Dale Earnhardt Jr.: When it comes to plate racing, greed is good
Feb. 16, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – When tandem “love-bug” racing was the order of the day at
restrictor-plate tracks, Dale Earnhardt Jr. didn’t like it one bit.
Hated it, if you want to know the truth.
NASCAR’s
most popular driver couldn’t see the logic in pushing another car to
victory, even if it happened to be a car driven by a teammate. When
Jimmie Johnson won at Talladega
in 2008, Earnhardt’s No. 88 Chevrolet was the caboose, and the caboose
finished fourth.
To Earnhardt, that was nonsense. Fortunately, times have changed.
“The
style of plate racing, it's always changing,” Earnhardt said on Tuesday
at Daytona International Speedway during NASCAR Media Day, the annual
media event that serves as
a preview for Sunday's Daytona 500 (1 p.m. ET on FOX). “In my opinion, I
think it's gotten a little bit closer to how it used to be back in 2001
to 2005 when we were very successful—the style of the draft and how the
draft works. It's really more similar to
that kind of racing, which I think suits me much better.
“The
tandem stuff was something I never liked and never enjoyed. I didn't
feel like that was racing. To really have to commit yourself to another
guy and know you're going
to run second just made no sense to me. That was a challenging time to
be involved in the sport, to be honest with you, when we were tandem
drafting in the plate races. It was hard to get excited about it and
want to go do it.”
Now
that the competition package used at plate tracks and revised rules
about bump-drafting have rendered sustained pushing a thing of the past,
Earnhardt can race the way
he prefers—looking out for his own interests above all others.
“Now
that the package is as it is, I think we're racing again where you're
just out for yourself, being very selfish,” Earnhardt said. “You can be
very aggressive. I think
it suits my style, suits some other guys' styles as well. The people
that I see up there, the guys that I tend to expect to see up there.”
The
numbers certainly confirm Earnhardt’s impression. After a
restrictor-plate drought that stretched back to the fall race at
Talladega in 2004, he ended the dry spell by
winning the 2014 Daytona 500. Last year, Earnhardt took the checkered
flag in the spring race at Talladega and in the summer event at Daytona.
All told, 10 of his 26 career victories have come at restrictor-plate superspeedways.
To
win a third Daytona 500 on Sunday, Earnhardt is reasonably sure he can
predict which other drivers he’ll have to beat, among them Joey Logano
(last year’s winner), Denny
Hamlin (this year’s Sprint Unlimited champion) and Jamie McMurray (2010
Daytona 500 winner).
“I
see different drivers that are successful at plate tracks,” Earnhardt
said. “Denny, and McMurray's a guy that's always up there. There's a
long list. Joey is very good at
it. He's always up there. Each one of them has a different style.
“Some
are aggressive, some maybe not so much. They find a way to be there and
have opportunities to win those races. I don't know if it's exactly one
style that actually works
and no other style works.”
Earnhardt, though, drives plate races predominantly by instinct, in the style of his father, the late Dale Earnhardt Sr.
“Me
and Denny I think are really similar: real aggressive, moving left to
right,” Earnhardt said. “A lot of times we make moves to get a run or
something without even contemplating
whether there's a car around us that we may crash into.
“Sometimes
I make moves and I go, ‘Man, I didn't even really look both ways before
I crossed the street,’ so to speak. You can't think about it like that.
You just got to go
on instinct and hope that you don't make a mistake.”
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