Coke Zero 400, Daytona
International Speedway
DALE EARNHARDT JR., NO.
88 NATIONAL GUARD / AMP
ENERGY IMPALA SS met with
media and discussed Jay
Leno, Mark Martin, racing at
Daytona in July, on Randy
Moss joining the sport of
NASCAR, the Montoya/KyBusch
incident at Loudon, the
performance of the new race
cars, 4th of July holiday
and more. Full Transcript:
Q. Talk about Jay Leno.
You've been on a show the
couple times, right?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:
Yeah. You know, Jay Leno's a
car guy. Got quite a
collection. Maybe a more
elaborate collection of cars
in the United States. You
know, I admire his passion
for automobiles. Being on
the show's fun.
Q. Did you enjoy doing
that?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:
Yeah, sure. Being on the
show's been fun because he's
a car guy. You feel more
comfortable with him. And, I
don't know, just a real neat
guy. Very gracious as a
host. Takes care -- he knows
that that's pretty far from
your territory and he makes
you feel pretty comfortable.
Q. (Question regarding
Mark Martin.)
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: They
haven't announced anything
yet. Mark's a great racecar
driver. He's done a great
job driving the No. 8 car
this year. He's a veteran
that all the guys look up
to. He's a great tutor for
the sport, for young guys. I
think that anybody that gets
a chance to work with him
can learn a lot.
Q. (Question regarding
retirement and keeping
going.)
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: A
lot of different reasons.
You know, it's really hard
to put it down, I suppose.
As tough as the schedule is,
it's pretty hard to just
stop and not do nothing or
do something else, I
suppose.
Q. (Question regarding
Daytona in July.)
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I've
been coming down here since
it was the Firecracker 400.
This was the biggest weekend
of the year for me when I
was a kid. The summer is
what you looked forward to.
This was the best part of
the summer.
It's a great area with
the beach and the
restaurants, and the
racetrack itself has a lot
of history. You know, to me
it's a little bit funner
than the Speedweeks. This is
definitely the weekend that
I look forward to the most
on the whole circuit.
I just met Randy Moss.
He's getting ready to
announce some kind of a deal
going on. So that was kind
of cool. You know, just like
the 500, you get celebrities
and such coming down here
for this race. Daytona's
always entertained a lot of
good celebrities. And it's
fun for the drivers, and
everyone else for that
matter, to interact with
them.
Q. (Question about Casey
Mears)
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I'm
sure that when Rick hired
Casey, he would have hoped
that that would have been a
fruitful deal and it worked
out. I'm sure Casey wished
it would have worked out.
Q. What do you feel you
have to do this week with
the rain, what adjustments
do you have to make this
week?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: It's
tough here. It's hard to
tell really what the rain
does to the racetrack. But,
you know, it should be fine.
It shouldn't be too big of a
deal. It doesn't really
affect you as much here as
it does other places.
Q. What do you think
draws a guy like Moss into
this sport?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I
don't know. I'd like to ask
him that question. I guess
he's got some interest in
racing and probably got some
rather unique investment
advice. So, you know, it's
interesting. We'll all get
to learn that, I guess, over
the next day or so. I'm
excited about that. You've
seen a lot of people from
football especially, but
other areas, you know,
owners of sporting
franchises, come into the
series. It's pretty neat. I
think it's great for us to
have a guy like Randy Moss
interested in being involved
in the sport and getting in
as deep as he is. So that's
pretty cool for me. I'm
really excited about that.
Q. Last weekend Jamie
McMurray said it was cool
you called him within 20
minutes of what happened. We
were all scared for you.
That was a bad accident,
hard hit. Is there anything
that could be done
differently?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:
Yeah, I just wondered -- me
and Jamie are good friends.
You know, if you don't call
him, he probably thinks
you're mad at him or
whatever. But I ran into
Tony Stewart a couple years
ago in the same situation.
And it's just tough getting
onto pit road there. I was
trying to get off the
racetrack as fast as I
could, to get out of those
guys' way. But, you know,
you can't speed on the pit
road. It's just a difficult
situation.
I waved down the back
straightaway. I couldn't
wave through three and four.
There's no way he could have
seen me waving on the back
straightaway being as far
behind me as he was. But I
weaved down to the apron on
the back straightaway, too,
which is kind of common. If
you want guys that are a
hundred yards or further
behind to see, that's sort
of international move, let
people know you're coming
in. They're expecting pit
stops around that time
anyway. If a guy drives the
apron on the back
straightaway, you definitely
notice it and understand
what's going on. Just
unfortunate.
But, you know, in certain
cases like that, you know,
it's good to clear it up as
soon as you can.
Q. How do you evaluate
how has DEI moved on since
you left?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:
Seems they're doing really
good. They fielded four race
teams rather competitively.
You know, Paul has really
improved his ability to be
more competitive each week.
If you really look at where
he was last year, I think
he's improved quite a bit.
Mark's done a great job
helping the No. 8 team
remain competitive. They're
a great group of guys and
deserve an opportunity to
run good. And it was great
of Mark to get in that car
and give them that
opportunity. I think Eric is
going to do a good job. He's
a good kid with a lot of
attitude and a lot of heart.
Really, you know, he's a
good student of the sport.
He really etches out things
that's happening to him and
tries to understand them.
And, you know, Martin Truex
was an awesome teammate; he
was a great friend. If
there's, you know -- I miss
being teammates with Martin
pretty bad. But, you know,
he's a great racecar driver
and you can put him in any
one of those four cars and
he's gonna help carry that
company, you know, just like
Mark is helping doing that.
So I feel like they've
done a lot with really --
they've done a lot with a
lot less, in my opinion.
Q. What was your reaction
to Montoya's retaliation to
Busch?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I
was really surprised. I
hadn't seen that since East
Carolina Motor Speedway in
'94. You rarely see guys
wrecking each other under
caution. Juan is a real
firecracker man. He's a good
guy, but you just don't push
his buttons. You got to
respect him on the
racetrack. And he has to
sort of have that sort of
mentality coming from
Formula One. He definitely
doesn't want to get pushed
around. He's not having the
best season. You know,
obviously not very happy
with how his car's running
up to this point. So he's
got an even shorter fuse due
to that.
Q. How do you catch
Busch?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: How
do I catch Busch? You just
try to run as good as you
can. You don't wish anybody
to have any misfortune.
Hopefully we can beat him on
the racetrack week after
week.
But, you know, he's
having a great season. He's
got a lot of points ahead of
everybody and doesn't seem
to be really faltering much.
You know, he had a little
bit of a struggle last week.
But I don't expect to see
too much more of that out of
that whole team up until the
Chase starts. Hopefully by
that time, we'll have all
our ducks in a row and be
ready to give him a good run
for it.
Q. Are you a
superstitious guy?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Just
the standard stuff. You
know, when a black cat
crosses the road in front of
you or walking under
ladders, things like that.
Q. Do you abide by any of
the racing superstitions?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: No,
huh-uh.
Q. How confident are you
in your COT program?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I'm
real happy. I landed a hell
of a good job with a good
company. Got a good program,
great crew chief, really
innovative. He's got other
great crew chiefs around him
to work with, learn and feed
off of. We're just trying to
be a really -- you know,
just trying to be a sponge
the whole time, learning as
much as we can from the
other teams in our
organization. I feel
fortunate, really fortunate.
Q. There's only a couple
tracks you're going to go to
the second half of the
season you haven't been to
yet with this car, Indy
being one of them. Are there
any concerns with those
tracks?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I
tested at Indy for Goodyear.
That give me a good idea of
how the car's gonna drive,
things about the car I need
to work on to help it. So we
got a little leg up on the
rest of the guys. So
hopefully that will help us
Q. Independence Day is
tomorrow. What do you have
to say for our National
Guardsmen out there?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: All
the National Guardsmen and
all our sailors in the Navy,
you know, this is -- July
4th kind of snuck up on
everybody. It's kind of hard
to believe it's the middle
of the season. But, you
know, we're trying to do our
best job to represent both
those branches of the
military, you know, at the
racetrack. So we're trying
to work hard, represent 'em
well, make 'em proud.
Q. Do you think drivers
today have to have more
skills today than the
drivers of yesterday?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: No,
I don't think so. I think
the cars, from the '70s and
even before that, were more
difficult to drive, for
sure, more challenging to
drive. So I think it took
quite a unique person to be
able to make that work,
so... I would say that David
Pearson, Cale Yarborough,
Richard Petty, those guys
would be able to give us one
hell of a run for our money
today, and we would find it
quite a challenge to keep up
with 'em back in the '60s
and '70s if they were to put
us in those cars.
Q. What do you enjoy most
about working with Mark and
can he help you again as a
teammate?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:
Mark, in his history,
especially of recent times,
Mark's really taken on that
role of being -- he's very
gracious, you know. He wants
to help. He wants to be an
asset. He wants -- whatever
he's got within arm's reach,
he wants to have a positive
effect on it, if it's a
driver, a team, a crew, a
crewman. You know, he just
has a good work ethic to
him.
I think him and Jeff
Burton are very similar. You
know what Jeff did for RCR.
You know how hard Jeff works
for RCR. The guy's on the
racetrack every minute of
the day, if he can be.
Regardless of whether Mark
went to a partial schedule,
but he still has that same
work ethic. You know, he's
just very gracious. You
know, if he can help you,
he's there. He really,
really goes out of his way
to try to add something to
the whole puzzle, he really
does.