powered by Google  
  Track your favorite teams and players.
Free membership, Register Now
Already a member, Log In
 

Earnhardt hopes to prove himself on road, earn top 10 at Sonoma - Auto Racing Sports News
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Home   Fantasy     NFL  |  MLB  |  NBA  |  NHL  |  College FB  |  College BK  |  Golf  |  More CBS College | MaxPreps | Mobile | Shop  
Auto Racing Home | Series: Sprint Cup | Nationwide | Trucks | IndyCar | Formula 1 | NHRA | ALMS | Grand Am ||| Teams | Tracks | Video
 

Earnhardt hopes to prove himself on road, earn top 10 at Sonoma

SONOMA, Calif. -- Dale Earnhardt Jr. is generally an afterthought when people talk about NASCAR's best road racers.

 

That is something stock car racing's most popular driver would like to change Sunday in the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway.

"This weekend is important to me because I'm sick of hearing people say 'Oh, he can't drive on a road course,'" Junior said.

It's not that Junior has been terrible on the tracks with left and right turns. While Earnhardt's best finishes in seven tries on Infineon's 1.99-mile circuit have been a pair of 11ths, he has a third, a fifth and a 10th at Watkins Glen International, the only other road course the Nextel Cup races.

But Earnhardt feels he has something to prove, particularly on this picturesque Northern California course with rolling hills and treacherous turns and elevation changes.

"We've been so close here before and have always come away with some sort of issue that takes away from what we can really do," said Earnhardt, who qualified third in the 43-car field. "I want a top-10 so bad here, I can taste it.

Dale Earnhardt will try to better his 11th-place finish at Sonoma. (Getty Images)  
Dale Earnhardt will try to better his 11th-place finish at Sonoma. (Getty Images)  
"In 2005, we had a car I thought had a chance to win the Cup race, but we were trying a new transmission and it locked up on the first lap and I was in the wall. That was so disappointing -- and it was even worse when we fixed the car and I went back out and was still as fast as anyone in a car that was beat up and taped together.

"It was frustrating, but it was another sign that I can do this," Earnhardt added.

The Sonoma track is also the site of one of Earnhardt's scariest moments in a race car.

In 2004, while driving a Corvette in the Sunday warmup for an American Le Mans Series sports car race, Earnhardt lost control and slid backward into a concrete barrier, igniting a fire. He came away with second-degree burns to the inside of both thighs, his chin and neck.

The injuries forced Earnhardt to use Martin Truex, his teammate at Dale Earnhardt Inc., as a relief driver in the next race and provided Junior some very uncomfortable days until the burns healed. But it wasn't the burns that upset Earnhardt the most.

"It broke my heart that I didn't get to race the Corvette here in 2004 because of the crash during the morning warmup," he said. "I was angry because it cost that team a chance to race after they had been so good to me, but also because I was really learning a lot and had improved my road racing skills."

Although pole-winner Jamie McMurray and solid road racer Robby Gordon are starting ahead of Junior on the grid, his biggest competition is likely to come from road course specialist Boris Said, who qualified fourth, and fifth-place Tony Stewart, a two-time Cup champion who has five road racing wins, two of them at Infineon.

CONTINUED: 1 · 2 · Next »
Copyright 2009 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 

 
 
 
 
Related Links
 
Headlines