Friday Watkins Glen Notebook
Notebook Items:
- “Retirement” is not in Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s vocabulary
- Truex Jr. signs two-year extension with Furniture Row
- Short Strokes
Aug. 5, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
“RETIREMENT" IS NOT IN DALE EARNHARDT JR.'S VOCABULARY
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. made it clear on Friday. He doesn’t want to talk about the “R” word, as in retirement.
Earnhardt’s
recent struggle with concussion-like symptoms, a malady that will cause
him to miss at least five NASCAR Sprint Cup races this season, has
fueled speculation that
concern over health issues might persuade him to exit the No. 88
Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet permanently.
But
Earnhardt had an emphatic reply when that issue was raised in a
question-and-answer session with reporters on Friday at Watkins Glen
International, host venue for Sunday’s
Cheez-It 355 (2:30 p.m. ET on USA Network).
I
have every intention of honoring my current contract (which runs
through 2017),” Earnhardt said. “I sat with (team owner) Rick (Hendrick)
before this happened a couple of months
ago to talk about an extension. That’s the direction that we are
going. As soon as I can get healthy and get confident in how I feel and
feel like I can drive a car and be great driving it, then I want to
drive.
“I
want to race. I miss the competition. I miss being here. I miss the
people and, as Rick likes to say, ‘We’ve got unfinished business.’ I’m
not ready to stop racing. I’m not
ready to quit. It’s a slower process, I wish it wasn’t. I don’t know
how long it’s going to take.”
Until
Earnhardt receives medical clearance, he won’t be allowed to race, and
he’s working diligently with his doctors to suppress the symptoms that
forced him out of the car
for the mid-July Sprint Cup race at New Hampshire and will keep him on
the sidelines at least through the Aug. 20 event at Bristol Motor
Speedway.
“I’m
not going to go in the car until the doctors clear me,” Earnhardt said.
“The doctors won’t let me race. This is not my decision, but it’s the
right decision, and I trust
what my doctors are telling me.
“When they say I’m good to go, I believe them. If they say I’m healthy and I can race, I’m going to race.”
Doctors
concluded that the onset of Earnhardt’s concussion-like symptoms, which
involve issues with gaze stability, dizziness and balance, began with a
wreck at Michigan in mid-June,
though Earnhardt said the intensification of the symptoms was gradual.
After
he raced at Kentucky Speedway on July 9, Earnhardt sought medical
attention, and what he thought might be a sinus infection instead
resulted in the diagnosis that forced
him out of the car.
Earnhardt
receives medical evaluations every two to three weeks and will continue
to do so until he is symptom-free. In the meantime, doctors are
encouraging him to participate
in higher-stress public situations—such as a press conference—to
exacerbate the symptoms with an eye toward getting them under control.
“That’s
just part of the process,” Earnhardt said. “You don’t want to go
anywhere where you’re going to feel worse. And this situation, my doctor
tells me, is good therapy to
go somewhere that makes you feel worse. Go in there and get exposure
and then get out and go somewhere where you can kind of get calmed back
down and then repeat the process.
“And
so, I’ve been going and eating and having lunch with my family. I go to
(sister) Kelley’s house and get in the living room with her kids; boy
that drives up the symptoms
pretty good. But, it’s been great to spend time with them.”
But it’s all with one thing in mind.
“I
just want to get better,” Earnhardt said. “Our intentions are to get
cleared and get back to racing. We are just taking it one evaluation at a
time.
“It’s
frustrating to have to do it that way, but that’s the process, and we
hope and expect that, when we go back for the next evaluation, we are
symptom-free and can start to
see a timeline develop.”
MARTIN TRUEX JR. SIGNS TWO-YEAR EXTENSION WITH FURNITURE ROW
With
an enhanced sponsor commitment from Bass Pro Shops and Tracker Boats,
Martin Truex Jr. has agreed to a two-year contract extension with
Denver, Colorado-based Furniture
Row Racing.
Truex
qualified for the Chase last year and advanced to the Championship Four
at Homestead-Miami Speedway before finishing fourth in the final NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series standings.
This year, he collected his fourth career victory, leading a
NASCAR-record 588 of 600 miles in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte in May.
“The
last year-and-a-half with this team has been amazing,” Truex said on
Friday afternoon at Watkins Glen, where he was second fastest in final
Sprint Cup practice. “Just looking
forward to continuing that momentum and building upon our success.
Final four last year was a big deal for us, and looking forward to
hopefully getting back there this year and do it even better.
“Just
again continue to build on the success we’ve grown into as a group. I
think we’ve got the best team in the garage without a doubt, in my
opinion, and just looking forward
to keeping that together and hopefully doing bigger and better things
as we go forward.”
Bass
Pro Shops and Tracker Boats has increased its primary sponsorship
commitment on Truex’s No. 78 Toyota from 12 to 16 races for the 2017
season.
SHORT STROKES
After
his No. 47 JTG/Daugherty Racing team repaired a punctured oil line on
his Chevrolet, AJ Allmendinger led NASCAR Sprint Cup final practice at
Watkins Glen. Even so, the
2014 race winner at the 2.45-mile road course wasn’t satisfied with the
performance of his car on the repaved track. “We got it closer,”
Allmendinger said. “It’s still not amazing, but it’s got speed in it at
least. There are a lot of nuances about this place
now that have changed with the new pavement and a real hard tire.
Strategy is going to be even more important than usual. It should be
interesting on Sunday” .... In Friday time trials, Team Penske teammates
Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski claimed the two
front-row starting spots for Saturday’s Zippo 200 (2 p.m. ET on CNBC).
Logano claimed the Coors Light Pole Award with a track-record lap at
124.552 mph. Logano is looking to break a NASCAR XFINITY Series drought
that dates to last year’s race at Watkins Glen.
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