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One to forget

Incidents make for rough day for Earnhardt Jr.

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Posted: Sunday September 02, 2001 10:14 PM
  Dale Earnhardt Jr. Dale Earnhardt Jr. had little to smile about at Darlington on Sunday. AP

By Stephen Thomas, CNNSI.com

DARLINGTON, S.C. -- Dale Earnhardt Jr. doesn't like Darlington Raceway. Hates it, in fact. Said so right there in his interview with Playboy. Called it the worst track on the Winston Cup circuit.

Sunday's Southern 500 likely did nothing to lessen his distaste for The Track Too Tough to Tame.

Earnhardt Jr., seemingly not quite himself throughout the race and complaining about his car and his prospects, was involved in at least two on-track incidents -- one with Stacy Compton, the other with Ron Hornaday -- that brought a warning from NASCAR.

"They said if we run into anybody else, we were gonna get parked," Earnhardt said.

  • Wild finish: Ward Burton needed a provisional to make the field for the Southern 500. When the smoke cleared, Burton had avoided some wild crashes to capture his third Winston Cup win and second at the Lady in Black.
  • Getting silly: Silly season -- the name says it all. But such is the nature of this time of year when teams feel compelled to deny that the latest rumor making the rounds is, well, silly.
  • Not looking back: Professional sports are littered with athletes and coaches who just can't quite seem to let go. Whatever the reason, many sports figures have exited the stage, only to discover that they just cannot bring themselves to accept that it is, in fact, over. And then there is Junior Johnson.
  • Park hospitalized: Steve Park suffered a concussion, bruising to the left side of his neck and a possible fracture or dislocation of the left sterno-clavicular joint, but was otherwise in good health after a freak, caution-flag crash in the South Carolina 200 on Saturday. 
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    Though there were no repercussions from those actions, Junior was clearly on edge Sunday, a point he admitted to his crew when he learned that NASCAR was watching him.

    "I know what they're saying," he said in response to the warning. "I don't know what's getting into me. I'm just not into it right now."

    Nor was Earnhardt Jr. "into it" after the race, when he still was fuming at NASCAR's decision to bring out the red flag with seven laps remaining.

    "That's staged if you ask me," he said. "That's rigged. There wasn't a big enough wreck to red-flag that race and everybody knows it and everybody saw it. And they made a big damn deal out of it. It's ridiculous. They had plenty of time to get that cleaned up and have a three- or four-lap dash."

    His frustration with that decision was exacerbated by the fact that he believed the pause was a direct cause of the crash with one lap remaining that ruined his chance at a top-10 finish.

    According to spotter Ty Norris, Earnhardt Jr. is a young man who is still wrestling with the expectations and pressures of a Winston Cup season. Combine the recent release of the report into his father's death and Steve Park's scary accident in Saturday's Busch race with his acknowledged distaste for Darlington Raceway, and the result is Sunday.

    Yes, Earnhardt Jr. learned a great deal from his late-season swoon last year, but he's still a work in progress. This Southern 500 was merely another rung on that ladder.


     
    Related information
    Stories
    Park, still hospitalized, misses Southern 500
    Burton survives wild Darlington race for third Cup win
    Notebook: Late red flag irritates drivers
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