Passion to race drives Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s return to the track
February 20, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. felt “wobbly” and didn’t know why.
In
his motor coach last July at Kentucky Speedway, Earnhardt felt the
first hint of the concussion symptoms that would keep him out of the No.
88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
for the last half of the 2016 season.
He voiced his concerns to fiancée Amy Reimann.
“I
told Amy, ‘I feel wobbly,’” Earnhardt recalled on Saturday at Daytona
International Speedway. “I’m just in the bus, and it was like,
‘Something ain’t quite right.’
“I
couldn’t see anything physically wrong with me, and I didn’t have any
problems like walking across the garage. Driving the car, I felt fine.”
But
crew-chief-turned-broadcaster Steve Letarte noticed during an
appearance with Earnhardt before the Saturday night race at Kentucky
that something was amiss. Earnhardt wasn’t
his usual conversational self.
Behind
the wheel, though, Earnhardt didn’t notice any symptoms, and he raced
that night in the Quaker State 400, completing all 267 laps and
finishing 13th—not knowing at the
time he wouldn’t race again until 2017.
What
Earnhardt first thought might be allergies turned out to be far worse.
Still feeling unsteady after the Kentucky race, Earnhardt told crew
chief Greg Ives to put Alex Bowman
on standby as a relief driver for the upcoming race at New Hampshire
Motor Speedway.
Then Earnhardt called team owner Rick Hendrick, who told his driver succinctly, “Go to Dr. Petty, dummy.”
After
his visit to Charlotte neurosurgeon Dr. Jerry M. Petty, Earnhardt’s
concussion symptoms, traceable to a collision at Michigan International
Speedway in mid-June quickly
grew to nightmarish proportions.
“My
eyes were jumping around in my head real bad, just walking down the
street or riding in a car,” Earnhardt said. “A road sign—jumping around
like this (Earnhardt demonstrated
with erratic hand movements). I couldn’t even read it. It was so
annoying, and I was scared to death that I was going to be stuck with
that all my life…
“When
me and Amy went to taste food for our wedding, I couldn’t look out the
windshield. I had to stare at the floor for a two-hour ride to Raleigh,
‘cause I just couldn’t stand
it, things were bouncing so bad.”
Balance also became a major concern.
“We
took videos of me and Amy working out, and I couldn’t put one foot in
front of the other without falling over—like the drunk driving test. I
couldn’t do that. I couldn’t
take one step without having to step to the right or step to the left
and catch myself.”
On
the bad days during his extended rehabilitation, Earnhardt felt the
Kentucky race might have been not only the last race of his season, but
the last of his career.
“There
were days during the recovery when I was 90-percent sure I wasn’t going
to drive again,” he said. “There were days when it was 50 percent, just
moving all over the place
depending on what I felt that day.”
The
field-of-vision problems plagued Earnhardt for more than five weeks,
but after a strict regimen of exercises, both the vision and balance
began to improve gradually.
“I
woke up one morning, and my eyes were better,” Earnhardt said. “I
looked out across the field in the back yard and could see clearer. When
I was taking steps across the living
room floor, it wasn’t jarring my eyes off the target that I might be
looking at far-off.”
Small
victories like that—not to mention the constant encouragement from his
fiancée—kept Earnhardt focused on his recovery. By December, he was
ready to test a Monster Energy
NASCAR Cup Series car at Darlington Raceway.
By
February, with the Daytona 500 looming, he was ready to compete again.
And Daytona was the perfect place to make his much-anticipated return.
“Coming
back to the race track for the first time, this is probably the best
place to be coming back to, because I feel so comfortable here,”
Earnhardt explained. “If this was
a real, real challenging technical track, my nerves would be a little
bit higher, but being that I understand what I need to be doing out
there and feel so comfortable, I guess it’s made it a much easier pool
to wade into.”
Earnhardt
knows what may be waiting for him. Crashes at Daytona are commonplace,
and to expect to go through an entire season incident-free is
unrealistic.
“I
don’t want to wreck to quantify my recovery, but I think, should that
happen, if I come out the other side of it feeling great, that will add a
ton of confidence,” he said.
“I can’t sit here and say that I know exactly how I’m going to react in
those situations with confidence. So, yeah, when I go through that
process, there’s a box or two to check that aren’t checked yet.”
Likewise,
Earnhardt understands the risk he’s taking, but he’s accepted the
possible consequences because his passion to race still burns.
“Of
course I’m human, and I’m going to be concerned and worry and (take)
precautions, and so forth,” he said. “But to be able to win the
qualifying race, and to be able to win
the Daytona 500, you’ve got to race with no fear ... I know that when I
get in the car, I can’t have any concerns. I can’t have any worry or
fret, or I’ll drive completely different.
“I
know what result I can get driving with no fear, and I know what kind
of result I’ll get if I go out there with even a sliver of apprehension.
I won’t be able to go out there
and win the race. Once you second-guess yourself one time, it
snowballs, and it just continues throughout the rest of the race…
“If
I’m going to come back, I’ve got to be racing because I want to be out
there. I couldn’t do that and put myself through the chance that I might
be back in rehab for months
and months going through that crap again if I didn’t want to be out
there.”
Throughout
the recovery process, Earnhardt and Reimann, who were married during
the offseason, had a chance to confront the reality of life without
racing. Even today, in the
final year of his contract with Hendrick, Earnhardt wants to wait until
he’s confident in his health before he commits to an extension.
“We
certainly got a glimpse into what that side of life would be like, and
I’m going to tell you, it’s a lot less stress,” Earnhardt said. “I
really never knew just how much
pressure all the drivers were under until I got out from under that.
... I don’t know whether I’m right about this or not, but I think, for
the longest time, I let racing be who I was instead of what I did.
“So
to maybe enjoy it more and not let it become so stressful that it’s
unenjoyable, maybe I’ll just try to focus on letting it be what I do
instead of who I am. Like Richard
Petty said, I’ve got a whole 'nother life beyond driving, and I really
believe that. I’ve got a lot of things that I’d love to do, outside of
having a family ... a lot of things in business that I’d love to see if I
can succeed at.
“I
think we got a glimpse of what that would be like, and it looks pretty
awesome. But I crave to drive the car. I love the position I’m in with
the team I’m with, with Greg
and the guys. And until that feeling is gone and the wanting to be
there is gone, I want to keep going.”
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