week at Talladega, Earnhardt raced among the pack until the middle of the race, when he took the lead. He led for 26 laps, but the last 30 laps saw the car take a conservative pace, and was never able to regain any track position, and finished 26th. At Kansas, for the first night race at the track, Earnhardt ran solidly in the Top 5, even leading a few laps, before finishing 5th.


For the Sprint All-Star Race, Earnhardt started 6th, but battled a tight car all night, and was never a real contender. Earnhardt crossed the finish line 4th. The following week at the Coca-Cola 600, he raced inside the Top 5 for most of the night, before making an unscheduled pit stop for an engine vibration. This resulted in a 19th-place finish, only two laps down. The following week at Dover, Earnhardt raced inside the Top 10 all day, and was running in the Top 5 late, but a mistake on pit road left them with a 9th-place finish.


At Pocono, Earnhardt started eighth and stayed inside the Top 10 most of the afternoon. On the last restart, he was behind Brad Keselowski. In a reversal of the events at Las Vegas, with 5 laps to go, Keselowski tried to move behind the lap down car of Danica Patrick to get a piece of trash off his grille, which caused Earnhardt to slip by and never look back en route to his first victory at Pocono and second of the season. The win marked the first time since 2004 that he had won multiple races in a season. The next week at Michigan, Earnhardt started inside the Top 5, but finished 7th, after several cars had different pit strategies. The next week at Sonoma, saw Earnhardt have his statistical best road course finish, staying in the top ten for most of the race, and finished 3rd. The following week at Kentucky, Earnhardt finished 5th.


Returning to Daytona, Earnhardt was involved in an early 16-car pileup on the front straightaway on lap 20, but was able to salvage a 14th-place finish by the time the race was called for rain after 112 of 160 laps.


Earnhardt was able to bounce back the following week at New Hampshire with a 10th-place finish. With the finish, he clinched a Chase berth, with him being enough inside the Top 30 and having two victories. The following week, he finished 9th at Indianapolis.


The questions referring to the replacement of Steve Letarte were finally answered on July 30, for it was announced that Greg Ives, Chase Elliott's Nationwide Series crew chief at JR Motorsports, would return to Hendrick Motorsports, and take over Earnhardt's pit box for 2015.


Returning to Pocono, Earnhardt started 9th. He ran inside the Top 10 for most of the race, and took the lead from Greg Biffle with 14 laps to go. Earnhardt had built up a lead in excess of three seconds when the caution came out for Kurt Busch's cut tire on lap 154, erasing his lead. He then sweated out a four lap shootout on the last restart to take his 3rd win of the year, marking the first time since 2006 that a driver swept both Pocono races (Denny Hamlin was the last driver). This win tied Earnhardt with Jimmie Johnson and Brad Keselowski for most wins of the season up to that point.


At Watkins Glen, Earnhardt finished 11th, and due to Jeff Gordon struggling, assumed the points lead, for the first time since Martinsville in April. The following week at Michigan, he made contact with Kyle Larson on pit road, but through hard work from his pit crew, was able to lead four laps and salvage a 5th-place finish.


The following week at Bristol, while running 5th, leader Denny Hamlin was wrecked by Kevin Harvick while racing for the lead, which then sent Hamlin's car into the inside wall. Hamlin's car then slid right back up in front of the No. 88 and slammed into the left-side door of the car, and the contact was bad enough to send Earnhardt behind the wall, and suffer a 39th-place finish. This was his second DNF of the year, after the early exit in the spring Texas race.


In the final race of NASCAR's regular season at Richmond, Earnhardt made his first debut with a Nationwide-sponsored No. 88. He raced to a 12th-place finish, after what was a long, difficult night for the team. Despite struggling at the 3/4-mile track, Earnhardt seeded third in the Chase grid, behind series leader Brad Keselowski, and tied with Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, and Joey Logano for 2nd place. He started the Challenger Round of the Chase with an 11th-place finish in Chicago. The following week at New Hampshire, Earnhardt finished a solid 9th-place finish, giving him a comfortable advantage to make the Contender Round after Dover. At Dover, he finished 17th to make it to the next round.


At Kansas, after a 5th-place run in the spring, Earnhardt was looking to repeat this feat to start off the contender with a solid finish to help his chances to extend his run for the championship. After leading 45 laps in the same car he used to win both Pocono races earlier in the season, a cut right front tire resulted in a 39th-place finish. That finish caused him to fall to 11th place in points, 25 points behind 8th place. He came to Charlotte needing a win or a good finish. He led early but around lap 133, his shifter broke due to a vibration (a similar problem had befallen Jimmie Johnson at Michigan in August). He had to make multiple pit stops to fix the problem and never recovered, ending up 20th. He fell to last in the Chase standings, 26 points behind 8th.


At Talladega, Earnhardt started 28th and led for 31 laps. However, a crash on the back straightaway when he was turned by Greg Biffle ended his title contention chances and left him with a 31st-place finish.


Despite being knocked out of the Chase, Earnhardt continued to be consistent. At Martinsville, he led 79 laps and was leading with ten laps to go when a caution came out for a wreck between Kyle Larson and Marcos Ambrose. On the resulting restart, Earnhardt was running 5th. During the restart, he slipped through the pack and overtook Tony Stewart for the lead in turn 4. He continued to hold the lead to win the race ahead of Jeff Gordon. It was Earnhardt's first career win at Martinsville.


Returning to Texas, Earnhardt had a rather average run, starting 12th and finishing 6th. At Phoenix, he had a solid day and got another Top 10, finishing 8th. At Homestead, Earnhardt had a tire problem early. He got the free pass and managed to crack the Top 5 at one point but fell back late to finish 14th. He finished 8th in the final standings with what was the best season for Earnhardt since 2004 with 4 wins, 12 Top 5s, 20 Top 10s, and an average finish of 12.2. For the 12th straight year, Earnhardt won the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award.



2015


At the end of the 2014, Earnhardt Jr.'s crew chief Steve Letarte departed Hendrick Motorsports to join NASCAR on NBC's broadcasting team. Letarte was replaced by Chase Elliott's 2014 Xfinity crew chief Greg Ives. Due to National Guard dropping their motorsports sponsorships, Earnhardt Jr. also got a new sponsor in the form of Nationwide Insurance.




Earnhardt racing alongside Joey Logano on lap 115 of the 2015 Daytona 500.


Earnhardt Jr. kicked off 2015 with a ninth-place finish in the Sprint Unlimited. On February 19, he won Budweiser Duel No. 1 in what was his fourth triumph in the Budweiser Duels. In the Daytona 500, he led for over 30 laps but on one of the last restarts, he made a move that mired him in the middle without help, and fell back to 16th with 15 laps to go, but managed to make his way back to third place by the last lap. This was his fifth Top 3 finish in the Daytona 500 in six years, after his runner-up finishes in 2010, 2012 and 2013, and his win in 2014.


At Atlanta, Earnhardt Jr. came home with another third-place finish and at Las Vegas, he finished fourth, scoring his third Top 5 finish after taking two tires during green flag pit-stops with 30 laps to go. At Phoenix, he had his worst finish of the year, with a last place finish after a tire-blowout. At Auto Club, he finished 6th. At Martinsville, he also ran inside the Top 20 until a tire-blowout made him get involved in a massive pileup that destroyed the front end of his car. Because of this crash, he would go on to finish 36th. At Texas, he narrowly was beaten by Kevin Harvick for second place. At Bristol, he ran as high as third until a loose wheel put him down two laps down. Although he never got them back, he was able to bring home a 16th-place finish only two laps down. At Richmond, he ran in the Top 10 all day until he and Tony Stewart made contact but managed to finish 14th.


At Talladega, Earnhardt Jr. started in row 2. He stayed near the front of the pack for most of the day, taking the lead with 27 laps to go and sailing away to his sixth win at the track and his first since October 2004, tying him with teammate Jeff Gordon for most wins among active drivers at Talladega. At Kansas, he finished third after staying out on the last caution. At Charlotte, he gambled on fuel and barely beat out Matt Kenseth and Martin Truex Jr. for another third-place finish. Earnhardt led three laps at Dover but a penalty for speeding on pit road cost him, although he was able to finish 14th two laps down.


At Pocono, Earnhardt ran in the top ten all day. On a late restart, he and Brad Keselowski cut their tires from incidental contact and a caution flew seconds later when Keselowski hit the wall after making contact with Brett Moffitt. Earnhardt Jr. pitted and restarted 29th with 20 laps to go and salvaged an 11th-place finish. Earnhardt finished second in the rain-shortened Michigan race after he could not pass Kurt Busch on the last restart before the race was called for rain on lap 138. Earnhardt also had another solid Top 10 run at Sonoma, finishing 7th.


Returning to Daytona, Earnhardt Jr. won the pole for the Coke Zero 400 after qualifying was rained out and the starting lineup was set by opening practice times. In the race itself, after enduring a rain delay, he took the lead early on lap 8, and after leading 97 laps, held off multiple charges from Jimmie Johnson and Denny Hamlin in the closing laps to take his second win of the year. The win itself, however, was overshadowed by the last lap crash that saw Austin Dillon's car fly into the catch fence. Earnhardt Jr. also became only the 23rd driver in NASCAR Sprint Cup history to lead over 8,000 laps. He achieved this milestone, when he led 97 laps. This brought his career total laps led count to 8,051.


At Kentucky, Earnhardt Jr. struggled with overheated brakes, and even caused a caution when he brushed the outside wall in turns 3 and 4 halfway through the race. Later, on lap 206, he would be the subject of controversy when he rear-ended Danica Patrick and spun her out, in part because of his faulty brakes. Patrick retaliated by cursing at Earnhardt on the radio and ramming him on pit road. Earnhardt was perplexed with Patrick's reaction, saying "I mean, what am I supposed to say other than the truth? We didn't have any brakes going into the corner. I know better than to run into her because it gets so much attention. There wasn't nothing I could do. I mean, as hard as I hit her, what the hell did she think I was doing? Trying to wreck her? We ain't got no problem. It's not like we were having a problem out on the racetrack with her. It's not like I just drew her name out of a hat and decided she was the one I was going to run into tonight."[39]




Earnhardt Jr. racing at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2015


At New Hampshire, Earnhardt Jr. started 19th and finished 5th.


At Indianapolis, Earnhardt Jr. was running well until lap 147, when he got forced into the grass in turn 1 and spun out. He was able to salvage a 22nd-place finish.


Returning to Pocono, Earnhardt Jr. was involved in a spin on a restart on lap 72 that also involved Kurt Busch. His car did not take severe damage, however, and despite running mid-pack for most of the second half of the race and running 17th with four laps to go, he ended up finishing in fourth place after many other drivers including the leaders at four laps to go ran out of fuel.


At Watkins Glen, Earnhardt was able to start 7th and finished 11th after running in the top 10 all day, but running out of fuel on the last lap.


Returning to Michigan, Earnhardt Jr. started inside the top 10 and was running in the top 3 in the early part of the race. After battling an ill-handling racecar, he was able to finish 10th.


Earnhardt returned to Bristol looking for his first win at that track since 2004. He qualified 26th and after the first caution came out he would pit. During the pit stop the crew would leave a wheel loose and Earnhardt would pit again. After going a lap down multiple times in the race, he got the Lucky Dog and got back on the lead lap. After moving up to the top 5 later on in the race, he would settle for a 9th-place finish.


The series would take an off week and return to Darlington. Again Earnhardt would have to start mid-pack. He would run outside the top 10 most of the day, but the crew would make right adjustments and they would finish 8th.


The regular season finale would take place at Richmond for the 26th race. Earnhardt would qualify 29th and was puzzled in his interview afterwards. During the race, Earnhardt made steady climbs and by halfway had cracked the top ten. Earnhardt would climb as high as 4th and end up finishing 5th. He made the chase for the 8th time in his career and was seeded 6th for the first Chase race.


Earnhardt Jr. opened the Challenger Round with a 12th-place finish at Chicagoland. At New Hampshire, he ran up front for most of the day, but an emergency fuel stop with two laps to go led him to finish 25th, two laps down, and at the bottom of the Chase cutline. At Dover, despite falling back at a few points, Earnhardt Jr. was locked in a battle with Jamie McMurray for control of the final transfer spot into the Contender Round. He almost did not make it into the next round, with his chances being saved thanks to a caution for Brett Moffitt's crash on lap 357 keeping him from having to make a green flag pit stop to replace a loose wheel. On the last restart, Earnhardt Jr. overtook McMurray on the outside, and finished third, clinching the final transfer spot and bumping McMurray out of the Chase.


At Charlotte, Earnhardt Jr was battling for a position inside the top 10 when he made contact Carl Edwards and hit the wall ending up 29th. At Kansas, Earnhardt Jr had to pit for a loose wheel under green and ended up finishing 21st, 2 laps down. Heading into Talladega, he basically needed to win to advance. He led 61 laps, but he slid his tires coming onto pit road and ended up having to take 2 tires instead of fuel only while others were taking fuel only. He ended up on the front row, heading into the only GWC. But a wreck behind him ended up cutting it short and he ended up 2nd upon a review, eliminating him from the championship. At Martinsville, the week after he was eliminated from Chase Contention, he was strong all race taking home a 4th-place finish at the track. At Texas the following week Earnhardt recovered from an early spin to finish 6th. Earnhardt Jr. managed to get his 3rd victory of the season at Phoenix, after the race was called for rain. At the season finale at Homestead Earnhardt crashed early in the race, winding up 40th. For the 13th consecutive year, Earnhardt won the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award.



2016




Earnhardt Jr. at the 2015 Toyota/Save Mart 350


Earnhardt started the 2016 season with a crash in the Sprint Unlimited on lap 23 when Brian Vickers cut down a tire and hit him, damaging the side of his car. This would allow him to finish 15th, four laps down. He then went on to win the first Can-Am Duel race for the second year in a row. In the Daytona 500, he was strong early in the race but with 30 laps to go, he spun off of turn 4 while trying to make a move and hit the SAFER barrier head-on. He would wind up 36th. The following week in Atlanta he was very strong, finishing second. The following week, at Las Vegas, Earnhardt had a car that was solid all day and ended with an 8th-place finish. At the spring race in Phoenix, he led for a good portion of the race but stayed out on old tires during overtime. Because of this, he slid his tires on the start, finishing 5th. At Fontana the next week, he struggled throughout the race in the early stages, even being as low as 34th. But in overtime, he made a charge, finishing 11th. At Martinsville, he spun on lap 5, spending 300 laps one lap down. But in the end, he finished 14th and on the lead lap. In Texas, he was strong late in the race, finishing 2nd to Kyle Busch, who won back to back races. At Bristol, he stalled his car on the start, going 2 laps down. But as the race went on, his car came to life and he finished 2nd.


When the Xfinity Series came to Richmond for the running of the Toyota Care 250, Earnhardt would finish 2nd in the first heat race. In the main feature, he would dominate and win the race holding off Ty Dillon for his first Xfinity win since 2010 and his first for JR Motorsports.[40]


On Lap 50 at the spring Talladega race, he got loose in the draft and just like Daytona he hit the wall, damaging his car. This would result in a 40th-place finish. At Kansas, he started 22nd and finished 15th. The following week at Dover, he would start 2nd because qualifying was rained out, but was involved in a late wreck on a botched restart, finishing 32nd.


In the All-Star Race, qualifying was rained out, so he started 10th due to owner points, but was able to finish 3rd.



Missing races due to concussions


In July, Earnhardt was diagnosed with concussion-like symptoms and would miss the second half of the year as a result. He was replaced by Alex Bowman for the New Hampshire 301[41] and Jeff Gordon at the Brickyard 400 and Pennsylvania 400.[42] On September 2, Earnhardt announced he would sit out the remainder of the season with Gordon and Bowman continuing their replacement roles in the 88.[43] On December 8, 2016, Earnhardt was medically cleared to return to competition in 2017.[44]
Despite missing the second half of the season, Earnhardt Jr. won the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award for the 14th consecutive time.



2017: Final year




Earnhardt during qualifying for the 2017 Toyota/Save Mart 350


Earnhardt started Daytona qualifying 2nd but was wrecked while leading mid-race, and finished 37th. After a string of lackluster finishes, he managed to score a top 5 at the newly repaved Texas. It was his first and only top 5 all year. On April 25, 2017, Earnhardt announced that 2017 would be his final year driving full-time.[45] Earnhardt Jr. failed to make the Playoffs in his final year, posting a 13th-place finish at Richmond, needing a win to make it in. In his final restrictor plate race at Talladega, Earnhardt would start on the pole and he would miss 3 big wrecks in the closing laps to finish 7th. In his final career race, Earnhardt started in 24th place and finished in 25th place. He ended up in 21st in points standings. He ended up with only 1 top 5, 8 top 10s, 2 poles and 7 DNFs. However he did win his 15th consecutive, and final, Most Popular Driver award. Even though 15 straight years of Earnhardt being most popular driver is a NASCAR record, he is second all-time to Bill Elliott, who has 16 most popular driver awards, including 10 straight.[46]



2018


In 2018, Earnhardt ran the fall Xfinity series race at Richmond in a one-off start. After qualifying 2nd, he dominated leading 96 of the 250 laps, but would ultimately finish 4th after a late race restart.



Other racing


On top of his 26 career Sprint Cup regular season victories, Earnhardt has also won 9 exhibition races. He won the 2003, 2004, 2008, 2015 and 2016 Budweiser Duels, the 2000 Sprint All Star Race, the 2003 and 2008 Budweiser Shootout and the 2012 Sprint Showdown. He finished 2nd in the 1999 IROC race from Michigan International Speedway, barely losing to his father. In 1998, he was one of a select few of drivers invited to race in the NASCAR Thunder/Motegi 500 in Motegi, Japan. He achieved a 6th-place finish in this overseas race.



Team ownership



JR Motorsports



Earnhardt is also the current co owner of JR Motorsports, a NASCAR Xfinity and Truck Series team. In 2014, the team won their first NASCAR national championship, as Chase Elliott drove the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts car to the 2014 NASCAR Nationwide Series championship. In 2015, JR Motorsports began fielding a part-time team in the Truck Series, with Cole Custer driving the No. 00 Haas Automation Chevrolet in 10 races. Kasey Kahne also drove part-time in the Truck Series, with the two drivers winning at Gateway Motorsports Park and Charlotte, respectively. JR Motorsports also has a very successful regional late model program, with Josh Berry capturing the 2012 Motor Mile Championship in the Whelen All-American series. Berry was also able to win a second track championship at Hickory Motor Speedway.



Chance 2 Motorsports



In 2003, Earnhardt and his stepmother Teresa founded Chance 2 Motorsports. The company was able to hire Martin Truex Jr. to drive in the 2004 Busch Series season. Truex would go on to win the 2004 and 2005 Busch Series Championships. The company would later endure financial struggles and go out of business in 2006.



Broadcasting career


In 2016, Earnhardt was a guest analyst in NASCAR Cup and Xfinity race broadcasts on Fox and NBC.[47]


Earnhardt will join the NASCAR on NBC broadcasting team as a color commentator for the 2018 season.[48] He made his debut on NBCSN's NASCAR America on March 12, 2018, joining Leigh Diffey, Jeff Burton, and his former crew chief, Steve Letarte.[49]



Business interests


Earnhardt owns Hammerhead Entertainment, a media production company that created and produced the TV show Back in the Day, which aired on SPEED. Hammerhead also produced "Shifting Gears", a show on ESPN2 that chronicled his 2008 team switch.


He was partners with a group of investors who were building Alabama Motorsports Park, a Dale Earnhardt Jr. Speedway.[50] The track was to be located near Mobile, Alabama and would feature stock car racing, kart racing and a road course. This would have joined with his partial ownership of Paducah International Raceway. He has also opened a bar named Whisky River in downtown Charlotte in April 2008; he later opened a second Whisky River in Jacksonville, Florida.[51]




Tallahassee Chevrolet dealership


As of 2013[update], Earnhardt has his own signature line of eyeglass frames, partnering with NY Eye Inc.[52] In August 2012, he entered the automobile dealer business, opening Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Buick-GMC-Cadillac in Tallahassee, Florida in association with car owner Rick Hendrick.[53]


Earnhardt co-owns the Whiskey River Beer and Wings restaurants in Charlotte, North Carolina, and at the Charlotte Airport.[54]



In popular media




A Dale Jr. autograph



Films


He was featured in the video Playboy: Celebrity Photographers (2003) where he photographed The Dahm Triplets.[55] He appeared in the 2006 film Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby. In the movie, he is seen asking Ricky Bobby (Will Ferrell) for his autograph, and tells Ricky "don't tell any of the other drivers." There is also a deleted scene on the DVD where he calls Ricky a "dirty liar" and asks him for money he owed him. The No. 8 car also appeared in Herbie: Fully Loaded in the final race where Herbie overtook him. His No. 88 car also appeared in the 2011 film Transformers: Dark of the Moon as Roadbuster of the Wreckers, a trio of NASCAR stock cars equipped with armor on the front that can transform into heavy artillery tanks (the other Wreckers were based on the No. 42 and No. 48 cars driven respectively by Juan Pablo Montoya and Jimmie Johnson).[citation needed] The Wrecker versions of these cars circled the track during the opening pace laps of the 2011 Daytona 500 (Josh Duhamel, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and Michael Bay were also the grand marshals for that race, in which Earnhardt crashed on lap 203 after making contact with Ryan Newman).



Television


He hosted Back in the Day a show that took a step back in time to races in the '60s and '70s with trivia and information. The show debuted on the Speed Channel on February 6, 2007. He has also appeared in an episode of the TV show Yes, Dear. He has also been on two episodes of MTV Cribs. The first episode originally aired in 2001. The second episode featuring the Western town Earnhardt built originally aired in 2009. His production company Hammerhead Entertainment also assisted in creating a DirecTV special called "Fast Lane For Fun", in which Earnhardt's Whisky River was shown in one episode.[when?] In 2010, he appeared in an episode of Shaq Vs., where he was racing against Shaquille O'Neal.[56] In 2013 Earnhardt made an appearance on the show Fast N' Loud where he requested Richard Rawlings from Gas Monkey Garage to build him a custom-built car for a road trip vacation. He has a home renovation show for the DIY Network called "Renovation Realities: Dale Jr. and Amy".[57]



Voice acting



  • His voice is featured in the video game Scarface: The World is Yours.[58]

  • He voiced himself in Disney/Pixar's movie Cars as a No. 8 car (painted in resemblance to Earnhardt's actual car) named "Junior" with the DEI logo on the hood.[59] The Budweiser logos were censored from the No. 8 to prevent alcoholic advertising to gain a "G" (General) rating.[citation needed]

  • His voice was used for the character Chase Davis in an episode of the Disney Channel's Handy Manny. Chase helps Manny compete in the Wood Valley 500 auto race in "Handy Manny's Big Race".[60]



Music


Until its rebranding in 2015,[61] the band Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. was named after Earnhardt.[62]



Music video appearances


He has made appearances in several music videos, including:



  • "Show Me What You Got" with Jay-Z along with Danica Patrick.[63]


  • Matthew Good Band's video for Anti-Pop, as he is friends with band frontman, Matthew Good.[64]


  • Sheryl Crow's "Steve McQueen" music video[65]


  • Trace Adkins video entitled "Rough and Ready".[66]


  • 3 Doors Down's "The Road I'm On" along with Tony Stewart.[66]


  • O.A.R.'s "Right on Time".[67]


  • Nickelback's "Rockstar".[66]

  • "Warrior" by Kid Rock.[67]



Radio


Earnhardt hosted a show on Sirius XM Radio's Sirius XM Sports Nation called Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s Unrestricted.[68]


Beginning the 2013 season, Earnhardt's Hammerhead Entertainment and his Dirty Mo Radio podcasting network began producing the Dale Jr Download, a weekly podcast which recaps his race weekend. It was hosted by Taylor Zarzour and Mike Davis up until the end of the 2016 season. For the 2017 season Dale Jr and his road manager, Tyler Overstreet replaced Davis and Zarzour as the hosts of the Dale Jr Download.[69] However, Davis continued to make an occasional appearance on the podcast.



Video games


Earnhardt has been featured on the cover of NASCAR-themed video games twice; he appeared on the cover of EA Sports' NASCAR Thunder 2003, and also was voted to be on the cover of NASCAR The Game: Inside Line in 2012.[70]



Politics


In a 2004 interview with Mike Wallace (not fellow competitor) on 60 Minutes, Earnhardt revealed himself to be a Republican and a supporter of President George W. Bush.[71] Despite this, he took his crew out to see the film Fahrenheit 9/11 earlier that year,[72][73] explaining, "I like hearing both sides of the argument. I thought the movie was well done. But my dad was a Republican, and I'm a Republican, and so [it's] not that I came out of there going, 'I ain't voting for Bush again.' That didn't happen, and I didn't expect that to happen. I just wanted to go and enjoy the movie."[71]


Earnhardt is a longtime opponent of the modern display of the Confederate flag at NASCAR events.[74] He wrote in his 2001 autobiography Driver #8 about his experience being asked about the flag in a Q&A at Richmond International Raceway (now Richmond Raceway) the previous year.[74] "I think it means something different to me than it does to y'all..." he responded.[74] He has distanced himself from race fans who display the flag, explaining, "It never really was me."[71] In 2006, Earnhardt told Dan Wetzel of Yahoo! Sports: "We live in a country where you can speak freely and do as you may. I don't know (if) what that flag stands for is the same for me as it is the guy who might have it flying out there. I am not going to agree with everything everybody does all my life. So I don't have any control over it."[75] Following the Charleston church shooting in 2015, Earnhardt told reporters: "I think it's offensive to an entire race. It does nothing for anybody to be there flying, so I don't see any reason. It belongs in the history books and that's about it."[76]


In January 2009, Earnhardt expressed enthusiasm following President Barack Obama's inauguration: "I'm as excited as everybody else is about him. I wish I had been able to go to the inauguration. I would love to meet him. That would be a great honor."[77]


In April 2012, Earnhardt became a partner of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity.[78] He addressed delegates to the 2012 Democratic National Convention at Charlotte Motor Speedway on behalf of the coalition.[79] In 2014, Earnhardt recorded an advertisement for America's Power, encouraging voter turnout for the U.S. elections that year.[80]


In May 2012, Earnhardt singled out Republican Representative Jack Kingston of Georgia while speaking against an amendment to a defense bill that would prohibit the military from funding sponsorships in professional sports.[81]


In January 2017, Earnhardt revealed that his family immigrated from Germany in the 1770s to escape religious persecution, saying "America is created by immigrants."[82][83] In August, he spoke out against hatred, bigotry and racism following the attacks in Charlottesville, Virginia and Barcelona, Spain.[84] In September, after protests of the U.S. national anthem gained traction following criticism from President Donald Trump, Earnhardt expressed support for peaceful protesters, quoting former President John F. Kennedy on Twitter: "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable."[85]



Personal life


Earnhardt is a passionate Washington Redskins fan and has been known to have Redskins scores relayed to him during races.[86][87] "During the race season, [if] I'm under caution, I'm getting stats and numbers told to me over the radio during the race," Earnhardt said. "I've got to know. I can't concentrate on what I'm doing if I don't know what the Redskins are doing. My fans tell me if I lose, it ruins their week. But if the Redskins lose, it ruins my week." Earnhardt once dreamed of playing football for the Redskins, but states that he "wasn't built" for it. "I was 5–3 (5'3", 160 cm) when I got my driver's license at the age of 16," he said, "so I wasn't going to make much of a football player."[87] He currently owns a Learjet 60 private jet with the tail number N8JR.[88]


Earnhardt also owns a graveyard of wrecked race cars on a property in North Carolina.[89] Some of the most notable cars include Juan Pablo Montoya's 2012 Daytona 500 car that collided with a jet dryer,[90]David Gilliland's 2014 5-hour Energy 400 car that was destroyed in a violent impact with the tri-oval wall, and Earnhardt's own 2014 Duck Commander 500 car that was wrecked from incidental contact with wet infield grass on lap 12 that cut a tire.


On June 17, 2015, Earnhardt announced his engagement to his longtime girlfriend Amy Reimann.[91] After winning his 14th Most Popular Driver Award in 2016, he announced their marriage would take place on New Year's Eve.[92] They got married at Richard Childress' Childress Vineyards in Lexington, North Carolina.[93]


In October 2017, Earnhardt revealed that he and Amy are expecting their first child, a girl, due May 2, 2018.[94] Their daughter Isla Rose Earnhardt was born on April 30, 2018.[95]


Earnhardt is a supporter of the Make-A-Wish Foundation and as of March 2018[update] has granted over 250 wishes.[96]


In March 2016, Earnhardt announced that he plans to donate his brain for concussion research when he dies.[97][98][99]



Racing record



NASCAR


(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)



Monster Energy Cup Series




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series results
Year
Team
No.
Make
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36

MENCC
Pts
Ref

1999

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
8

Chevy

DAY

CAR

LVS

ATL

DAR

TEX

BRI

MAR

TAL

CAL

RCH

CLT
16

DOV

MCH

POC

SON

DAY

NHA
43

POC

IND

GLN

MCH
24

BRI

DAR

RCH
10

NHA

DOV

MAR

CLT

TAL

CAR

PHO

HOM

ATL
14

48th
500
[100]

2000

DAY
13

CAR
19

LVS
10

ATL
29

DAR
40

BRI
38

TEX
1*

MAR
26

TAL
42

CAL
12

RCH
1

CLT
4*

DOV
10

MCH
13

POC
19

SON
24

DAY
35

NHA
21

POC
13

IND
13

GLN
40

MCH
31

BRI
21

DAR
11

RCH
13

NHA
31

DOV
16

MAR
36

CLT
19

TAL
14

CAR
34

PHO
27

HOM
13

ATL
20

16th
3516
[101]

2001

DAY
2

CAR
43

LVS
23

ATL
15

DAR
34

BRI
31

TEX
8

MAR
11

TAL
8

CAL
3

RCH
7

CLT
25

DOV
3

MCH
39

POC
20

SON
19

DAY
1*

CHI
11

NHA
9

POC
2

IND
10

GLN
12

MCH
12

BRI
14

DAR
17

RCH
3

DOV
1*

KAN
33

CLT
4

MAR
27

TAL
1

PHO
37

CAR
15

HOM
15

ATL
7*

NHA
24
8th
4460
[102]

2002

DAY
29

CAR
26

LVS
16

ATL
2

DAR
4

BRI
4*

TEX
42

MAR
5

TAL
1*

CAL
36

RCH
36

CLT
35

DOV
30

POC
12

MCH
22

SON
30

DAY
6

CHI
10

NHA
23

POC
37

IND
22

GLN
35

MCH
10

BRI
3

DAR
16

RCH
4

NHA
11

DOV
24

KAN
6

TAL
1*

CLT
9

MAR
4

ATL
5

CAR
34

PHO
5

HOM
21
11th
4270
[103]

2003

DAY
36

CAR
33

LVS
2*

ATL
3

DAR
6*

BRI
16

TEX
2

TAL
1

MAR
3*

CAL
6

RCH
3

CLT
41

DOV
11

POC
4

MCH
7

SON
11

DAY
7

CHI
38

NHA
6

POC
3

IND
14

GLN
3

MCH
32

BRI
9

DAR
25

RCH
17

NHA
5

DOV
37

TAL
2

KAN
18

CLT
9

MAR
4

ATL
6

PHO
1

CAR
13

HOM
24
3rd
4815
[104]

2004

DAY
1

CAR
5

LVS
35

ATL
1

DAR
10

BRI
11

TEX
4

MAR
3

TAL
2

CAL
9

RCH
1

CLT
6

DOV
3

POC
6

MCH
21

SON
11

DAY
3

CHI
22

NHA
31

POC
25

IND
27

GLN
5

MCH
21

BRI
1

CAL
34

RCH
2

NHA
3

DOV
9

TAL
1

KAN
9

CLT
3

MAR
33

ATL
33

PHO
1

DAR
11

HOM
23
5th
6368
[105]

2005

DAY
3

CAL
32

LVS
42

ATL
24

BRI
4

MAR
13

TEX
9

PHO
4

TAL
15

DAR
8

RCH
14

CLT
33

DOV
22

POC
33

MCH
17

SON
42

DAY
3

CHI
1

NHA
9

POC
32

IND
43

GLN
10

MCH
18

BRI
9

CAL
38

RCH
20

NHA
5

DOV
31

TAL
40

KAN
34

CLT
42

MAR
18

ATL
4*

TEX
8

PHO
40

HOM
19
19th
3780
[106]

2006

DAY
8*

CAL
11

LVS
27

ATL
3

BRI
11

MAR
4

TEX
12

PHO
23

TAL
31

RCH
1

DAR
5

CLT
11

DOV
10

POC
14

MCH
3

SON
26

DAY
13

CHI
5

NHA
43

POC
43

IND
6

GLN
18

MCH
6

BRI
3

CAL
2

RCH
17

NHA
13

DOV
21

KAN
10

TAL
23*

CLT
4

MAR
22

ATL
3

TEX
6

PHO
9

HOM
19
5th
6328
[107]

2007

DAY
32

CAL
40

LVS
11

ATL
14

BRI
7

MAR
5

TEX
36

PHO
19

TAL
7

RCH
13

DAR
8

CLT
8

DOV
22

POC
12

MCH
5

SON
13

NHA
4

DAY
36

CHI
19

IND
34

POC
2

GLN
42

MCH
12

BRI
5

CAL
5

RCH
30

NHA
16

DOV
3

KAN
10

TAL
40

CLT
19

MAR
23

ATL
25

TEX
14

PHO
43

HOM
36
16th
3929
[108]

2008

Hendrick Motorsports
88

Chevy

DAY
9

CAL
40

LVS
2

ATL
3

BRI
5

MAR
6*

TEX
12

PHO
7

TAL
10

RCH
15

DAR
4

CLT
5*

DOV
35

POC
4

MCH
1

SON
12

NHA
24

DAY
8*

CHI
16

IND
12

POC
12

GLN
22

MCH
23

BRI
18

CAL
11

RCH
4

NHA
5

DOV
24

KAN
13

TAL
28

CLT
36

MAR
2

ATL
11

TEX
20

PHO
6

HOM
41
12th
6127
[109]

2009

DAY
27

CAL
39

LVS
10

ATL
11

BRI
14

MAR
8

TEX
20

PHO
31

TAL
2

RCH
27

DAR
27

CLT
40

DOV
12

POC
27

MCH
14

SON
26

NHA
13

DAY
39

CHI
15

IND
36

POC
28

GLN
39

MCH
3

BRI
9

ATL
17

RCH
21

NHA
35

DOV
20

KAN
36

CAL
25

CLT
38

MAR
29

TAL
11

TEX
25

PHO
35

HOM
28
25th
3422
[110]

2010

DAY
2

CAL
32

LVS
16

ATL
15

BRI
7

MAR
15

PHO
12

TEX
8

TAL
13

RCH
32

DAR
18

DOV
30

CLT
22

POC
19

MCH
7

SON
11

NHA
8

DAY
4

CHI
23

IND
27

POC
27

GLN
26

MCH
19

BRI
13

ATL
22

RCH
34

NHA
4

DOV
23

KAN
22

CAL
16

CLT
29

MAR
7

TAL
39*

TEX
25

PHO
14

HOM
27
21st
3953
[111]

2011

DAY
24

PHO
10

LVS
8

BRI
11

CAL
12

MAR
2

TEX
9

TAL
4

RCH
19

DAR
14

DOV
12

CLT
7

KAN
2

POC
6

MCH
21

SON
41

DAY
19

KEN
30

NHA
15

IND
16

POC
9

GLN
14

MCH
14

BRI
16

ATL
19

RCH
16

CHI
3

NHA
17

DOV
24

KAN
14

CLT
19

TAL
25

MAR
7

TEX
7

PHO
24

HOM
11
7th
2290
[112]

2012

DAY
2

PHO
14

LVS
10

BRI
15

CAL
3

MAR
3

TEX
10

KAN
7

RCH
2

TAL
9

DAR
17

CLT
6

DOV
4

POC
8

MCH
1*

SON
23

KEN
4

DAY
15

NHA
4

IND
4

POC
32

GLN
28

MCH
4

BRI
12

ATL
7

RCH
14

CHI
8

NHA
13

DOV
11

TAL
20

CLT

KAN

MAR
21

TEX
7

PHO
21

HOM
10
12th
2245
[113]

2013

DAY
2

PHO
5

LVS
7

BRI
6

CAL
2

MAR
24

TEX
29

KAN
16

RCH
10

TAL
17

DAR
9

CLT
39

DOV
10

POC
3

MCH
37

SON
12

KEN
12

DAY
8

NHA
14

IND
6

POC
5

GLN
30

MCH
36

BRI
10

ATL
8

RCH
13

CHI
35

NHA
6

DOV
2

KAN
8

CLT
15

TAL
2

MAR
8

TEX
2

PHO
4

HOM
3
5th
2363
[114]

2014

DAY
1*

PHO
2

LVS
2

BRI
24

CAL
12

MAR
3

TEX
43

DAR
2

RCH
7

TAL
26

KAN
5

CLT
19

DOV
9

POC
1

MCH
7

SON
3

KEN
5

DAY
14

NHA
10

IND
9

POC
1

GLN
11

MCH
5

BRI
39

ATL
11

RCH
12

CHI
11

NHA
9

DOV
17

KAN
39

CLT
20

TAL
31

MAR
1

TEX
6

PHO
8

HOM
14
8th
2301
[115]

2015

DAY
3

ATL
3

LVS
4

PHO
43

CAL
6

MAR
36

TEX
3

BRI
16

RCH
14

TAL
1*

KAN
3

CLT
3

DOV
14

POC
11

MCH
2

SON
7

DAY
1*

KEN
21

NHA
5

IND
22

POC
4

GLN
11

MCH
10

BRI
9

DAR
8

RCH
5

CHI
12

NHA
25

DOV
3

CLT
28

KAN
21

TAL
2*

MAR
4

TEX
6

PHO
1

HOM
40
12th
2310
[116]

2016

DAY
36

ATL
2

LVS
8

PHO
5

CAL
11

MAR
14

TEX
2

BRI
2

RCH
13

TAL
40

KAN
15

DOV
32

CLT
14

POC
2

MCH
39

SON
11

DAY
21

KEN
13

NHA

IND

POC

GLN

BRI

MCH

DAR

RCH

CHI

NHA

DOV

CLT

KAN

TAL

MAR

TEX

PHO

HOM
32nd
461
[117]

2017

DAY
37

ATL
30

LVS
16

PHO
14

CAL
16

MAR
34

TEX
5

BRI
38

RCH
30

TAL
22

KAN
20

CLT
10

DOV
11

POC
38

MCH
9

SON
6

DAY
32

KEN
12

NHA
18

IND
36

POC
12

GLN
37

MCH
14

BRI
23

DAR
22

RCH
13

CHI
17

NHA
34

DOV
7

CLT
12

TAL
7

KAN
7

MAR
11

TEX
35

PHO
10

HOM
25
21st
668
[118]


Daytona 500







































































































Year
Team
Manufacturer
Start
Finish

2000

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.

Chevrolet
8
13

2001
6
2

2002
5
29

2003
2
36

2004
3

1

2005
5
3

2006
7
8

2007
5
32

2008

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
3
9

2009
14
27

2010
2
2

2011

1
24

2012
5
2

2013
18
2

2014
9

1

2015
3
3

2016
3
36

2017
2
37


Xfinity Series







































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































NASCAR Xfinity Series results
Year
Team
No.
Make
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35

NXSC
Pts
Ref

1996

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
31

Chevy

DAY

CAR

RCH

ATL

NSV

DAR

BRI

HCY

NZH

CLT

DOV

SBO

MYB
14

GLN

MLW

NHA

TAL

IRP

MCH

BRI

DAR

RCH

DOV

CLT

CAR

HOM

77th
121
[119]

1997

DAY

CAR

RCH

ATL

LVS

DAR

HCY
DNQ

TEX

BRI

NSV
39

TAL

NHA

NZH

CLT

DOV

SBO

GLN
39

MLW

MYB

GTY
38

IRP

MCH
7


CLT
DNQ


CAR
16

HOM
13

47th
684
[120]

Wellrich Motorsports
7

Chevy


BRI
22

DAR

RCH

DOV


CAL
34


1998

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
3

Chevy

DAY
37

CAR
16

LVS
2

NSV
3

DAR
10

BRI
2

TEX
1

HCY
8

TAL
32

NHA
10

NZH
28

CLT
30

DOV
1*

RCH
2*

PPR
10

GLN
8

MLW
1*

MYB
5

CAL
1*

SBO
13*

IRP
1*

MCH
5

BRI
15

DAR
2

RCH
1*

DOV
8

CLT
3*

GTY
1

CAR
14

ATL
2*

HOM
42

1st
4469
[121]

1999

DAY
14

CAR
35

LVS
6

ATL
3

DAR
11

TEX
10

NSV
9

BRI
2

TAL
6

CAL
3*

NHA
34

RCH
32

NZH
2

CLT
2

DOV
1*

SBO
1

GLN
1

MLW
3

MYB
25

PPR
36

GTY
1*

IRP
5

MCH
1*

BRI
3

DAR
12

RCH
1

DOV
33

CLT
5

CAR
13

MEM
2

PHO
2

HOM
2*

1st
4647
[122]

2001

NEMCO Motorsports
87

Chevy

DAY

CAR

LVS

ATL

DAR

BRI

TEX

NSH

TAL

CAL

RCH

NHA

NZH

CLT
29

DOV

KEN

MLW

GLN

CHI

GTY

PPR

IRP

MCH

BRI

DAR

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

PHO

CAR

HOM

118th
76
[123]

2002

Richard Childress Racing
3

Chevy

DAY
1*

CAR

LVS

DAR

BRI

TEX

NSH

TAL

CAL

RCH

NHA

NZH

CLT
36

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

DAY

CHI

GTY

PPR

IRP

MCH

BRI

DAR

60th
425
[124]

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
8

Chevy


RCH
1*

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

ATL

CAR

PHO

HOM


2003

DAY
1*

CAR

LVS

DAR

BRI

TEX

TAL
1*

NSH

CAL

RCH

GTY

NZH

CLT

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

DAY
1*

CHI

NHA

PPR

IRP

MCH

BRI

DAR

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

ATL

PHO

CAR

HOM

66th
555
[125]

2004

Chance 2 Motorsports

DAY
1*

CAR

LVS

DAR

BRI

TEX

NSH

49th
677
[126]
81


TAL
2*

CAL

GTY

RCH

NZH

CLT

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

DAY
17

CHI

NHA

PPR

IRP

MCH

BRI
1*

CAL

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

ATL

PHO

DAR

HOM


2005

DAY
3

CAL

MXC

LVS

ATL

NSH

BRI

TEX

PHO

TAL

DAR

RCH

CLT

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

DAY
40

CHI

NHA

PPR

GTY

IRP

GLN

MCH

BRI
7

CAL

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT
39

MEM

TEX

PHO

HOM
75th
410
[127]

2006

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
8

Chevy

DAY
17

CAL

MXC

LVS

ATL

BRI

TEX

NSH

PHO

TAL

RCH

DAR

CLT

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

DAY
1*

CHI
15

NHA

MAR

GTY

IRP

GLN

MCH
1

BRI

CAL

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

TEX

PHO

HOM
7
53rd
761
[128]

2007

DAY
7

CAL

MXC

LVS

ATL

BRI
6

NSH

TEX

PHO

TAL
29

RCH

DAR

CLT

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

NHA


CLT
3

MEM

TEX

PHO

HOM
60th
668
[129]

JR Motorsports
88

Chevy


DAY
14

CHI

GTY

IRP

CGV

GLN

MCH

BRI

CAL

RCH

DOV

KAN


2008
5

DAY
3

CAL
7

LVS

ATL
15

BRI

NSH

TEX
7

PHO

MXC

TAL
6

RCH

DAR


DAY
3

CHI

GTY

IRP

CGV

GLN
30

MCH

BRI

CAL

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

TEX

PHO

HOM
3
42nd
1235
[130]
83


CLT
4

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

NHA


2009
5

DAY
7

CAL

LVS
5

BRI

TEX
20

NSH

PHO

TAL
5

RCH

DAR

CLT
13

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

NHA

DAY
40

CHI

GTY

IRP

IOW

GLN

MCH

BRI

CGV

ATL
3

RCH

DOV

KAN

CAL

CLT

MEM

TEX

PHO

HOM
51st
901
[131]

2010
88

DAY
29

CAL

LVS

BRI

NSH

PHO

TEX

TAL

RCH

DAR

DOV

CLT

NSH

KEN

ROA

NHA


BRI
4

CGV

ATL

RCH

DOV

KAN

CAL

CLT

GTY

TEX

PHO

HOM
73rd
436
[132]

Richard Childress Racing
3

Chevy


DAY
1*

CHI

GTY

IRP

IOW

GLN

MCH


2011

JR Motorsports
5

Chevy

DAY
4

PHO

LVS

BRI
3

CAL

TEX

105th
01
[133]
7


TAL
8

NSH

RCH

DAR

DOV

IOW

CLT

CHI

MCH

ROA

DAY

KEN

NHA

NSH

IRP

IOW

GLN

CGV

BRI

ATL

RCH

CHI

DOV

KAN

CLT

TEX

PHO

HOM


2012
5

DAY
15

PHO

LVS

BRI
5

CAL

TEX
14

RCH

TAL
4

DAR

IOW

CLT

DOV

MCH

ROA

KEN

DAY

NHA

CHI

IND

IOW

GLN

CGV

BRI

ATL

RCH

CHI

KEN

DOV

CLT

KAN

TEX

PHO

HOM

117th
01
[134]

2013
88

DAY
4

PHO

LVS
14

BRI

CAL

TEX
4

RCH

TAL

DAR

CLT

DOV

IOW

MCH

ROA

KEN

DAY

NHA

CHI

IND

IOW

GLN

MOH

BRI

ATL

RCH

CHI
5

KEN

DOV

KAN

CLT

TEX

PHO

HOM

103rd
01
[135]

2014

DAY
11

PHO

LVS
4

BRI

CAL

TEX
5

DAR

RCH

TAL

IOW

CLT

DOV

MCH
3

ROA

KEN

DAY

NHA

CHI

IND

IOW

GLN

MOH

BRI

ATL

RCH

CHI

KEN

DOV

KAN

CLT

TEX

PHO

HOM

88th
01
[136]

2015

DAY
10

ATL

LVS
12

PHO

CAL

TEX
3

BRI

RCH

TAL

IOW

CLT

DOV

MCH

CHI

DAY

KEN
8

NHA

IND

IOW

GLN

MOH

BRI

ROA

DAR

RCH

CHI

KEN

DOV

CLT

KAN

TEX

PHO

HOM

91st
01
[137]

2016

DAY

ATL

LVS

PHO

CAL

TEX
5

BRI

RCH
1*

TAL

DOV

CLT

POC

MCH

IOW

DAY

KEN

NHA

IND

IOW

GLN

MOH

BRI

ROA

DAR

RCH

CHI

KEN

DOV

CLT

KAN

TEX

PHO

HOM

91st
01
[138]

2017

DAY

ATL

LVS

PHO

CAL

TEX

BRI

TAL

RCH

CLT

DOV

POC

MCH

IOW

DAY

KEN

NHA

IND

IOW

GLN

MOH

BRI
13

ROA

DAR

RCH
9

CHI

KEN

DOV

CLT

KAN

TEX

PHO

HOM

101st
01
[139]

2018

DAY

ATL

LVS

PHO

CAL

TEX

BRI

RCH

TAL

DOV

CLT

POC

MCH

IOW

CHI

DAY

KEN

NHA

IOW

GLN

MOH

BRI

ROA

DAR

IND

LVS

RCH
4*

CLT

DOV

KAN

TEX

PHO

HOM

50th
51
[140]

* Season still in progress
1 Ineligible for series points



International Race of Champions


(key) (Bold – Pole position. * – Most laps led.)





































International Race of Champions results
Year
Make
1
2
3
4
Pos.
Pts
Ref

1999

Pontiac

DAY
10

TAL
12

MCH
2

IND
11
9th
29
[141]

2000

DAY
5

TAL
11

MCH
8

IND
9
10th
29
[142]


24 Hours of Daytona


(key)






































24 Hours of Daytona results
Year
Class
No
Team
Car
Co-drivers
Laps
Position
Class Pos.

2001
GTS
3

United States Corvette Racing
Chevrolet Corvette

United Kingdom Andy Pilgrim
United States Dale Earnhardt
United States Kelly Collins
642
4
2

2004
DP
2

United States Howard-Boss Motorsports
Chevrolet Crawford DP

United Kingdom Andy Wallace
United States Tony Stewart
519
5 DNF
3 DNF


References





  1. ^ Seelman, Jacob (February 24, 2014). "NASCAR Sprint Cup: Sunday is Dale's Day as Earnhardt Jr. Wins Second Daytona 500". Race Chaser Online. Retrieved February 25, 2014..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Dale Earnhardt Jr. ends full-time racing career with 15th consecutive MPD Award". NASCAR. November 27, 2017. Retrieved November 30, 2017.


  3. ^ ab "Ancestry of Dale Earnhardt Jr".


  4. ^ Bensinger, Graham. "Dale Earnhardt Jr". In Depth with Graham Bensinger. GB Entertainment, LLC. Retrieved September 26, 2018.


  5. ^ Gumbel, Bryant. "Episode 258: Junior". Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel. HBO. Retrieved October 24, 2018.


  6. ^ Greg Roza, Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Nascar Driver, 2006, page 9


  7. ^ James MacDonald, Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Racing's Living Legacy, 2008, pages 34-35


  8. ^ ab "Dale Earnhardt Jr. Drive Bio on Nascar.com". Nascar.com. February 20, 2011. Archived from the original on May 14, 2011. Retrieved May 15, 2011.


  9. ^ Kerry Earnhardt website Archived 2011-10-02 at the Wayback Machine.


  10. ^ "NASCAR Sprint Cup Standings 2001". NASCAR.com. Retrieved September 12, 2012.


  11. ^ Associated Press (October 6, 2004). "Post-Talladega expletive costs Earnhardt". ESPN. Retrieved April 4, 2013.


  12. ^ Blount, Terry (April 17, 2007). "Dale Jr.'s decision to drive the No. 5 scrutinized". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved February 18, 2014.


  13. ^ Fox Sports on MSN – NASCAR – Dale Jr. camo car, other schemes honor troops Archived 2007-05-12 at the Wayback Machine.


  14. ^ "Mears stretches fuel to win Coca-Cola 600, first Cup race". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Associated Press. May 28, 2007. Retrieved November 9, 2015.


  15. ^ ESPN – Kurt Busch makes statement with dominating win at Pocono – Nascar


  16. ^ Mike Irwin (November 29, 2007). "Dale Earnhardt Jr. Wins Fifth Consecutive NASCAR NMPA Chex® Most Popular Driver Award". Motor Sports News. Archived from the original on July 28, 2011. Retrieved May 15, 2011.


  17. ^ "Dale Earnhardt Jr., the Gravest Loss in the History of NASCAR?" Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine.


  18. ^ "This Bud's for ... ? Dale Jr., longtime sponsor to split"


  19. ^ Blount, Terry (August 18, 2007). "Dale Jr.: Teresa Earnhardt made 'ridiculous' requests for No. 8". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved April 1, 2015.


  20. ^ ESPN.com news services (September 4, 2007). "Eury to remain Earnhardt's crew chief; Mears to drive No. 5". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved April 1, 2015.


  21. ^ "Earnhardt 'amped' about car, future with Hendrick". nascar.com. September 19, 2007. Retrieved May 15, 2011.


  22. ^ "Earnhardt and Hendrick Come from the Same Place". NASCAR. Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. June 13, 2007. Retrieved January 2, 2008.


  23. ^ "Post-Daytona penalties handed down" Archived 2008-06-02 at the Wayback Machine. by Jaymes Song, Seattle Times, February 21, 2008


  24. ^ staff and wire reports (May 28, 2009). "Eury Jr. out as crew chief for slumping Earnhardt". NASCAR. Retrieved October 24, 2012.


  25. ^ "Earnhardt Jr. Beyond Frustration". Allleftturns.com. Retrieved October 24, 2012.


  26. ^ Ryan, Nate (October 30, 2009). "Hendrick keeping McGrew as Earnhardt's crew chief in 2010". USA Today. Retrieved April 30, 2010.


  27. ^ Sporting News Wire Service (February 11, 2011). "Earnhardt draws Shootout pole". NASCAR. Retrieved October 24, 2012.


  28. ^ "Nascar.Com". NASCAR. February 20, 2011. Retrieved October 24, 2012.


  29. ^ Caraviello, David (March 6, 2014). "TOP 10 BAD LUCK MOMENTS IN NASCAR". NASCAR. Retrieved March 6, 2014.


  30. ^ "Junior ends skid, wins at Michigan". Fox Sports. Associated Press. June 17, 2012. Archived from the original on June 18, 2012. Retrieved June 17, 2012.


  31. ^ "Junior was caught up in last-lap crash". Fox Sports. Associated Press. October 11, 2012. Archived from the original on October 11, 2012. Retrieved October 11, 2012.


  32. ^ Racing-Reference.Info. "Dale Earnhardt Sr. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Statistics". Retrieved October 21, 2012.


  33. ^ Nascar.Com. "Earnhardt Jr. set for Martinsville return". NASCAR. Retrieved October 24, 2012.


  34. ^ Bruce, Kenny (April 7, 2013). "Earnhardt loses spot atop standings". NASCAR. Retrieved April 11, 2013.


  35. ^ Bruce, Kenny (June 16, 2013). "Trouble snares Hendrick quartet at Michigan". NASCAR. Retrieved June 16, 2013.


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  39. ^ Gluck, Jeff (July 12, 2015). "Dale Earnhardt Jr. perplexed after contact with Danica Patrick at Kentucky". usatoday.com. Gannett Satellite Information Network, Inc. Retrieved July 12, 2015.


  40. ^ Jensen, Tom (April 23, 2016). "Dale Earnhardt Jr. could break out the broom at Richmond International Raceway". Foxsports.com. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
    [permanent dead link]



  41. ^ Staff report (July 14, 2016). "Dale Jr. to Miss Sunday's Race at New Hampshire". NASCAR.com. Turner Sports Network. Retrieved July 14, 2016.


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  45. ^ Albert, Zack (April 25, 2017). "Earnhardt Jr. to Retire Following 2017 Season". NASCAR.


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External links








  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata


  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. driver statistics at Racing-Reference

  • JR Nation


  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Curlie


  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. on IMDb










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