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Six essential qualities that
are the key to success: Sincerity, personal integrity, humility, courtesy,
wisdom, charity. - William Menninger
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (left)
will drive the National Guard car next year in NASCARS's top-level Sprint
Cup series for Hendrick Motorsports. He stood with Lt. Gen. Clyde Vaughn,
director of the Army National Guard, and Rick Hendrick, Hendrick Motorsports
owner, in Dallas where the announcement was made on Sept. 19, 2007. Photo by
Master Sgt. Bob Haskell,
10/5/07 Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
whose family's name is part and parcel with American motorsports legend,
will drive the Chevrolet the National Guard will sponsor in NASCAR's
top-level Sprint Cup series in 2008.
Earnhardt -- "Junior" to the
millions who follow the sport -- will drive the 88 car for Hendrick
Motorsports' new team that will have PepsiCo products' Mountain Dew and
AMP Energy as its other major sponsors, officials announced during a
nationally televised news conference here yesterday.
The popularity of the Earnhardt name raises the Guard's participation in
one of America's two most popular spectator sports, the National Football
League being the other, to a new level, said Lt. Gen. Clyde Vaughn,
director of the Army National Guard.
NASCAR appeals to the same age group, 18-24, that is the prime recruiting
group for the Guard and the other military services, Vaughn pointed out.
The Army Guard has to recruit about 70,000 new people every year, he said
at the Dallas Convention Center.
"If the strength of our recruiting is the same place that you run NASCAR,
which it is, and if Dale Earnhardt Jr., is the most popular of all the
NASCAR drivers, which he is, then you would think that would make a
difference in the number of people who will follow the Guard, the Guard
car, and maybe effectively think about joining our team," he said.
"And that's all we ask him to do. Dale will have an enormous, enormous
impact on that effort," Vaughn predicted. "People will look at the
partnership this way: 'The Guard is a great way to serve. It's a
first-class organization. And I like Dale Earnhardt Jr. So does the Guard.
I'm going to have to think about that.'"
"I think it's important to support the military, especially now,"
Earnhardt said about his new affiliation with the National Guard.
Todd Bodine and Greg Biffle, who finished second in the Nextel Cup Series
in 2005, have been previous Guard car drivers. Casey Mears is this year's
driver.
Earnhardt, 32, has won 17 Cup-level races and two NASCAR Busch Series
championships. He is the son of racing legend Dale Earnhardt Sr., who was
killed in a crash on the final corner of the final lap of the NASCAR
season's inaugural race, the Daytona 500, in February 2001. He is the
grandson and nephew of, respectively, NASCAR pioneers Ralph Earnhardt and
Morgan Shepherd. His mother's father, Robert Gee, built NASCAR cars.
Earnhardt will replace Mears as the driver for the Guard car and will add
his name and pedigree to the Hendrick lineup of dominating drivers that
includes Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson.
Mears will replace Kyle Busch, who is leaving the Hendrick team for the
Joe Gibbs team, after one season as the No. 25 Guard/GMAC Chevrolet car
driver, and Earnhardt will begin racing for Hendrick Motorsports after
severing his ties with Dale Earnhardt Inc., the company that his father
founded.
Earnhardt announced in June that he signed a five-year contract with
Hendrick Motorsports. His new car number is no accident. He has driven the
No. 8 Chevrolet since he entered the Cup Series in 1999. His grandfather
raced with that number, as well as 88, and Dale Sr. drove the 8 car early
in his career. Earnhardt family politics, however, precluded Junior from
bringing the famed single-digit number to the Hendrick team.
"We considered every number with 8 in it that was available," he told a
room filled with media and Texas Army Guard recruiters, distinctive in
their Army combat uniforms.
Earnhardt is currently in 13th place, and out of this year's 12-car chase
for the Nextel Cup, after finishing 16th in the Sylvania 300 on Sept. 16
at the New Hampshire International Speedway. He has started on the pole,
in first place, once this season but has yet to win a race.. He has
finished among the top five six times, and he has been among the top 10
drivers in 10 races.
He did qualify for the chase last year, beginning the season's 10-race
championship series in sixth place and finishing fifth, 147 points behind
Cup victor Jimmie Johnson.
Earnhardt is joining the Hendricks team that has ruled the NASCAR roost in
2007. Johnson and Gordon, with 10 victories and 30 top-five finishes
between them, are tied for the lead with 5,210 points after 27 races. Kyle
Busch, with one victory and a total of 22 top-five and top-10 finishes, is
fifth in the Nextel Cup standings.
This year's Guard car driver, Mears, is in 15th place after his strong
performance at New Hampshire, where he started 15th. He has one victory in
the Guard/GMAC Chevrolet, coincidentally in the Memorial Day Coca-Cola
600, which raised money for the families of U.S. military troops. Ten
drivers raced in cars painted in military camouflage patterns to signal
their support for that cause.