Stewart Leads Earnhardt Jr. Across Atlanta Finish Line
No. 8 Budweiser Team Grabs First Top Three Tally of
Young Season_3/10
Tony Stewart won for the first time this
season, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr. and the No. 8 Budweiser team in second place in
today's MBNA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The action-filled race featured a battle among
many of the young stars of NASCAR as Stewart and Earnhardt Jr. jousted at the front of the
field with third-place finisher, rookie Jimmy Johnson, Matt Kenseth (fourth) and others
youngsters like Kurt Busch and Ryan Newman. The second-place finish is the best of the
season for the Budweiser-backed crew, and marks their first top-10 finish in the first
four races. The red No. 8 car led the race five different times for 38 laps.
The Key Moment: Dale Jr., starting third, ran among the top 10 throughout
the entire 325-lap race. The 27-year-old Earnhardt Jr. took the lead for the first time on
lap 57 and then traded the lead with Stewart five times between laps 80 and 97. Several
slower-than-usual pit stops dropped Dale Jr. back into the field as far as 10th place on
lap 214. The Bud crew saved their best stop of the day for their final, critical stop on
lap 282. A 13.36-second stop propelled them into a position to win the race in the final
40 laps. Like earlier in the race, Stewart and Earnhardt Jr. streaked away from the rest
of the field, running in tandem for the final laps. Dale Jr. was able to close on Stewart,
but was unable to make a pass for the victory. The second-place finished launched Dale Jr.
from 25th in points into 14th place after four races.
Dale Jr.: "At the end of the race, I was able to catch Tony - we
were quicker than him in clean air, but once I got near his car, my car would get real
tight and I couldn't get any closer. I found what I thought was a great line around the
track - high in turns one and two and then low in turns three and four - but Tony saw what
line I was working and he moved into the same line and made it almost impossible for me to
make a move. When he's running the same line and not making any mistakes you just can't do
anything to pass.
"I'm happy. We have always been fast here at Atlanta, but we always had strange
things cost us a great finish. I guess you want to win and get greedy, but we had a great
car from the moment we started the weekend until the last lap of the race. The guys in the
pits made adjustments all day and so we were fast all day. There was never a time when the
car wasn't strong, especially on new tires. We were able to really make some aggressive
moves and pass a lot of people on those restarts. It was the best time to make your move
because once the field gets spread out, everyone is a lot harder to get past.
"This is a fun track, a great place to race. I wish there were more multi-groove
tracks like it. There seems to always be three or four lines in each corner, so if your
car doesn't work down low, you can move around to find the best line for your car. It
means the driver can make a bigger difference, and it means great passing and great
racing. It's fun for the driver and I'm sure it's fun for the fans."
Best Radio Conversations
When the team made a pit stop on lap 259, it created a situation where they would be
approximately 0x00bd-lap short of finishing the race with the fuel in the car.
Tony Eury (crew chief): "Watch your fuel take it easy."
Dale Jr. (half-joking) "Awwwwwwwww God dang it. Not THIS again! That's like putting
the weight of the world on my shoulders. That's a lotta pressure guys. If we run out of
fuel, I look like an ass because I didn't breathe the car enough. I just want to run
wide-ass open."
Tony Eury Jr. (car chief, with slight hesitation) "You should be OK"
Dale Jr: "Y'all don't sound so sure! C'mon now If it means I'm going to run out -
let's pit now. Let's get a splash of gas. Should we stop? I mean, I'm in it with ya -
whatever you want to do, I'm in. But, I hate to be the guy with all the pressure on
me."
Tony Jr: "Didn't we just have a big meeting about all of us guys with big
shoulders?"
Another yellow flag on lap 281 allowed all of the teams to pit again, sending the fuel
mileage concern out the window.
On lap 300, Dale Jr. was in third, following Stewart and Ward Burton.
Dale Jr. (reporting on the car's handling to Tony Eury Jr.): "It's a little tight,
Junior"
Tony Jr: "Then think LOOSE..."
With less than 20 laps to go, it became a two-car shootout as Dale Jr. closed in on
Stewart.
Tony Jr. "Good lap there. You're closing about a tenth (of a second) per lap. Keep
doin' what you're doin'"
Dale Jr. (irritated) "Alright. Alright. Quit talking to me. Just let me concentrate
here. Let me work on him (Stewart). I can catch him, but we're tight so it'll be really
hard to pass him." With 10 laps left in the race, Dale Jr. reached over and turned
his radio off.
RACE NOTES
No. 4 for No. 8
"Driver #8," Dale Jr's behind-the-scenes look at his rookie season, has risen to
No. 4 on the New York Times Non-Fiction Best Seller list for this week. It is the book's
highest sales ranking yet after six weeks on the prestigious list.
Today's Stats
Started: 3rd
Finished: 2nd
Money Won: $104,800
Points Position: 14th
Laps Led: Five times for 38 laps.
Best Pit Stop: Lap 282 / 4 tires and Fuel / 13.36 seconds
(Seventh stop of the day)
-Budweiser
Jr. qualifies 3rd for MBNA 500
3/8/02 - Dale Earnhardt Jr. ran a
lap of 191.337 mph in Friday's qualifying session in Atlanta, good enough to place him
third on the starting grid for Sunday's MBNA America 500.
Sunday's
Starting Lineup
Interview with Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
driver of the No. 8 Budweiser Chevrolet Monte Carlo_3/8
Team Monte CarloDo
you feel like your team has struggled or is it just circumstances?
"It was circumstances at Daytona. We struggled through
Rockingham. We fought a tight car all last weekend at Las Vegas. Rarely do you dial-in a
racecar at the race track. If you can't produce a great racecar from the shop, it's hard
to be a great race team.
"I still feel we can turn around with three or four
good finishes in a row. And I think we're the kind of team that can have three or four top
fives in a row. There's a chance. We always run good here. We've just got to figure out
how to finish here."
On his luck at Atlanta Motor Speedway
"I don't really feel like I have bad luck or bad karma
here. I love the race track and I look forward to coming here. You can move around here.
For drivers, this is one of the best racetracks that we run on. There's always a good
three or four car battle here at the end."
On the one-engine rule
"I feel like we don't have the speed that we had in
qualifying last year. A lot of the teams don't. I feel like our race motors are so
conservative (vs. qualifying motors) that we're really not qualifying as good as we should
have. I'm the type of guy to push the envelope a little bit and try to get the horsepower
out of the motor even if it's a risk. I'd rather blow-up running first than run 20th all
day. I feel like we're really soft on our motors. I feel like there's a lot there that
we're not taking advantage of. Also the new rules of the components being a certain weight
has really hurt our engine program as far as the race motor goes. We've just got to find
ways around that. I like the one-engine rule, myself. It's very cost effective for the
programs. I give it a year or a year and a half, and it'll be old news."
Are the Chevys at a disadvantage?
"Last week, I thought the Chevrolets were at a huge
disadvantage as far as front aerodynamics. But when we come to a track like Atlanta or
Charlotte, we seem to be able to compete pretty well, if not a little bit better than the
Fords and Dodges and even the Pontiacs. It seems like certain styles - certain shaped
tracks - are good for certain cars, teams, and manufacturers. The Chevrolet teams have
something to be learned or gained at flat track programs. But when we come here, it seems
like we're as good as anybody else. But we are at a disadvantage at flat race tracks. I
don't know why, or where on the racecar we need to go to improve it. I think overall, the
balance of our cars is way off. The Fords and Dodges have a good balance. We have way too
much rear downforce compared to what we have on the front and it makes our cars real
tight. I'd give up 40 on the back to get 40 counts on the front."
On Steve Park returning to the No. 1 car
"I have mixed emotions. I'm excited about it. Kenny
Wallace and I were friends before, but when he came to DEI I learned a lot more about him
and got real close with him. He's the kind of guy that you would like to see the
opportunity he probably deserves and be with a competitive team. He's definitely a good
spokesperson for a sponsor. He's got a good attitude and he's fun to be around. And he's a
talented racecar. I hate to see us unplug him and plug Steve in, but that's the way
business works sometimes.
"But I'm glad to have Steve back. It's probably real
emotional for him to make his return at Darlington. I can't speak for him. He wants to get
in the racecar and run good. He's ready to come back."
Do you think NASCAR's decisions are still under
scrutiny?
"I think if you have to ask that question, the answer
is probably yes. Before the TV contracts and long before NASCAR came into the public eye,
they had run the business 'as is'. I don't think they thought about the kind of scrutiny
that would come to them because of the decisions they made. They have to make some
decisions at the blink of an eye. There's not really time to sit around and talk about it.
Apparently we have learned something from it. But I hate to see in the news that their
credibility is being questioned. Some of their decisions haven't been that great. But I
don't really know what they could have done different. It's not good to see that in the
headlines instead of who won the race."
Is it too early to worry about the end of the season?
"I started worrying about the season at Daytona. You
really want to get off to a great start. We've made such a steep hill for us to climb in
the first three races already. I wanted to come out with good finishes and be in the top
15 in the points at this point in the season, but we're not. So there's a sense of
urgency, but also caution. As much as I want to get a great finish out of here, I know
that I have to be smart to get it and be reserved at times and not take too many seasons.
Maybe this isn't our season. But we'll go week in and week out. We might be good at one
and totally miss the set up someplace else. But there's no one thing that plugs in your
team that puts you up front. It just evolves."
Dale Jr. Budweiser Race Preview_3/5
Dale Jr. Quotes for the MBNA 500
"If last year is any indication, this is just what we needed. We were really strong
at Atlanta last year. I was happy that Kevin (Harvick) got his first win at this race, but
if we didn't have that cut tire, I think you would have seen the red Bud car in the
victory circle instead. We were really strong, and then we came back in the fall and sat
on the pole. It'd be great to get another Bud Pole pretty quick so we can make sure we're
in the Budweiser Shootout, but most importantly, we need to start seeing some top-fives
and top-10 finishes if we're going to have any chance at all of contending for a top
points finish this year."
Dale Jr. and the No. 8 Bud Team at Atlanta
Winston Cup Starts: 5
Best Start: 1 (Fall, 2001)
Best Finish: 7th (Fall, 2001)
This Race, Last Year: St: 17th
Fin: 15th
The Bud team has been in position to win the last two races
at Atlanta, dominating the fall race last year, leading 170 laps before Dale Jr. was
hampered by debris that lodged in his left eye. At this event last year, Dale Jr. was
among the five cars dicing for the victory with five laps to go (setting the
second-fastest lap of the race along the way) when debris caused a cut right front tire
and dropping the team to a 15th place finish.
What to Watch:
Dale Jr. seems to reserve his best performances for the tracks that are wickedly fast -
and Atlanta is the fastest and most wicked of all. He won the Bud Pole at the most recent
Atlanta race and was within a cut tire of a top-three finish at this race last year.
-Budweiser |