Earnhardt, Jr. to Hendrick
Motorsports Press Conference
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I'd
like to thank everybody for being here today. It's
a pretty packed crowd we've got. It's been a
privilege to invite everyone back here at JR
Motorsports for a very special announcement
regarding my racing career. First before I get
started I'd like to take a moment to thank the
fans and the media for their patience and giving
me the time I needed to make this important
announcement and decision.
I've taken this seriously as anything I've ever
done before. And I could say, this process has
opened my eyes to many great people in the sport.
I want to thank each of the team owners who
brought me in, gave me their time and answered my
questions. I want each of them to know that I
value their friendships and extremely appreciative
for their honesty. When we announced a month ago
that we would seek a new team for 2008 we were
immediately asked for a timetable.
I had hoped to have a decision by midsummer but I
had no idea how long this would take since I had
never been in this position. I wanted to take as
much time possible to find the right team, the
team that was right for me as a person and where I
could compete for championships. As I sit here
today, I could say with complete honesty that I
have found and accomplished that goal. We talked
with many teams, but one stood out above the rest
and it became apparent to me that the man � it
became apparent to me the man I wanted to drive
for. I've known him since childhood. He competes
with integrity, and most importantly, he wins
races.
I feel like this decision will give me that
opportunity and hopefully I can give my fans what
they expect and deserve and have a whole lot of
fun along the way. And so today, it is with great
honor to introduce my new boss for 2008, Mr. Rick
Hendrick.
THE MODERATOR: Without understating or over
stating anything, this is huge. Start off by
talking a little about how this evolved and what
this means to you personally and to Hendrick
Motorsports?
RICK HENDRICK: Well, it is a wow day. It is
an awful special day for me, both from a personal
standpoint and a professional standpoint. You
know, in my whole racing career, this day is going
to go down as one that I'm still having a hard
time believing that we've got it done and it's
happening.
It's just good to see the rest of the family here,
Mrs. Earnhardt, Brenda, good to see all you folks.
It's a day that, again, that's an exciting time
for us to be able to bring a talent like Junior
into our camp and to be able to take a lot of
pleasure in trying to win championships for
different people. But this one has got a special
place in my heart. Because Ricky told me about
four years ago, this was going to happen one day
and I said, I don't think it's ever going to
happen. So we are kinds of bringing that to life
today.
I can't tell you how special this is to me, how
thrilled I am and how much pressure I feel to make
sure that � (Laughter) � that he's going to win
races. And I think he said it, too. We're going to
have some fun along the way, because I've known
him since he was a puppy, he and Kelly both. It's
just something that's really special to me.
THE MODERATOR: I know there are a lot of
people that are looking down smile, Dale Senior,
Ricky, Papa Joe all come to mind. Something we've
heard told over the years, and this is a question
for both of you heard bits and piece about a
napkin story and a napkin contract perhaps. Can
each one of you tell each version of the story?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I had been fortunate
enough to be invited on a trip with Kenny
Schraeder around the Midwest to run some dirt
tracks. And it was going to end up at Topeka,
Kansas where Rick was racing and my dad was going
to race with Schraeder. I was running around with
Schraeder for the whole week and we get to Topeka
and that's the first time I had ever met Rick, and
introduced to me and he had, "Have you got a
contract to drive for anybody." I wasn't even
racing, you know. (Laughter) I was not even close.
But I thought it was a joke and he wrote down on a
napkin, wrote a contract down on a napkin and I
signed it. We were joking around. Obviously he's a
pretty smart businessman, and I figured even if it
was a joke � I'd better sign it because it might
come in handy one day. (Laughter).
THE MODERATOR: And that was in 1991. Rick
if you still have that napkin, I've got a perfect
home for it. What's your recollection of that and
what took 17 years to get Dale Junior to own up to
the contract?
RICK HENDRICK: The first thing I was
concerned with was how deal let him go to the
Midwest with Schraeder. (Laughter) I felt like
kind of needed to protect him a little bit.
You know what was so funny about that, as � how
old were you then?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: 15.
RICK HENDRICK: So we did that. And it was
later I think, I don't know what year it was, but
Ricky ran his first Busch race at Myrtle Beach and
I went to the drivers meeting and I ended
upstanding beside Junior and I said, you remember
you signed the contract with me.
He said, "I thought I forgot that. "
I said, no, I didn't forget it. I was just scared
of your daddy. I wasn't going to try to enforce
it. So we laughed and he said, well, I've got to
have a Corvette for all of my team members, I said
that's no problem. He remembered it and I remember
it and we joke about it. Those kind of things are
special memories.
MODERATOR: Did you get the Corvette thing
written down in the contract?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Nah, that napkin was
pretty small but it had the most important stuff
on it.
It was a fun time.
MODERATOR: One of the obvious questions is
you currently have a stable with four drivers and
something has changed, can you talk about how this
came together and what the situation is there at
Hendrick Motorsports?
RICK HENDRICK: Kyle Busch and I, we had
been negotiating an extension on his contract for
the last almost since the end of last year. And
those conversations were moving along and it
became pretty, you know, obvious to me that other
people were talking to Kyle at the time and he was
a guy in the garage area that at his age and his
ability, which is an unbelievable talent; he had
people picking on him just to make sure he was
going to have an opening or an opportunity.
In the last discussions, we started talking around
the Charlotte race trying to get things finished
up and in those conversations, it became pretty
obvious to both of us that maybe a fresh start
might be good for both of us. He had unbelievable
opportunities. You know, I'm trying to negotiate
to get things done. I have an unbelievable
opportunity and so you know with a tremendous
amount of respect and putting a lot of effort into
bringing him into the series, he's got � he's got
so much opportunity. We decided it would be good
for him to pursue those and me to be able to
pursue this opportunity with Junior.
But a commitment from both of us that we're
committed to that 5 car to win the championship if
we can finish the race and concentrate on that to
the end of the year and that's what we intend to
do.
MODERATOR: We see a Hendrick Motorsports
back drop. Have there been decisions made on car
number, sponsor, team alignments?
RICK HENDRICK: Well you folks are so good,
the media. If we move or make one phone call,
you're on it. We've got so much to get squared
away, we don't � we haven't decided on any of that
yet. We made the deal. We know that for the next
five years that Dale's going to be with us and a
lot of things can change before the end of the
year. But the car number, the sponsor, the
alignment, all that, we're going to work on. But
none of that's in place yet.
MODERATOR: Dale Junior, a lot of people may
not realize that the relationship with the
Earnhardt family goes back a long way. Of course,
your grandfather Robert g senior, a very big part
of Hendrick Motorsports, Dale senior even drove a
few times for Robert Hendrick motorsport. Talk
about how much this means in that history and your
recollections of that history growing up.
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well, my grand daddy
worked with Rick and kind of helped Rick get into
racing, or he was there along that � along the way
the entire time. Rick tells a story about him
putting a hood scoop on his Chevalle (ph) when he
was 16 or 17 and that's how they met.
But he was one of the best body men in the
business, if not the best. And he was really proud
of his employment and his involvement at
Hendricks, and you know, that was always apparent
to me as his grandson when I would go over to his
shop, his pride that he took in where he worked
and how his job was and everything.
But my dad and Rick were friends throughout his
career and his life. Daddy helped Rick when Rick
got in the sport, tested his first Cup, shook down
Rick's first Cup car. I think he won Rick's first
race in stock cars at Charlotte in the Busch
Series in 1983, was it?
RICK HENDRICK: Yeah.
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: So there's a lot �
there's a lot of connections there. And me and
Rick have been friends since I was little. He's
always treated me with a lot of respect and been
genuine about my well being and how I was doing
and what he could do to help so that's always been
really cool about Rick.
THE MODERATOR: I was just talking to your
mom before we came down here about having the
chance to deliver parts down to Robert G.'s shop
years ago and how meticulous the job was, so you
could see at that time in a lot of areas, the cars
always very mitt includes.
Rick, one final question from me and we'll open it
up to the audience. This is quite a snag and Dale
junior has without a doubt the biggest brand
recognition as a driver right now in NASCAR
racing. So how does that blend with Hendrick
Motorsports from your perspective and for him to
be able to maintain his market ability and brand,
and from Hendrick Motorsports perspective which
certainly has a huge brand recognition in its own
right.
RICK HENDRICK: Well, I think all of our
drivers are a little different, and it's good
that, you know, Jeff, Jimmie and Kasey are friends
of Dale's. You know, it's important to me and to
Junior to protect his brand and grow it. I work
for Kelly now and she's told me how important that
is.
You know, it's a situation where we want to give
him the best equipment we can. I'd love to � I
told him that our goal would be to go to Daytona
and win the Busch race and the Cup race. I
promised Mr. Earnhardt I would take her to New
York if we won the championship. So I made a lot
of commitments today that I'm going to have to
live up to.
But along the way, again, when we first started
talking, it was, you know, to try to help them and
again, there were conversations with he and Ricky
way back. It's just been neat to see what they
have built, and what he's created. We want to be �
we want to add to that. We want to try to give him
the best equipment that we can and there are a lot
of other things that we plan on doing together.
And I'm just going to enjoy the relationship.
Again, it's not just professional; it's personal.
But from the professional side, I feel the
pressure. I felt it when I drove in here today,
and I know I'm going to feel it when we show up in
Daytona, and I'm committed to do everything I can
to make the entire relationship the best it can be
for he and his family.
MODERATOR: I would say you've done a pretty
good job of living up and delivering on the
pressure you may have felt over the years since
1984 with Hendrick Motorsports.
I know there are a lot of questions from the
audience.
Q. You've won 10 of 14 races, and you've got
the all.time active wins leader and the defending
champion and now you're added NASCAR's most
popular driver. You're starting to look like the
New York Yankees of NASCAR. Is there any part that
stockpiling all of this talent might be bad for
the sport?
RICK HENDRICK: I don't think so. They are
going to race each other. I mean, we've seen it
with our cars this year when you see Jeff and
Jimmie at Martinsville and you hold your breath
that they don't wreck each other.
I think when you have multi.car teams, you try to
get � my job is to get the best talent out there.
You know, I want to protect the brand. I want to
protect Junior's image and who he is, but I want
to give him the best stuff. And he's going to have
to beat those guys anyway. They are going to have
to beat him anyway, no matter if he's with our
team or somewhere else. Once again, on the
racetrack, it's kind of everybody for themselves.
My job is to give them the best equipment to get
that done.
We have been very fortunate this year. I have to
check the horseshoe to make sure it hasn't fallen
completely out every morning, because we've had
some races this year that we could just as easily
be sitting here winning five races, and I know
that. And you're going to be asking me probably
ten races from now, hey, what happened, and we're
going to be doing the same thing. You can't
control people running out of gas or flat fires or
whatever.
Check he can check we are on a roll right now and
I wish it was the last ten instead of this ten but
I guess I should be honored that I would be
compared to the Yankees, I don't know. We're just
working hard. Everybody is working together kind
of let each driver earn his own way.
Q. Dale, it's no secret that your
relationship with Teresa was rough, or has been
rough. Already today we've heard Rick talk about
this personal relationship issue. Obviously every
team has similar equipment, similar cars, so what
kind of a role did the relationship with Rick have
in this decision.making process, as opposed to
picking another team?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: For me personally, it
had a huge impact on my decision. You know, a lot
of people don't know � a lot of people really
don't know a lot of the inside relationships in
the garage, a lot of the friendships that have
been around for years.
Obviously we talked about me and Rick becoming
friends and knowing each other for a while, but
over that period of time, there's been a lot of
decisions that I've had to make and a lot of
things that I've went through where I sought
advice from key people in the sport and he was one
of those guys, and he was just always really
genuine to me. And even when � even when I was
thinking about my decision to leave DEI, his main
concern was just my well.being, and he had no
other motives or any other intentions other than
just trying to help me in any way he could, be as
happy as I could at the end of the day.
So that was one of the things that I never forgot
and I probably will remember for a long time about
Rick, you know, is just that he � you know, when
it comes down to business, you know, he's a smart
businessman, but really and genuinely cares about
the people that are his friends or the people that
he employs and he takes care of them. That was a
big deciding factor for me.
Q. Talk about going into a team that's so
dominant right now, and what input, if any, did
the senior Hendrick drivers have; specifically
Jimmie and Jeff?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I don't feel a whole
lot of pressure. I'm pretty excited about the
opportunity to drive Rick's cars, his equipment,
track performance and track record speaks for
itself so I'm pretty pumped up about, you know,
getting in there and getting my feet wet.
I feel some pressure. I hope it ain't that hard to
get me to victory lane.
So, we have had a lot of success at DEI and like
Rick said, we've got a lot of goals still set for
the rest of this season to pursue and give a great
effort for and you know, this is probably going to
help continue to motivate me for the rest of the
season to run well.
But I'm excited just to get in the car. I don't
feel really any pressure. I feel pretty
comfortable. I think once I get into the testing
mode and all of those things during the off.season,
there won't really be any questions marks for me
or any kind of pressure. I think I'll be so
anticipating it so much, you know, that I won't
even � I'll be anticipating it so much, I don't
think that the pressure is going to get to me.
Q. A lot of your fans would follow you to
the end of the earth, but some of them have said
they didn't know if they would sleep last night
because they were trying to figure out, they
formed their alliances based on ownership camps
and that sort of thing. Can you also add whether
Budweiser is in the picture at all? Are you still
negotiating with them?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well I think that the
fans will makeup their own minds and somehow, you
know, come to terms with whatever decision we
would have made. I feel like you know, once we get
on the racetrack and have some success, you know,
we'll be able to give them what they deserve.
Like I said months ago, I feel like over the years
I sort of haven't been able to give them what I
feel they deserve. I want to get them on their
feet more often than I do. I'm trying to make
those decisions not only for me, but to make that
happen. So I think that they will find a lot of
things to get excited about in the future. But you
know, as far as sponsorships, we haven't � we
haven't began to work around that and see what the
options are and opportunities are for us and
that's something we'll work down the road.
Q. When you made this announcement just a
few short weeks, you said your decision was going
to encompass you, your life, your career, but also
your team here at Junior Motorsports. What
influence will Hendrick Motorsports have on Junior
Motorsports and your Busch Series organization?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: He has expressed to me
that he wants to make a huge commitment to
supporting our programs here, whether it be driver
development or Busch races, for the full team we
have here and also maybe some races for myself or
whatever.
Those are some things we can explore down the
road. But he's shown great commitment to helping
us here and giving us the best opportunity we can
have here to win races as well. I feel like this
is a great opportunity to develop drivers, develop
crew members, future crew chiefs, things like that
and I hope that we can be that kind of an asset to
Rick.
Q. Is there a number that you would prefer?
Are you going to beating on him to give you one
number? And the best analogy we have been able to
come up with is like Bear Bryant's son announcing
he's going to play football at Auburn. (Laughter)
To some fans who have strong allegiances both
ways, do you sort of get that, and this is sort of
like two old warring camps coming together and
signing a peace accord? It's almost like you
should be at Malta somewhere. Can you talk about
that?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I feel like � I'd like
to be No. 8, but you know, we have to obviously
talk to Teresa about that and see what her
interest is there. I'll just go ahead and throw
that out there.
But other than that � (Laughter) might as well. It
work the pretty good sometimes when you let the
media speak for you. (Laughter).
You know, there's other numbers that you know, I
have interest in. We'll just have to sit down. I
want to have � I want to have any hands in the
design of what the car looks like. Rick's said
that I have � that I'll have some ability to, you
know, have some influence on what the car looks
like, the numbers, things like that.
So you know, we'll just have to sit down and see
what looks cool. But as far as � I never really
looked at Hendrick Motorsports as our archrival or
nemesis or whatever you. We competed against them
and they were one of the best competitors over the
years obviously. They set the mark for most, if
not all the teams, at least the Chevrolet teams.
But I always looked at the Fords and the Roushes
and those guys as more of my competitors I had
more interest in out running and beating. But Jeff
has always been a real good friend of mine. Him
and dad were business partners on several things.
Dad helped him a lot coming into the sport so,
Jeff has always tried to � over the last six
years, has always tried to express to me that he's
sort of repaying that favor back to my father by
helping me in a lot of ways. A lot of things
behind the scenes people don't know about.
I helped Jimmie get in the spore � I know he won't
give me that credit. (Laughter) when he came to
St. Louis to drive the Kingsford car, I was the
guy he came to ask how to get around the racetrack
and when he wanted to buy his first motorhome, he
came to me because he never spent that kind of
money before.
We have all been pretty good friends. I'm looking
forward to it. We didn't really get to answer that
question about the teammates that I'll have in the
future but those guys seemed really excited about
it and we'll talk about it and we're pretty pumped
up about us being teammates next year.
Q. A lot of fans like to pretend that you
and Jeff are rifles and you never were. Can you
speak to those fans who are now upset that you
guys are teammates?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well, I think that � I
can't really speak for Jeff, but I think if I know
him like I think I do, that we'll still enjoy � we
do have a personal competition, you know, if you
want to call it a rivalry, fine. But I like to out
run Jeff. Jeff is one of the best that's ever been
in our sport. He's fun to race with, and
especially when you beat him, it's a good feeling.
It's a good feeling when I out run my father or
anyone else of that magnitude, you know what I
mean.
So I think that will still be there. I think that
I'll still have that in me, just as an Earnhardt,
you know, to beat Jeff Gordon. It's always been
there in the sport and I think that will continue
to be there. I think that we can be � you can have
that kind of rivalry within Rick's program within
his business and it would still be healthy. I
think we race � we always race each other with
respect. I've never driven dirty with Jeff and
never spun him out or anything like that. Hit him
on accident a couple of times.
But you know I think that's kind of healthy
because you each � I'll be in equal equipment, so
he can't make any excuses. But we can each raise
each other's game, you know what I'm saying.
(Laughter).
I think we can both challenge each other to be
better race car drivers and improve each other. I
think that will be healthy and a lot of fun.
RICK HENDRICK: I'm liking this already.
This is good. (Laughter).
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I thought about this a
lot. (Laughter).
Q. In the beginning you said it wasn't about
money; it was only about winning championships,
and after seeing you this morning and Kelly and
your mom, have you finally found the peace of mind
that you've been looking for?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well, I have � you
know, I do feel like there's a big weight lifted
off my shoulders. There's still a lot of things to
figure out and discuss with the number of the
sponsors. There's a lot of things � there's a lot
of things I have going on that Rick has going on
and we have to figure out a way to mesh it out
together. That's still going to be a lot of work.
There's a whole lot of work left to be done. I've
still got to concentrate and focus on driving the
red No. 8 car and as hard as I can do that
throughout the rest of the year. You know, I owe
that to my guys.
So still a lot of pressure. Still typical life.
But I do feel a big relief and a lot of
excitement. I know that Rick is going to do
everything he can do for me and that's a great
feeling to have somebody that's going to support
you like that.
Q. Junior, you just mentioned your guys, is
there any thought or discussion at this point
about anybody from your team and from DEI and any
of your crew members coming over to Hendrick for
you? And Rick, is there any discussion with Teresa
about bringing No. 8 over to Hendrick?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: That's probably some
of the discussion and things we'll be working on
over the next couple of months, as far as the crew
members and whatnot.
That's basically all got to be worked out yet as
far as, you know, Rick's got a lot of guys working
there, great employees and great, talented guys.
That's things we'll have to discuss down the road.
Q. How close did it come to the rumors of
signing with either Childers or Gibbs?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well, we had � as I
said, I wanted to thank all of the other owners
that we had talked to and for everybody to giving
me that opportunity to discuss things with them.
But all of the reports that I saw or heard of had
came out of thin air, basically.
Q. The pressure you're talking about that
you feel, is it partially that he wants to win
championships, but also knowing that it's not just
Dale junior wants to win championships; it's that
the most popular driver in the sport wants to win
championships and if he does, it could take NASCAR
to unprecedented levels? Jeff Gordon said that if
he wins, it's game over for the rest � do you feel
it will be huge for NASCAR if you do well with
him?
RICK HENDRICK: I've been through this
before where if Jimmie wins, Jeff's fans say I
don't give him the good equipment. So I'm sure in
this situation, if he's not winning, it's going to
be my fault. If he's winning, it's going to be
because of his talent. And if it's not, it's
because of not giving good stuff. That's the way a
lot of the fans look at it. So that pressure is
there. You know, again, he's such an icon in the
sport and he made a decision to come with us,
based on our performance and ability to give him
what he needs to reach those goals.
So that's the competitive side of me that adds
pressure that I want to deliver what we said we
could deliver and what he's expecting.
You know, this is because of the magnitude of his,
you know, space and position in the sport with his
fan base and so forth, it's been an appeal to
everyone connected. You know, you just want to
work hard to give him what you can.
And as far as the competition inside the camp,
there's already a little bid of a feud � not a
feud, but a competition between Jeff and Jimmie.
They are running for the championship and they can
be friends and they can be upset when they lose a
race. But they get back and go again. So I feel
like that's going to be the same situation here.
You know, again, the pressure is because I want to
deliver, and I'm going to do everything I can to
make that happen because it's going to be a lot of
people watching.
Q. You mention that you thought it was
obvious Kyle was talking to other teams. If the
opportunity presented itself for him to make a
move before the end of the season, is that
something you would consider?
RICK HENDRICK: No. And I don't think Kyle
would consider that. We have a responsibility to
the sponsors, and he's sitting in a position to be
in the Chase. That's a very good team.
You know, this decision was not an easy decision.
And Kyle has got a tremendous amount of talent and
I know in talking to him, he wants to � his goal
is to see that car finish this year in first
place. I think you're going to see him very
focused and very committed to that effort. The
same is true with Junior. It's hard in the sport
to have to make these decisions mid year and
finish out the year but we have sponsors to cars
both sitting in the Chase, and that's what it's
all about. So we've got to focus each one of us on
that goal?
Dale, can you talk a little specific about a
championship; do you think you will win a
championship now at Hendrick Motorsports, and if
you don't, despite 17 wins already and everything
else you've done ultimately, do you think your
career will be judged unkindly if you don't win a
championship?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Some people obviously
will � everyone's a little different in how they
view success. I'm really � I've always said that
I've done more in this sport than I've ever
anticipated. I just wanted to be able to pay my
bills and once I got past that, everything else
was a bonus.
I went � it seems like to me, three years ago, I
was three months behind on my fire bill (ph) and
living at YY (ph) with Carey (ph) and his kids
jumping over the couch back and forth and I would
have to lock myself in the room just to get some
peace and quiet. Those days don't seem like that
far or that long ago.
But you know, I want to work really, really hard
to give myself and Tony Junior and myself an
opportunity to make the Chase and challenge for
the championship this season. I think we are a
good enough team to do that. If we can't
accomplish that at DEI this year, my efforts will
be obviously, you know, focused full-fledged on
doing that with Rick, and I think that I'll have a
good opportunity to succeed and win a lot of
races.
I will, you know, honestly, I think personally I
will cherish a championship on my mantle when it's
all said and done. I think I can live without it
obviously. But I feel like, yeah, I think I'd be
you know, 90, 95 percent on my goals that I set
for myself personally throughout my career, if I
can't get that championship; I really do want it.
Q. Would there be any consideration of
trading the No. 5 to DEI for the 8 if Kyle were to
look at that as an alternative, and was this in
the back of your minds when he jumped in the back
of the car at Texas?
RICK HENDRICK: As far as swapping the 5 for
the 8 if they wanted to talk about that, sure,
we'd be open to that.
And what was the question about Texas? That sure
started a lot of rumors. (Laughter)?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I was trying to see
what kind of horsepower they had, see where we
measured up. The car was wrecked so it didn't
really drive that good. (Laughter).
Q. I'm going to play the role of Ed Hinton
(ph) and ask a three.part question. I assume the
24 and 48 are pretty locked up, those numbers. So
when you say the team is not decided, it's
basically between the 5 and the 25; correct?
RICK HENDRICK: Right.
Q. Sponsors, you're all locked up; are you
looking for a new sponsor � ask the third?
RICK HENDRICK: Yeah, go ahead?
Q. Kyle, you said you guys decided to just
go separate ways, what happened that brought you
to that decision?
RICK HENDRICK: On the Kyle situation,
again, Kyle is a young guy and a very talented
guy. And when you come up on any kind of contract
extension or renewal, it's the people around you I
guess that work for you, it's their responsibility
to test the market to see what your value is. And
in testing the market, it was an unbelievable
amount of interest in Kyle.
When we started looking at, you know, what he's
doing and where he is and extensions, those kind
of things came up. And probably our contract talks
drug on a little bit longer than they probably
should have. But there are always � there's times
when you've never been anywhere else and you've
got goals and you've got situations that occur
that you think that maybe it might be good to go
try something different.
Again, I think we have the kind of relationship
and respect that I'm going to support him in
whatever he does, and you know, that's kind of the
answer to that question. What was the other
question � sponsors. We have several sponsors on
our cars that are multi.year deals. And I guess my
first responsibility is to those people, and we've
got to look at how the teams are going to look at
the end of the year going into next year and what
spots on those cars are available and where they
want to be. We do have some space but we have
sponsors in place, so we've got � we couldn't
really talk to them because as soon as we started
talking to them and the conversations got out, you
folks would have it the next day.
So we have to wait until we got this deal done and
then we'll look at what their commitments are and
what our commitments are, and we'll make it all
mesh and we hopefully will get that done here in
the next few months.
Q. I'm only going to ask a two.part
question. For awhile, you had made your name on
the restrictor plate tracks and the last couple of
years, Hendrick has surpassed you guys in that.
How good is it going to feel to know that you're
going to have a real bullet at Daytona and
Talladega?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: You know, Rick's teams
win a lot of races, but this wasn't necessarily
ever a � there wasn't ever really a competition
issue or question with me at DEI. I got all of the
confidence in the world in those cars and my
ability to drive them well.
You know, again, Rick's cars win a lot of races,
so I'm just looking forward � I think there will
be a lot of difference in the feel of the cars and
how they drive. Just driving his car at Texas, you
know, the front end, the geometry settings, a lot
of the things that they are doing on their cars,
which I couldn't see and really know for sure what
they were, but I could tell a big difference in
just how the car rolled down in the corner and how
the carry yawed (ph) in the center of the corner,
but even though it had been wrecked they fixed it
back pretty well.
And so watching Kasey and having talked to Kasey
just for a few minutes, he had spoken a little bit
about how it took him a little bit of time to
understand how to drive the car and how big a
difference the car drove from what he was used to.
You know, if you give five guys the same pieces to
build a car and they build all five cars, even
though they try to set them up the same, they will
drive differently just because guys set the front
ends up and things like that. Interested in just
knowing the angles that Rick's guys take to
approach getting the car to turn and things like
that. So I'm interested in knowing all those
things.
Q. Know you're close to a lot of the guys at
DEI. How much does it help to you see the
resurgence of Martin Truex over the last couple of
weeks that when you leave, there's still people in
place there that can keep that team in good hands?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Yeah, that's been a
really great thing for me. It gives me � obviously
I'm happy for Martin because we're good friends
and he appreciates everything that anybody has
ever done for him to get him where he is today.
He's thanked me and everybody on his team and
everybody that ever helped him ever get modified
or whatever. He's just so good about that and it
makes you feel good to see him have success and
you want him to win more and do better.
But as far as DEI is concerned, it is a good
feeling. Those guys take a lot of pride in their
ability to win races.
I think that you know, it hurts Bono's pride a
little bit and those guys' pride when the remarks
were made about DEI being able to continue without
me and a driver there. And for them to go out and
make a statement like they have over the last
couple of weeks, I think it helps them and gives
them a lot of confidence and gives the rest of the
employees that are not going to the rates track a
lot of confidence. Those are the people that are
at home and on the weekends and work the 9:00 to
5:00 throughout the week, you know, that need the
boot in the pants.
So the guys that go to the racetrack know
everything, know the whole story, know all the
gossip. So that was legally good for them and that
makes me � I'm just proud of them and it's good to
see the team have success.
Q. Do you already have designs for expanding
your gift shop? And secondly, you now have three
of the four or five superstars in the sport; if
we're at Daytona and you have a lap to go with
Junior first, Jeff second and Jimmie third, what's
going to happen?
RICK HENDRICK: I'm going to ask them to be
nice and don't wreck each other � no, that would
be a good problem to have. I hope that works out
that way. You know, I do plan to expand the gift
shop. It's going to be an exciting time for our
company and I think it's really no different than
racing Tony or, you know, Denny or Matt Kenseth
when they are all out there racing. Those guys
driving those cars, they are so competitive, they
want to beat each other.
We have a good program going right now where they
share information, crew chief drivers, engineers,
and they help each other in driving styles and
it's okay to beat on each other. Just don't wreck
each other. They understand that and I watched
Dale drive and he's not going to � I think most of
the guys in the garage area today have kind of
adopted that philosophy that if you do that,
you're going to get paid back and it's just going
to make life difficult and NASCAR is going to
watch and they are going to take action and all of
the above.
So hopefully we have that problem at Daytona that
they are running like that. That would be great.
You know, we are just, again, that would be a good
problem to have.
Q. Dale, you leave, you made the
announcement a month ago that you were leaving the
company that your father built, and it seemed at
the time to be a surreal experience, but now that
you have a landing spot and you know where you're
going next season, has the reality of leaving the
company that your father built really kind of hit
home and have you been kind of struggling with
that since you made the announcement back in May?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I never struggled with
that. I felt solid about that decision. Obviously
I made the decision and I felt pretty firm about
it. I think if I struggled at all, that was before
I made it. But once I had come to terms with it,
wrapped my brain around it, I was pretty confident
that I was making the right choice. I told Rick
that the hard part for me was being in limbo, not
having a home, not knowing what your future was.
Being that I was a son of the guy that built the
place, not only, you know, I had a job driving
race cars and when dad was around and even after,
I never had to worry about my job. I basically
could act and do and say and go along as I pleased
because of the family connection. And so it is
really uncharted territory for me. And not only to
� I think it was a huge risk and it took a lot of
nerve for me to make that first decision and to
get out there into the real world and work for
someone who I had to � who I had to straighten up
a little bit, you know what I mean.
So I don't think that � Rick said he's not going
to ask me to change too much. May not be able to
wear jeans and tee shirts quite as often. But it's
going to be a great experience for me and I think
my fans are going to still have the same Dale
Junior that they have always had and the one they
like to cheer for.
Rick's going to give me great equipment and you
know, can't wait � I'm looking forward to the rest
of the season and I love driving race cars and as
much as I would like to go ahead and get started
to work toward our future with Rick, I love
driving race cars enough and the team I'm working
with now, I appreciate those guys enough that I
look forward to the rest of this year and working
hard for them.
Q. You were saying that you were working �
trying to work through Kyle's situation at
Charlotte, so it seems this came together pretty
quickly. When did you decide that you were
actually going to be a player in this thing and
really go after it and to Junior, when did you
make the decision that that's where you were going
to go?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I get all the
questions.
You know, that was � when I went around and looked
at all of the other shops, basically I saw the
same thing everywhere. Everyone has the ability to
build the same cars. Everyone has the ability to
hire good people. Everyone has the ability to, you
know, to have all of those secret things behind
the door on the right, the door on the left.
I didn't really � you know, Rick's got a great
building and a great operation that's available,
and attainable by everyone in the sport owner.wise.
I think Rick and I's relationship was what made
the difference for me, and I notice obviously,
he's committed to winning and committed that
winning is what it's all about for him.
I know that he'll commit whatever it takes for us
to be successful, but the personal relationship
was really important. But I had a lot of fun
talking to everyone that we talked to; that was a
real surreal experience, and some of the things
that I heard and saw and was told were amazing and
the relationships that I � you know, I'm sitting
there, you know, Job Gibbs, coach of the Redskins,
he's a hero of mine since I was a little kid. And
to be actually talking to the man in the same room
with the man was kind of hard to get over � get
used to.
Some of the relationships that I even made over
the last two months, I think or forged over the
last two months are really important to me. I
think a lot of people understood that there's a
lot more good personalities in the sport than I
gave the sport credit for.
Q. Talk about that day when Ricky mentioned
to you that some day this day would come and why
you didn't think at that time it wouldn't happen.
And Dale, Waltrip said all along he thought you
would end up with Hendrick because Rick would
treat you like a son; talk about how ironic that
it's going to happen here apparently but maybe
didn't happen at DEI.
RICK HENDRICK: Yeah, I don't remember. I
guess it was Joel Suggs here, somewhere, Joel and
Dale and Ricky were together. And Ricky called me
and he said, you know, when my dad had the 25 team
since it started, and Ricky, the plan was for him
to take over. And when he got out of the car, he
called me one day, I don't know where they were,
and he said, "I'm going to sign Dale Junior."
I said, "Okay, right, that's good. I believe
that." And then I talked to Dale and it was just
something that he had in the back of his mind, and
I didn't think it would ever come to pass. But I
think he always planned, because of their
friendship, and the respect he had for Dale, that
that was his goal in life.
For me now, to see that really happen, is surely
special to me. I think the next part was yours.
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: What was the other
part of that question?
I don't know that you can talk about him with him
sitting next to me � he does a lot for his
employees. One of the things I keep hearing about
time after time, and he did it for my sister when
he was sick. Rick had his health issues several
years ago, and he learned I guess through that
experience the importance of, you know, confident
and talented medical crews and that kind of
service and how important it is that they are as
good as they can be.
I've heard half a dozen stories about him when
someone is ill or whatever, whether it be Parsons
or somebody at his business, or a family member of
an employee or whatever, he's flying people all
across the country trying to get the best crews
and doctors to that person or however they can get
the best kind of treatment they can get. He does
those kind of things in that fashion, those kind
of things all the time.
I find that kind of fascinating that he has that
kind of � has the ability to take time out of what
he has going on and his busy life to do those type
of things for other people. You know, you want to
be around people like that. You want to surround
yourself with people like that; not to take
advantage of that kind of behavior, but to try to
improve yourself. They make you a better person.
They teach you how to treat other people.
So that's important to me that that's the kind of
guy that Rick is. I feel like we've had a great
relationship and we've had a lot of respect for
each other over the years. And I think that we can
� we'll be able to grow that over the next several
years as we work together and as I work for him,
and hopefully I can do a good job. I think that
I've got enough talent and if you're a race car
driver, you've to think you're the best out there,
and I don't have any problem doing that. So I feel
like he's got great cars and I feel like we'll
have success on the racetrack. I want to have
success off the racetrack, as well. I want to do a
good job for him as far as far as pleasing his
sponsors, pleasing his employees, all of the
people we'll be working with racing cars and
everything we do.
It's a new chapter for me and I couldn't be
anticipating it anymore. I don't think I could be
working, you know, for a better guy when it comes
to just as a person.
Q. People will be debating this for the next
three days, 24 hours a day, and they are going to
talk about what you said and how you said it. One
of the things they will say is, well, I know what
Dale's dad would have said. Can you clarify what
would injure dad have said about this and how
would he have reacted and also people think that
you're very tight with the 5 team because you
climbed in the race car and those guys were your
friend enough to ask you and they also talk if
that was part of it, too, that you're tight with
the team?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I've got some friends
throughout the garage. One of the things I'll say,
what surprised me is when we talked about being a
free agent, which I never proclaimed to be, the
crew members that came up to me in the garage
saying things to me about, man, we'd love to have
you. That was � it felt like I had won every week
because every time I was going back to the track,
I had somebody patting me on the back. So that was
a great feeling.
But I know my dad would trust Rick. They had a
great amount of respect for each other and known
each other for a long time. And I know Dad would
appreciate what Rick is trying to do and what he's
done for me up to this point and what he will do
for me in the future and his approach and respect
for my sister and my family. I know Dad would
appreciate that, and he'd probably be a little
jealous to be honest with you. (Laughter).
Q. You said you only wanted to go through this one
time as far as this process and your career. Are
you happy with the length of the contract,
five.year deal; is it kind of open.ended after
that?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Yeah, we haven't
really talked about that as far as, you know,
after five. I think that � I always like doing a
three.year deal, but knowing what kind of guy Rick
is and I know I'm going to be comfortable there
and I know the employees and I will get along
great. You know, I just really anticipate the deal
� I think that five years, it's a great amount of
time. That's a solid � seems like the right amount
of time for me. But you know, we'll talk � I don't
even think that we've even talked about how we're
going to leave the end of the deal open or
whatever. But there's a lot of options for us to
explore there and a lot of exciting options I'm
sure.
Source: NASCAR Media
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