Earnhardt (2025) s01e04 Episode Script
Dale
1
[race car engines]
[delicate piano music]
[Dale Jr.]
You spend your whole life living
without no consideration
for how fragile your existence is.
[engine revs]
We all just live like hell, wide open.
And there's a point, I think,
where we all get to the crest of that hill
and we go,
shit, the end's right over there.
[interviewer]
As you look back on your career,
you said in one of your first interviews
that what you want to do in your career is
make your daddy proud of you.
You think you've done that?
I think he'd be proud
of our accomplishments.
My dad taught me the foundation of racing
and taught me
pretty much everything I know
that I haven't learnt on my own.
But what I learnt on my own, he told me.
I just didn't hear it.
Dad gave me a lot of good advice.
But really, it was being a good person.
When you're gone, all you're gonna have
left is your reputation and your name,
so you want to have a good one.
[director]
Mark Earnhardt one.
Okay, here we go. Dolly. And action.
Families are real important in NASCAR.
My father got me into it,
and now it's my turn.
Hey, can I borrow the keys to your car
this weekend?
- No way.
- C'mon, Dad.
No way, man.
You're gonna go ride Smash Mouth
around that race track in my car? No way.
[director]
Cut.
[Dale Jr.] I was getting everything
that I ever wanted out of my childhood.
I was getting this badass relationship
with Dad.
He's a teddy bear.
Nah, polar bear.
- You're a teddy bear.
- Polar bear.
What do you call him?
[Dale Jr.]
Dad, most of the time.
[reporter] Kerry's gonna come on out
in just a second here.
Get a little help from Papa Dad.
What about these kids, Earnhardt?
Kids are getting better and better,
aren't they? I'm pretty proud of 'em.
[Dale Jr.]
It was fun to see Dad enjoy that.
All we'd ever seen him do
was enjoy himself,
his own wins, his own achievements.
So, in our minds,
man, this is just gettin' started.
[Kelley] Dale was doing great,
but my dad and I weren't speaking
and
we just had a really rough time.
When I had Carson, it kind of gave us
a reason to connect and talk.
But it was just short-lived.
You know, I'm knee-deep
in figuring out how to raise a baby.
My mom moved to North Carolina
to help take care of Carson.
So, I leaned on her a lot
for help and guidance.
But there was nothing I could do
in my mom's eyes that she would ever
not support me. I mean,
she was my biggest cheerleader.
And it's like, what you wanted
It's what I wanted from my dad.
[unsettling music]
[whistle blows]
[Darrell Waltrip]
In 2001, at Daytona,
I did an interview with Dale.
And uh, I was very blunt.
How do you see yourself?
How do you feel about Dale Earnhardt?
A lot better today
than I did several years ago.
Uh, because of family,
because of my life.
Because I think I'm a better person
than I used to be.
I got a great wife, a great family.
I'm proud of my kids.
Racing and enjoying it.
I win, I'm competitive.
So, you know, I'm having a good time.
I got it all right now, Darrell.
[Darrell]
No, you really do.
Really, I'm a lucky man.
I have it all, I mean
[Darrell] I think he had finally realized
what he had accomplished.
Seventy-six wins, seven championships.
One of the greatest drivers of all time.
He wasn't, but they said he was.
Is that part of your plan
with your company, your Garage Mahal?
Quit callin' it that.
It's a damn race shop.
[Darrell laughs]
I don't know, I mean, I just
What's the plan for that company?
The plan was to have a race team.
Then, all of a sudden,
it became a Winston Cup Team.
And then, it's two, now it's three.
And I feel like,
when I get out of the race car
in three, four, five, ten years
down the road, whenever it is,
you know, I'll have a good business
to look back,
and Dale Jr. and I can be involved with.
Hopefully Michael will still be there
because I like a long-term commitment.
[reporter]
Michael Waltrip's off season jump
to join the Intimidator
at Dale Earnhardt Incorporated.
I don't know this for a fact,
but I think Dale did that
because he knew it'd make me mad.
[laughing]
I love my brother to death.
I'd do anything in the world for him.
But he was 0 for like 365 or
Four sixty-two, whatever it was.
And you're gonna hire him
to be your driver?
Michael is here, we're ready to go.
Honestly, we've seen multi-car teams
where they work in a spectacular way,
and we've seen 'em been a dismal failure.
Now, I have not asked the question:
win number one.
Oh, yeah. It'd be so cool to write
one for four, whatever it's gonna be.
Um, I'm lookin' forward to that.
But, you know, that's not gonna be
a record to be very proud of.
That's still not very good.
This was my first race for DEI.
Dale told me the plan.
He went into this speech
about how we were gonna win the race.
He's like, me, you, and Dale Jr.,
we're gonna work together,
and we're gonna be in a position
to win this race.
I'm like, I'd never heard
anything like that before.
[Dale Jr.] He's like, if you guys
just stay and work together.
Like, yeah, whatever. You can't predict
who's gonna win this race.
Anybody can win this race.
[Michael]
He had won Talladega
when he went
from 18th to the win in three laps.
You saw what I did,
how I drove through the field.
I couldn't have done that if I hadn't been
the push I was getting from Kenny Wallace.
That's what we gotta do.
Whoever gets to the front first,
the other two have to shove.
Push hard. We'll decide
who's gonna win on the last lap.
[commentator] We're expecting
one of the biggest crowds ever.
Nearly a quarter of a million people
packing this legendary speedway.
In the end, we'll have one champion,
one driver,
who will make his way through
42 other cars and 500 miles of track
to decide who will win the Daytona 500.
[announcer]
Almighty God, we pause today
with all of this excitement
in this beautiful setting
to give thanks to You, our God.
And may your blessings abound
with us all this day. Shalom and amen.
As a young race driver,
I dreamed about racing at Daytona.
And then, I dreamed about winning
at Daytona.
It took a long time.
[jets whooshing]
Some dreams turn into nightmares,
like some of these guys
have had happen to them.
Here we go!
But there's no greater feeling,
no greater accomplishment,
than driving your car through
those pearly gates into that holy ground.
[announcer]
Gentlemen,
start your engines!
[engines roar]
[upbeat drumming music]
[commentator] Dale Earnhardt is
the most prolific restrictor plate driver
in NASCAR history.
He's chasing his second 500 victory,
looking to bookend what's been
a legendary Daytona career.
[upbeat music continues]
[commentator 2] Terry Bradshaw
waves the green flag. We're racing.
[commentator 2] Dale Earnhardt
will start in seventh position today.
He'll be turning 50 years old in April.
He's looking for his second win
at the Daytona 500.
[commentator]
Three wide in the back straightaway.
[commentator 2] They're battling
back around the fifth spot.
Something's gotta give.
It all settles down.
Atwood sees an opening in the middle.
[commentator] Now, here's
Dale Earnhardt getting restless,
two cars stacked up behind him.
Trying to pick off yet another spot,
but having to wait and find
the right time to make the move.
Dale Earnhardt dives down low
as they head into turn one.
[commentator 2] Here's Earnhardt,
goes inside to Jeff Gordon.
[Darrell]
Gordo doesn't want to let him go, but
[commentator 2]
Did you see him work that wheel?
[Darrell] Oh, yeah,
he was a busy man in there.
[commentator] Michael Waltrip
up to ninth spot.
Darrell's younger brother.
[man]
I think about 43 cars, and his plan
First of all, you're trying to survive.
Then, ya gotta get to the front.
[commentator 2] Here comes Earnhardt,
all the way to the bottom,
trying to run to take the lead.
Sterling Marlin moved over to block.
Look at Earnhardt!
[commentator] Right down to the apron
to take the lead.
[Darrell]
Jeff Gordon pushed him in the 24 car.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the red car,
the 8 car pushing with it.
[commentator 2]
Here comes Michael Waltrip up the middle.
[Darrell] We hadn't
talked about Uncle Mike all day,
and there he is. Come on, buddy.
Pretty impressive, all three
of them DEI cars up there in the lead.
[commentator] Here's Earnhardt Jr.,
working the inside lane.
It's a tight squeeze off of turn two.
Skinner's still in the middle.
[commentator 2]
Now trouble.
Stewart is in trouble on the back stretch.
Stewart's car up in the air and over.
It's a big wreck on the back straightaway.
At least six, seven, eight,
maybe a dozen,
maybe a dozen and a half cars.
[Michael] The red flag came out.
Everybody stopped.
We stopped on the front straightaway.
And I look in my mirror
And Dale Jr.'s second,
and Dale's third.
The three of us, one, two, three.
Just like he said we would be.
I'm like, well, damn.
Not only is he
Not only is he an amazing racer,
but he can see the future.
Like, that's wild.
And I just thought, I did my job.
I did just what I was hired to do.
I put myself in a position
to get through that wreck,
as did Dale Jr.
I couldn't believe it.
This is what you race your whole life for.
There's 30 laps to go,
and you're leading the Daytona 500.
[commentator] Michael Waltrip
leads the Daytona 500,
and those two Earnhardts
are right behind him.
[Michael] We've already decided, we're
gonna push each other to the very end.
It's time to drive the best 30 laps
of my life.
[crowd cheers]
[Darrell]
You gotta have nerves of steel, folks,
to see what these guys saw just now,
these cars all flippin' and flyin'
through the air.
Pop right back out there
just like it never happened.
[Dale Jr.] So, we come
down to the end, and it's us.
And I'm sitting there
between Dad and Michael.
And man, I'm thinkin',
this is what we talked about.
[commentator]
Michael Waltrip, 0 for 462.
Right now, the car behind him
is his teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr.
[Darrell] Let me tell ya, that's
the best thing Mikey's got goin' for him,
is those two cars behind him,
Dale Jr. and Dale Sr.
You gotta pass two cars to get to him.
But they're gettin' heat from the back.
Sterling's all over Dale Sr.
Dale Sr.'s trying to keep him back,
so he can't get to the two team cars
in the front.
This is a chess match at high speed.
[commentator] At the front of the field,
Michael Waltrip by himself.
The battle's on for second place.
Whoa! Look at Earnhardt!
Sterling got into Earnhardt.
[Darrell] Dale is doing everything
he can to keep Sterling behind him,
because Dale knows
that Sterling's got a fast car.
[commentator] And the laps wind down.
Ten to go.
It was like the last ten laps of the race.
It was getting really close.
All the DEI cars was up front.
Dale was up front.
I want to be at Mama's, you know.
So, I flew over there in the car.
[light guitar music]
I was at Mother's. I always went to Mom's
on Sunday to watch the race with her.
Kelley was there with Carson.
I mean, we were just watchin' the race
as normal.
But then
[commentator] There is some damage
to the front end of Earnhardt's car.
Could affect the aerodynamics.
It's like runnin' against a brick wall.
[Darrell] I don't know
if I can stand this or not.
Come on, buddy, you got two to go.
[Michael] I'm workin' my ass off,
drivin' my car,
holding the proper line.
[Darrell] Just stay under him,
Dale Jr. Just stay under him, buddy.
[Michael] I was clean
because Dale Jr. was pushing me.
Dale Jr. was clean,
because Dale was pushin' him.
And Dale had the whole world
after him.
[Darrell]
Come on, buddy. One to go.
[commentator]
The last lap.
[Darrell] Come on, man.
He's gonna make a run on the inside.
Block him, block him.
You got him, Mikey. You got him, man.
You got him!
[man over radio]
Inside. Three wide, inside.
Inside, inside.
[commentator]
The 3 car Oh!
Big trouble. Big wreck behind him.
- To the flag.
- [Darrell] C'mon, Mikey, you got it, man.
You got it, you got it, you got it!
Mikey! Oh, Mike!
[commentator]
Michael Waltrip wins
[Michael]
Whoo!
[commentator]
Darrell? Is this better than winning it?
Oh, it's much better.
[sniffs]
This is great.
I just hope Dale's okay
I guess he's all right, isn't he?
[Michael]
When we came off turn four,
the spotter says,
they're wrecking behind you.
And I took the checkered, and that was it.
If I didn't have blinders on,
I would've went over there
just to celebrate with him.
[Kaye] When the wreck happened,
Mother just started crying.
[announcer speaking indistinctly]
[cheering]
I said, Mother, it's gon' be okay,
but she didn't say anything.
She just kept crying.
[Chocolate Myers]
I remember being on Pit Road
and some of the guys walkin' by there
and puttin' their equipment together,
and they're tellin' how bad it is.
We've done this before. I saw the crash.
[Hank Parker] It did not look that bad.
It didn't look that bad to me.
But then I watched him roll
down the racetrack.
Well, that tells me he's unconscious.
Because he woulda locked his brakes.
There's no way he'd have came
down that racetrack. No way.
[metal crunching]
[Darrell]
The TV does not do that justice.
That is an incredible impact head on.
Those are the kind of accidents
that absolutely are frightening.
I mean, we were really at the mercy of
sittin' there, watching it unfold on TV.
And I mean, at this point, we still
weren't in communication with anybody.
Just watching my brother, you know,
get out and run.
[Kaye] They kept saying,
they've taken him to a local hospital.
And of course, they showed
the ambulance slowly drivin' out.
[Dale Jr.] I'm hustling through the halls,
you know, looking in every room.
And I look over,
and there's Dad on a table.
Seemed like eight or 10 doctors
surrounding that table,
and they're all working.
[reporter] Kenny, let me ask you.
I know you're just getting
out of the care center.
You made your way over to Dale's
situation. What's going on there?
I don't really know. I'm not a doctor.
I mean, I got the heck out of the way
as soon as they got there.
[cheering]
[Michael] You know, I'm celebrating
with my team and my family.
And I got my trophy.
And I'm just livin' it up.
Everything was perfect in my world.
[announcer] On behalf of Dale Earnhardt,
the owner of the winning Daytona 500 car.
[Ty Norris] So, they asked me
to accept the owner's trophy.
And we're sitting there,
and we're still celebratory,
and then Ken Schrader shows up.
Kenny walked into Victory Lane and
gave me a hug and told me,
It's not good.
And it was like a light switch.
It just changed Michael's demeanor.
[sirens blare]
Finally, somebody grabbed me
and told me that Dad was gone,
or Dad passed away,
or Dad didn't make it.
And I could go back into this room.
And so, I go back to the room,
and there's no doctors, there's just Dad.
[soft music]
And Teresa was standing over Dad,
and she is just so sad.
You know, as sad as you can imagine
somebody in that moment being
losing their spouse.
I didn't want to go any closer.
I stood at the door and again,
Dad's 15 feet away.
And I
didn't want to, um,
remember him that way.
And so, I just left.
[Darrell] We went to the hospital,
and they weren't gonna let me in.
They said, you can't go in there.
You're not family.
I said, I am, too.
Teresa said, you want to go see Dale?
I said, can I?
And I walked in the room,
and he's laying on the stretcher, dead.
And, uh, I kissed him on his forehead.
That was the end of the day.
[Kerry]
I was on the lawnmower mowing.
Wife, René, come out,
wanting to know if I've talked to Kelley.
And I hadn't, so I called her,
and she's bawlin'.
I remember, we always thought
he was invincible.
You know, just never thought that a race
would take his life like it did.
[Kelley] That whole night,
more and more family just kept comin'.
You know, tons of crying,
tons of disbelief.
And the news started showing up,
you know,
with the news vans
around my grandmother's house.
We just all were shocked
and wondering what was next.
Sad news this morning. Dale Earnhardt
was killed in a high-speed crash
The death of race car driver
Dale Earnhardt.
[Tom Brokaw]
For millions of Americans,
the grief is as great
as when Elvis or Diana died.
[Bryant Gumbel] And in Morrisville,
North Carolina, fans are creating a shrine
outside the shop where the seven-time
Winston Cup winner created his legacy.
[Dale Jr.] Every hour,
his face would be on the screen.
It would say 1951 to 2001.
Everybody was recognizing
that he had passed.
And you're thinkin', damn, dude,
he was farther out there
in the stratosphere
and into the mainstream
than I ever even thought.
[reporter] President Bush is among those
mourning the loss of legendary racer
(overlapping)
Dale Earnhardt
the greatest race car driver ever.
[man] When Dale died,
you could not open up the funeral.
It was a zoo. It was
thousands of people there.
And there were thousands of people
outside, all over the street.
[reporter 2]
So, how long was the trip?
Oh, I would say eight hours.
[fan] To us, he'll always be
the greatest driver there is.
There'll never be another Dale Earnhardt.
[Dale Jr.] We were standing there
at the church, and I'm like, holy shit.
All these people want to be here for this.
[reporter 3] Sixty-two hundred seats
are filling with Dale's NASCAR family.
The florists in the surrounding areas
say they have orders
they will not be able to fill
for more than three weeks.
[Dale Jr.] In a weird way,
that gave you some kind of a good feeling
that he was so appreciated,
that people would want to be there
for that moment.
I thought he was just ours.
I thought he was just this NASCAR icon.
And in that moment,
I just remember thinkin',
I feel so lucky
that I got to be his son.
A lot of people will never get to have
the moments I had with him.
And Kelley certainly doesn't
look at it that way.
She's going to miss him terribly,
every day.
And uh, my heart breaks for her.
[Kelley] It was three weeks,
the last time I had talked
to my dad before he died.
Three weeks.
I mean, there's nothing I can do about it,
you know.
There's not a conversation that I can have
to have that closure with my dad
on what I felt like
I was missing in that relationship.
You know, listening to stories of,
oh, your dad was so proud of you.
Your dad was so this,
your dad was so that, your dad is like
I didn't feel that way.
You know, there's a lot of hurt
and, um,
things that needed to be healed
and overcome.
The next morning, Monday morning,
got up and went to work.
Like I always do.
Kinda quiet in the garage area.
Couldn't talk to each other.
We just lost, not only our best friend,
but we lost the guy
that we make a living with.
Everybody was in limbo.
What are we gonna do?
I told my wife, I said, "Honey, we're
gonna sell everything and close it down."
I was ready to quit, ready to leave.
It was hard on everybody.
Teresa had tough decisions to make
for DEI.
I had tough decisions at RCR.
But I, uh, made the decision
that we were going forward.
Because I think that's
what Dale wanted us to do.
[Chocolate] We realized, if we were
gonna race, we gotta have a car ready.
Then we find out,
it's not gonna be number 3.
So, we start taking those numbers
off of everything.
And when I say everything,
you have no idea.
Every piece of equipment we got,
every jack stand, every wheel
has a number 3 on it.
And we're taking those 3s off.
We'd take a 3 off,
and we'd cry for a while.
And I'm sure that we are doing
exactly what he would want us to do.
We're racers. This is our life.
This is what we do.
Once all of the tears were dried up,
Friday, we have a press conference
because we had a business to run.
As cold as that sounds, what do you do?
Tell 200 people, "Go home,
we don't race anymore"?
Tell sponsors
with millions of dollars committed,
"We don't need your money anymore"?
I mean, I miss my father.
I've cried for him,
but out of my own selfish pity
is the reason for those emotions.
And, uh,
our main focus is to progress
with the vision my father had
with Dale Earnhardt Incorporated
to the best of our ability.
That's really all I have to say.
[reporter]
Drivers return today for their first race
since the death last Sunday
of stock car racing legend Dale Earnhardt.
[newscaster] Dale Earnhardt's son
will race again today.
One week after the crash
that killed his father at the Daytona 500.
[commentator] Kevin Harvick tapped
to drive the Richard Childress car.
Richard has said the number 3
will never be raced again
out of the Childress racing shop.
So, here this car is in white
with the number 29.
[Dale Jr.]
I wanted to be at the track.
'Cause I didn't want to have to be
in my thoughts about Dad.
My mind was in a really bad place.
Dale was not the kind of guy that would
walk around cryin' or complainin'.
He would say, boys, we got a job to do.
Let's get goin'.
When you get in that race car
and you put that helmet on,
you wipe away the tears.
You start to focus and concentrate.
Because every lap that you run,
you gotta have your mind
on what you're doin'.
And it's not about Dale.
It's about you today.
I'd like to ask you to do something.
I'd like you to take the hand
of the person beside you.
And let's all take a few moments
to remember Dale
as we deal with this loss.
We pray for Teresa,
Dale Jr., the entire Earnhardt family.
Comfort them, Lord.
Amen.
[crowd cheers]
[engine revs]
[commentator]
Lights are out atop the safety car.
This will be the start of 400 miles
from Rockingham.
Green flag, we're racing.
Steve Park dropped right in single file,
but Tony Stewart challenged
Oh, we got trouble, trouble already.
- Three cars, four cars
- [commentator 2] Dale Jr., Dale Jr.
[commentator]
And it is Earnhardt Jr.'s car
who comes to rest
against the outside wall.
[Darrell] This cannot be happening
to that young man.
From the last lap of last Sunday
to the first lap of this.
[Kelley]
I didn't go to the race,
but I remember
feeling really sorry for my brother.
I could just see the sadness on his face.
Just still in shock, you know.
[commentator]
And there is the result.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s car is going home
without completing a lap.
It was just defeat. You know,
like, is this how it's gonna go
from here, right?
[cashier]
Can I help someone?
[man]
You got any visors?
Like this one? Is that it?
Thank you, sir. You have a good day.
[Kelley] At that time, I was
on the side of the business and licensing
where everybody was fiending for product.
So, you couldn't make enough stuff.
You couldn't have enough t-shirts
and die casts,
and anything that anybody wanted
with my dad's name or face on it.
[newscaster] Sales of NASCAR merchandise
growing to a whopping $1.2 billion.
At one point, for auction today on eBay,
61,000 Earnhardt items.
[Ty] Everywhere you looked,
there's a 3, 3, 3.
They just couldn't stop coming after it.
[cashier]
Twenty-five.
[Ty] So, they started creating
new Earnhardt designs.
And let's go find anything
that we didn't do before.
[Joe Mattes]
It just went through the roof.
It was major. It was everywhere.
And Kelley's in the middle of,
"I'm grieving for my dad,
and I got this business that's exploding."
[Kelley]
It just put me in a really awkward spot,
because you're still trying to figure out
where's my passion
to continue to work there.
And what it means to you, you know,
for Dad to be gone.
[announcer over PA]
The Budweiser car number 8,
how about a nice, warm round
of applause for Dale Earnhardt, Jr.!
[cheers and applause]
[Jade Gurss] When his dad died,
a lot of tracks would say,
we're gonna give you an award
before the race
that we want to give,
recognizing your father.
And it would kind of take Junior
out of his, you know, his race mode,
or his game face.
At the same time,
his father had this long list
of appearances for his sponsors.
So, suddenly,
Teresa and others are saying,
Dale Jr., you have to go do this.
And that really bothered him,
because he didn't want to do appearances
that his father was meant to do.
[newscaster]
There is growing controversy in Florida
over the death of NASCAR legend
Dale Earnhardt.
Lawyers for a college newspaper
and a website
have been trying to gain access
to photos taken after his death,
but they're facing staunch opposition
from Earnhardt's widow.
[Dale Jr.] When all this went down,
Teresa was in protect mode.
She's consumed,
doing what she thinks is right.
And what we all thought was right.
[Teresa] This is the first time I've
spoken in public since we've lost Dale.
I am here to tell you that the trauma
we have suffered has only grown,
because we have been caught up
in an unexpected whirlwind
of efforts to gain access
to the autopsy photographs of Dale.
We can't believe that anyone
would invade our privacy
during this time of grief.
[Dale Jr.] When Dad died,
that first month or that first two months,
there was so much going on.
You just couldn't believe
that this was real.
[newscaster] An independent medical expert
who reviewed the autopsy photographs
says that Earnhardt died when
his head whipped violently forward
as his car crashed into a wall.
He had what I feel were life-ending-type
injuries at the time of impact.
And really, nothing could be done.
It is a nightmare.
That you don't wake up from.
[lawyer] If someone was able to view
these autopsy photographs,
how does that viewing
violate your privacy?
Because it would be of me.
Dale was a part of me.
He was half of me.
And the thought that at any time,
for the rest of our lives,
they could pop up,
I just can't imagine.
[Kelley] There was so much goin' on
with Teresa and the autopsy photos,
I knew that Teresa would not have
my brother's best interests in mind.
That was like back burner for them.
[reporter] Dale, is this whole thing
like a business to you,
or is it just like,
hey, this is pretty fun?
[Dale Jr.] I don't really see much
of the business side of it.
I just handle the personality side of it.
And then, we got people behind the scenes
that work the calculator.
[Kelley]
Again, we were raised all those years
that you just let Dad handle it,
let Dad control it, let Dad do it.
So, Dad had it all in place.
And then you lose your dad.
So, who's gonna take care
of Dale Jr.?
[fan]
Junior!
[crowd cheering]
So, what do you gotta do
to get a hug?
I know you hear this all the time,
but I love you, so
[fan]
Junior!
Breathe, man, breathe.
[man]
One at a time.
[Kelley] With my dad's death, my brother
was just thrust into a limelight.
And he had this legion of fans
that wanted him
to win 76 races and
seven championships just like Dad.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. inherited
Dale Sr.'s fan base.
He didn't ask for it.
But I cannot imagine the pressure
to become what his dad was.
The first half of the year,
you were just goin' through the motions.
Like, you'd just go to the track
go to the next track
And you didn't even know if you really
wanted to be doing what you were doing.
[Dale Jr.] When I didn't run good,
I was a miserable person.
It was this cycle, week after week.
[Tony]
He enjoyed racing,
but his whole drive was
to get his dad's attention.
Well, he's gone.
So, who's gonna pat me
on the back?
[Dale Jr.]
Everybody has their own opinion
about how you need to be,
and how you need to live your life.
My father was in the same situation.
I mean, he lost his father
at about the same age.
And I still ain't really
got it figured out.
Even if I wanted to stop,
I couldn't get off the merry-go-round.
You just don't get off this machine.
There's too much at stake.
There's too many responsibilities,
too many obligations, partners,
people that are depending on this.
[Jade]
Everyone in that first six months
was so full of loss and grief
that they just did what needed to happen
to get through that time.
But behind the scenes,
there were some cracks.
And you could kinda see
that Dale's leadership was missing.
[Wesley Sherrill] If you had a problem,
there was nobody to go to.
We couldn't walk in Teresa's office.
You've been left with all these people,
this huge company.
But at the same time,
she only has so much power.
She's Teresa Earnhardt,
she's not Dale Earnhardt.
[Tony]
You know, it's not one person's fault.
It was just a matter
of not having a leader.
[Teresa] Just to continue building
what we have started,
I couldn't do it all without him,
and he couldn't do it all without me.
It takes two of us.
So, uh, you know,
just real dedicated
and committed to the cause.
[Kelley] So, being the kind of
mother-figure for Dale all of my years,
I just begged and begged Dale,
like, let me come work for you.
You know, it's just kind of
always unwritten that
we take care of each other.
Whatever it was, I mean, it was me and him
lookin' out for each other.
[Dale Jr.] Of course,
Kelley dives in and wants to help.
Because I think she saw
that I was ill-equipped
to handle my future
without Dad's direction.
And so, Kelley took a 50% pay cut
to come and work in a little office
out of my house.
You know, she was always
lookin' out for me.
[soft music]
[birdsong]
[Dale Jr.]
Before Daytona, there was a week off.
You could spend that however you wanted.
It was a great pause
or half-time in the year.
Eury started kickin' it around,
"Hey, we ought to go to Daytona.
This is a weekend with the boys,
you're gonna have some fun.
We're gonna blow off some steam."
[laughing]
So, we got a crew of us,
and we got a Suburban.
We put some 20-inch wheels on that thing.
We thought we were big shit.
'Cause 20-inch wheels
was a big deal back in 2001.
We were so pumped.
Rollin' on DUBs down to Daytona!
So, the whole damn trip
kicked off right.
You want a piece of pizza? [laughs]
[Dale Jr.] And so, we drive down there,
we're jammin' out.
And we get to Daytona.
It's afternoon, sun's out,
it's a beautiful day.
And I got it in my head, I was like hey,
I want to go see if we
can go inside the track.
Because I couldn't drive past that track
and go into town,
and hang out, just knowing
what had happened there.
[Josh] So, he just rolls
that old Suburban on in there.
Then there was a little gate opened
and we kinda just got on the track.
We were out there, we rode around it,
and we stopped at turn four.
[Dale Jr.] I don't know
exactly where Daddy hit the wall.
I don't know
exactly where his car came to rest.
But I kinda came to that general area,
and I just got out.
My buddies, they all kinda
got out for a second,
but I just walked off by myself
and stood around a little bit
and just looked around.
Just didn't even really think,
I just was just there.
And I wanted, I think,
really to see how I would feel.
Would I get emotional? Would it
be too much? Would it feel too heavy?
Would I have a problem with it?
I didn't know.
If I was gonna have
some kind of a reaction,
I didn't want to have it
in front of everybody.
And I thought about it in that moment.
I was like, you know
my dad loved racing here.
He loved Daytona.
And he loved winning there.
He was proud of it.
And I just had this feeling
that I shouldn't be mad at it.
You know, I shouldn't dread
going to Daytona.
But at the same time,
there was this weird
feeling. Oh, man,
I almost hesitate to say this,
because it isn't gonna make
any sense to anybody.
But there was this really strange
feeling of freedom.
And I felt guilty,
even about feeling that way at all.
I felt so guilty.
I mean, I'm still in the very beginning
of my, hopefully, a long career.
And so, I kind of decided then and there
that I wasn't gonna hold anything
against the track.
And if anything,
Daytona was maybe even more special,
because it's where Dad had passed away.
[orchestral music rises]
[commentator]
Watch that circle.
[commentator 2]
There goes the grass.
[crowd cheers]
[soft orchestra music continues]
[seagulls squawking]
[reporter] The Winston Cup series
returns to Daytona.
Most of the drivers don't want to talk
about Dale Earnhardt this weekend,
but they will certainly have the late
seven-time champion on their mind.
[commentator]
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is on the track.
What must he be thinking right now?
I kinda had this really, like,
"I don't care" attitude.
What are they gonna say,
what are they gonna do?
What are they gonna do to me?
I don't give a fuck.
[upbeat drumming music]
In this moment, I'm like,
this car is amazing.
[Tony] I worked on
that Speedway car for a long time.
I mean, that was everything that we had.
It was one of them deals where,
like he went there with such an attitude
and such a drive.
We were gonna go to Daytona
and just take back what was ours.
[drumming music continues]
[crowd cheering]
[Michael Waltrip] Returning to Daytona
as a winner of the 500,
as a guy that needed
to get his shit together,
I had only one thought in mind,
and that was to win the race.
[jet engines roar]
[announcer over PA] And now,
for the most famous words in motorsports,
Miss Britney Spears.
Gentlemen
start your engines!
[crowd cheering]
[Michael] When the race started,
I had a pretty strong car.
Dale was really fast.
[commentator] And check out
the battle for second spot,
and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
and Michael Waltrip.
[commentator 2]
Dale Earnhardt Jr. goes for the lead.
Out front, Earnhardt leads at Daytona.
The fans all jump to their feet.
[commentator 3]
This young man, Allen, wants this race
as badly as he's ever wanted anything
in his life. He wants this one today.
[commentator]
Lead change. Mike Skinner out front.
And look at Junior go by
on the outside of Skinner.
Is he going to take the lead back?
Yes, he is.
Oh! Trouble off the corner.
Several cars involved.
Three, four, five, six, seven.
Sterling Marlin, Mike Skinner.
Jeff Gordon's in it. Bobby Hamilton.
Caution's out.
But it all happened
behind Dale Earnhardt Jr.
We had a caution.
And now I gotta come down pit road.
And so, we come down
and put four tires on.
Some people didn't take any tires.
But we're shuffled back in
like sixth spot.
[engine revs]
And Tony Sr. gives this interview.
[interviewer] Tony Eury, Sr.,
as the crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
you've led 111 laps tonight, but it seems
like time might be running out.
[Tony Sr.] You don't have
no control over your own destiny.
Ain't no tellin' what's gonna happen.
[commentator 2] Oh, man, six laps to go,
and they throw the green flag.
We've seen cars unable to pass him
all night long.
But we haven't seen how easily
he can pass.
[Tony Sr.]
We definitely got the car to pass 'em.
If we can get there, we'll get there.
If we can't, hey
we know who had the fastest car tonight.
[commentator]
Seven laps left.
Now it'll be six
as they come to the start/finish line.
Time to settle the Pepsi 400 at Daytona.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is sixth in line
and Benson leads on the restart.
[commentator 2]
All right, it's free game. Let's go.
Earnhardt Jr. lying back,
trying to get him to run.
He has that run, but Tony Stewart
moves up in front of him.
Look at Junior go!
[commentator]
Up to fourth.
Junior to the outside of Mayfield
for third.
Here's Dale Jr. to the outside
for second spot.
[commentator] To the outside
for the lead in turn four.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. rockets to the front
at Daytona! Listen to the crowd!
[commentator 2]
And look at this crowd!
[cheering]
Tony Eury's clapping, said,
"Come on, Junior, come on!"
[commentator]
Two to go.
Michael Waltrip
dives underneath Bobby Labonte.
They bump on the back stretch.
Waltrip in second. Elliott Sadler
and Rusty Wallace with him.
[Michael] I think I drove
the best seven laps of my life
to get right there,
and I had a split-second decision,
because I was going way faster
than Dale Jr.
So, when it was time to turn the wheel
to the right to go up beside him,
I don't know what happened.
I just went right behind him.
I'm right behind you.
I gave him a shove,
just like he'd given me in the 500.
[commentator] White flag is out.
Final lap at Daytona.
180,000 on their feet screaming wildly.
Two and a half miles to go.
[crowd cheering, shouting]
[commentator 2] Just exactly
the opposite of the Daytona 500.
It was 15 and 8.
[commentator] Here they come,
turn four. Final lap of the Pepsi 400.
Michael Waltrip in second,
but it's going to be Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
using lessons learned from his father
to go from sixth to first, and score
- the victory in the Pepsi 400.
- [Dale Jr. cheering]
[all cheering]
[man on radio]
That's unbelievable.
Love you, man. You did it.
- [cheering]
- Yeah! Hey!
[shouting indistinctly]
[commentator 2]
I am speechless.
[orchestral music rises]
I see Dale Jr. win that race
and I can't take it anymore.
And I was able to run out there
and congratulate him.
It shows me open my uniform up,
and I've got a number 3 t-shirt.
I'm kind of an emotional guy.
And that was
one of the most emotional things
that's happened in my racing career.
[commentator]
All right, Mikey, you celebrate, too.
He never got to celebrate your win
in February. You celebrate now.
[Michael]
You know, it was magical.
You know, I get back to my camper after
all the crazy celebration and all that,
and I'm sittin' on the bed thinkin',
now, why didn't I do that?
Why didn't I try to pass Dale Jr.
and win this race?
And then I just laughed, because I think,
maybe if I had did it and screwed it up,
I knew how pissed Dale would be.
You never know. Maybe I don't
make the move and we don't run one, two.
Maybe I don't have the greatest memory
of my career.
[cheering]
When he jumped up on my car
and gave me a hug,
I thought, everything's
going to be okay now.
And I'll have that in my heart forever.
[cheering]
[popping]
[Dale Jr.] Up until that moment,
I didn't care about nothin'.
The most important thing in my life
was gone.
But it flipped that night.
When we won that race,
stuff mattered.
Friends mattered, my future mattered,
my existence, my team.
A lot of people said
that was kind of like closure for them,
but for me, it was like
the very beginning of healing.
He was with me tonight.
I don't know how I did it.
And he was there.
I mean, ain't nobody else
I could dedicate it to,
that it would mean more to me.
I dedicate this win to him.
[interviewer]
One last question.
What do you think your dad would say?
Well, I feel like he would be proud of us.
Uh, me and the family and everybody
that is involved.
I think he would be proud.
He's a pretty independent-type guy.
He'd probably been pretty hard on me,
the way we, you know, raced,
and to get to where we've gotten.
You know, he'd probably crack the whip
a little bit on me,
but I think he'd be proud of us.
On this day, the 23rd of May 2010,
it's truly my honor and privilege
to induct Dale Earnhardt
into the Hall of Fame.
[Teresa]
This is an achievement of a lifetime.
And to be able to celebrate it
is a moment of pride for Dale
I just can't put into words.
Some call him legend.
Some call him hero.
Some simply call him Dad, or son.
Or to me
He was the love of my life.
[Kelley] My dad achieved
what he wanted to achieve.
You know, what he dreamed about.
He was great.
And with greatness comes sacrifice.
Do I wish that things
would've been different?
Absolutely.
But a lot of that made me who I am.
And I like who I am.
Who's in that picture with Mamaw?
In the blue shirt.
Um, Papa Dale.
[Kelley]
Who's with Papa Dale in that picture?
Uncle Junior, look,
you're in the picture, too.
I mean, it's still there
a little bit today,
it's like, you just can't believe
that he can't be here.
He deserves to be here,
he deserves to see all this.
He deserves to see
what Kelley did with her life,
and what Kerry did with his,
and what Taylor's doing with hers.
And what I did with mine.
[commentator] Dale Earnhardt Jr.
is the Daytona 500 champion of 2004.
[Kelley] You sit there and you talk
about the Earnhardt family,
and how joined to racing
and what this family does.
I mean, we do it
because we don't know any better.
This is what we do.
I would be lost without racing.
[Dale] You know, I've made mistakes,
and I've paid dues,
and I went through life as it is,
and you can't go back
and change your life.
So, I have to go on
and be happy with what I've got
and be ashamed of my mistakes,
and say I'm sorry and go on.
["Hands on the Wheel"
by Willie Nelson]
♪At a time when the world♪
♪Seems to be spinnin'♪
♪Hopelessly out of control♪
♪There's deceivers and believers♪
♪And old in-betweeners♪
♪That seem to have no place to go♪
♪Well, it's the same old song♪
♪It's right and it's wrong♪
♪And livin' is just somethin' that I do♪
♪And with no place to hide♪
♪I looked in your eyes♪
♪And I've found myself in you♪
♪I looked to the stars♪
♪Tried all of the bars♪
♪And I've nearly gone up in smoke♪
♪Now my hand's on the wheel♪
♪I've something that's real♪
♪And I feel like I'm goin' home.♪
[race car engines]
[delicate piano music]
[Dale Jr.]
You spend your whole life living
without no consideration
for how fragile your existence is.
[engine revs]
We all just live like hell, wide open.
And there's a point, I think,
where we all get to the crest of that hill
and we go,
shit, the end's right over there.
[interviewer]
As you look back on your career,
you said in one of your first interviews
that what you want to do in your career is
make your daddy proud of you.
You think you've done that?
I think he'd be proud
of our accomplishments.
My dad taught me the foundation of racing
and taught me
pretty much everything I know
that I haven't learnt on my own.
But what I learnt on my own, he told me.
I just didn't hear it.
Dad gave me a lot of good advice.
But really, it was being a good person.
When you're gone, all you're gonna have
left is your reputation and your name,
so you want to have a good one.
[director]
Mark Earnhardt one.
Okay, here we go. Dolly. And action.
Families are real important in NASCAR.
My father got me into it,
and now it's my turn.
Hey, can I borrow the keys to your car
this weekend?
- No way.
- C'mon, Dad.
No way, man.
You're gonna go ride Smash Mouth
around that race track in my car? No way.
[director]
Cut.
[Dale Jr.] I was getting everything
that I ever wanted out of my childhood.
I was getting this badass relationship
with Dad.
He's a teddy bear.
Nah, polar bear.
- You're a teddy bear.
- Polar bear.
What do you call him?
[Dale Jr.]
Dad, most of the time.
[reporter] Kerry's gonna come on out
in just a second here.
Get a little help from Papa Dad.
What about these kids, Earnhardt?
Kids are getting better and better,
aren't they? I'm pretty proud of 'em.
[Dale Jr.]
It was fun to see Dad enjoy that.
All we'd ever seen him do
was enjoy himself,
his own wins, his own achievements.
So, in our minds,
man, this is just gettin' started.
[Kelley] Dale was doing great,
but my dad and I weren't speaking
and
we just had a really rough time.
When I had Carson, it kind of gave us
a reason to connect and talk.
But it was just short-lived.
You know, I'm knee-deep
in figuring out how to raise a baby.
My mom moved to North Carolina
to help take care of Carson.
So, I leaned on her a lot
for help and guidance.
But there was nothing I could do
in my mom's eyes that she would ever
not support me. I mean,
she was my biggest cheerleader.
And it's like, what you wanted
It's what I wanted from my dad.
[unsettling music]
[whistle blows]
[Darrell Waltrip]
In 2001, at Daytona,
I did an interview with Dale.
And uh, I was very blunt.
How do you see yourself?
How do you feel about Dale Earnhardt?
A lot better today
than I did several years ago.
Uh, because of family,
because of my life.
Because I think I'm a better person
than I used to be.
I got a great wife, a great family.
I'm proud of my kids.
Racing and enjoying it.
I win, I'm competitive.
So, you know, I'm having a good time.
I got it all right now, Darrell.
[Darrell]
No, you really do.
Really, I'm a lucky man.
I have it all, I mean
[Darrell] I think he had finally realized
what he had accomplished.
Seventy-six wins, seven championships.
One of the greatest drivers of all time.
He wasn't, but they said he was.
Is that part of your plan
with your company, your Garage Mahal?
Quit callin' it that.
It's a damn race shop.
[Darrell laughs]
I don't know, I mean, I just
What's the plan for that company?
The plan was to have a race team.
Then, all of a sudden,
it became a Winston Cup Team.
And then, it's two, now it's three.
And I feel like,
when I get out of the race car
in three, four, five, ten years
down the road, whenever it is,
you know, I'll have a good business
to look back,
and Dale Jr. and I can be involved with.
Hopefully Michael will still be there
because I like a long-term commitment.
[reporter]
Michael Waltrip's off season jump
to join the Intimidator
at Dale Earnhardt Incorporated.
I don't know this for a fact,
but I think Dale did that
because he knew it'd make me mad.
[laughing]
I love my brother to death.
I'd do anything in the world for him.
But he was 0 for like 365 or
Four sixty-two, whatever it was.
And you're gonna hire him
to be your driver?
Michael is here, we're ready to go.
Honestly, we've seen multi-car teams
where they work in a spectacular way,
and we've seen 'em been a dismal failure.
Now, I have not asked the question:
win number one.
Oh, yeah. It'd be so cool to write
one for four, whatever it's gonna be.
Um, I'm lookin' forward to that.
But, you know, that's not gonna be
a record to be very proud of.
That's still not very good.
This was my first race for DEI.
Dale told me the plan.
He went into this speech
about how we were gonna win the race.
He's like, me, you, and Dale Jr.,
we're gonna work together,
and we're gonna be in a position
to win this race.
I'm like, I'd never heard
anything like that before.
[Dale Jr.] He's like, if you guys
just stay and work together.
Like, yeah, whatever. You can't predict
who's gonna win this race.
Anybody can win this race.
[Michael]
He had won Talladega
when he went
from 18th to the win in three laps.
You saw what I did,
how I drove through the field.
I couldn't have done that if I hadn't been
the push I was getting from Kenny Wallace.
That's what we gotta do.
Whoever gets to the front first,
the other two have to shove.
Push hard. We'll decide
who's gonna win on the last lap.
[commentator] We're expecting
one of the biggest crowds ever.
Nearly a quarter of a million people
packing this legendary speedway.
In the end, we'll have one champion,
one driver,
who will make his way through
42 other cars and 500 miles of track
to decide who will win the Daytona 500.
[announcer]
Almighty God, we pause today
with all of this excitement
in this beautiful setting
to give thanks to You, our God.
And may your blessings abound
with us all this day. Shalom and amen.
As a young race driver,
I dreamed about racing at Daytona.
And then, I dreamed about winning
at Daytona.
It took a long time.
[jets whooshing]
Some dreams turn into nightmares,
like some of these guys
have had happen to them.
Here we go!
But there's no greater feeling,
no greater accomplishment,
than driving your car through
those pearly gates into that holy ground.
[announcer]
Gentlemen,
start your engines!
[engines roar]
[upbeat drumming music]
[commentator] Dale Earnhardt is
the most prolific restrictor plate driver
in NASCAR history.
He's chasing his second 500 victory,
looking to bookend what's been
a legendary Daytona career.
[upbeat music continues]
[commentator 2] Terry Bradshaw
waves the green flag. We're racing.
[commentator 2] Dale Earnhardt
will start in seventh position today.
He'll be turning 50 years old in April.
He's looking for his second win
at the Daytona 500.
[commentator]
Three wide in the back straightaway.
[commentator 2] They're battling
back around the fifth spot.
Something's gotta give.
It all settles down.
Atwood sees an opening in the middle.
[commentator] Now, here's
Dale Earnhardt getting restless,
two cars stacked up behind him.
Trying to pick off yet another spot,
but having to wait and find
the right time to make the move.
Dale Earnhardt dives down low
as they head into turn one.
[commentator 2] Here's Earnhardt,
goes inside to Jeff Gordon.
[Darrell]
Gordo doesn't want to let him go, but
[commentator 2]
Did you see him work that wheel?
[Darrell] Oh, yeah,
he was a busy man in there.
[commentator] Michael Waltrip
up to ninth spot.
Darrell's younger brother.
[man]
I think about 43 cars, and his plan
First of all, you're trying to survive.
Then, ya gotta get to the front.
[commentator 2] Here comes Earnhardt,
all the way to the bottom,
trying to run to take the lead.
Sterling Marlin moved over to block.
Look at Earnhardt!
[commentator] Right down to the apron
to take the lead.
[Darrell]
Jeff Gordon pushed him in the 24 car.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the red car,
the 8 car pushing with it.
[commentator 2]
Here comes Michael Waltrip up the middle.
[Darrell] We hadn't
talked about Uncle Mike all day,
and there he is. Come on, buddy.
Pretty impressive, all three
of them DEI cars up there in the lead.
[commentator] Here's Earnhardt Jr.,
working the inside lane.
It's a tight squeeze off of turn two.
Skinner's still in the middle.
[commentator 2]
Now trouble.
Stewart is in trouble on the back stretch.
Stewart's car up in the air and over.
It's a big wreck on the back straightaway.
At least six, seven, eight,
maybe a dozen,
maybe a dozen and a half cars.
[Michael] The red flag came out.
Everybody stopped.
We stopped on the front straightaway.
And I look in my mirror
And Dale Jr.'s second,
and Dale's third.
The three of us, one, two, three.
Just like he said we would be.
I'm like, well, damn.
Not only is he
Not only is he an amazing racer,
but he can see the future.
Like, that's wild.
And I just thought, I did my job.
I did just what I was hired to do.
I put myself in a position
to get through that wreck,
as did Dale Jr.
I couldn't believe it.
This is what you race your whole life for.
There's 30 laps to go,
and you're leading the Daytona 500.
[commentator] Michael Waltrip
leads the Daytona 500,
and those two Earnhardts
are right behind him.
[Michael] We've already decided, we're
gonna push each other to the very end.
It's time to drive the best 30 laps
of my life.
[crowd cheers]
[Darrell]
You gotta have nerves of steel, folks,
to see what these guys saw just now,
these cars all flippin' and flyin'
through the air.
Pop right back out there
just like it never happened.
[Dale Jr.] So, we come
down to the end, and it's us.
And I'm sitting there
between Dad and Michael.
And man, I'm thinkin',
this is what we talked about.
[commentator]
Michael Waltrip, 0 for 462.
Right now, the car behind him
is his teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr.
[Darrell] Let me tell ya, that's
the best thing Mikey's got goin' for him,
is those two cars behind him,
Dale Jr. and Dale Sr.
You gotta pass two cars to get to him.
But they're gettin' heat from the back.
Sterling's all over Dale Sr.
Dale Sr.'s trying to keep him back,
so he can't get to the two team cars
in the front.
This is a chess match at high speed.
[commentator] At the front of the field,
Michael Waltrip by himself.
The battle's on for second place.
Whoa! Look at Earnhardt!
Sterling got into Earnhardt.
[Darrell] Dale is doing everything
he can to keep Sterling behind him,
because Dale knows
that Sterling's got a fast car.
[commentator] And the laps wind down.
Ten to go.
It was like the last ten laps of the race.
It was getting really close.
All the DEI cars was up front.
Dale was up front.
I want to be at Mama's, you know.
So, I flew over there in the car.
[light guitar music]
I was at Mother's. I always went to Mom's
on Sunday to watch the race with her.
Kelley was there with Carson.
I mean, we were just watchin' the race
as normal.
But then
[commentator] There is some damage
to the front end of Earnhardt's car.
Could affect the aerodynamics.
It's like runnin' against a brick wall.
[Darrell] I don't know
if I can stand this or not.
Come on, buddy, you got two to go.
[Michael] I'm workin' my ass off,
drivin' my car,
holding the proper line.
[Darrell] Just stay under him,
Dale Jr. Just stay under him, buddy.
[Michael] I was clean
because Dale Jr. was pushing me.
Dale Jr. was clean,
because Dale was pushin' him.
And Dale had the whole world
after him.
[Darrell]
Come on, buddy. One to go.
[commentator]
The last lap.
[Darrell] Come on, man.
He's gonna make a run on the inside.
Block him, block him.
You got him, Mikey. You got him, man.
You got him!
[man over radio]
Inside. Three wide, inside.
Inside, inside.
[commentator]
The 3 car Oh!
Big trouble. Big wreck behind him.
- To the flag.
- [Darrell] C'mon, Mikey, you got it, man.
You got it, you got it, you got it!
Mikey! Oh, Mike!
[commentator]
Michael Waltrip wins
[Michael]
Whoo!
[commentator]
Darrell? Is this better than winning it?
Oh, it's much better.
[sniffs]
This is great.
I just hope Dale's okay
I guess he's all right, isn't he?
[Michael]
When we came off turn four,
the spotter says,
they're wrecking behind you.
And I took the checkered, and that was it.
If I didn't have blinders on,
I would've went over there
just to celebrate with him.
[Kaye] When the wreck happened,
Mother just started crying.
[announcer speaking indistinctly]
[cheering]
I said, Mother, it's gon' be okay,
but she didn't say anything.
She just kept crying.
[Chocolate Myers]
I remember being on Pit Road
and some of the guys walkin' by there
and puttin' their equipment together,
and they're tellin' how bad it is.
We've done this before. I saw the crash.
[Hank Parker] It did not look that bad.
It didn't look that bad to me.
But then I watched him roll
down the racetrack.
Well, that tells me he's unconscious.
Because he woulda locked his brakes.
There's no way he'd have came
down that racetrack. No way.
[metal crunching]
[Darrell]
The TV does not do that justice.
That is an incredible impact head on.
Those are the kind of accidents
that absolutely are frightening.
I mean, we were really at the mercy of
sittin' there, watching it unfold on TV.
And I mean, at this point, we still
weren't in communication with anybody.
Just watching my brother, you know,
get out and run.
[Kaye] They kept saying,
they've taken him to a local hospital.
And of course, they showed
the ambulance slowly drivin' out.
[Dale Jr.] I'm hustling through the halls,
you know, looking in every room.
And I look over,
and there's Dad on a table.
Seemed like eight or 10 doctors
surrounding that table,
and they're all working.
[reporter] Kenny, let me ask you.
I know you're just getting
out of the care center.
You made your way over to Dale's
situation. What's going on there?
I don't really know. I'm not a doctor.
I mean, I got the heck out of the way
as soon as they got there.
[cheering]
[Michael] You know, I'm celebrating
with my team and my family.
And I got my trophy.
And I'm just livin' it up.
Everything was perfect in my world.
[announcer] On behalf of Dale Earnhardt,
the owner of the winning Daytona 500 car.
[Ty Norris] So, they asked me
to accept the owner's trophy.
And we're sitting there,
and we're still celebratory,
and then Ken Schrader shows up.
Kenny walked into Victory Lane and
gave me a hug and told me,
It's not good.
And it was like a light switch.
It just changed Michael's demeanor.
[sirens blare]
Finally, somebody grabbed me
and told me that Dad was gone,
or Dad passed away,
or Dad didn't make it.
And I could go back into this room.
And so, I go back to the room,
and there's no doctors, there's just Dad.
[soft music]
And Teresa was standing over Dad,
and she is just so sad.
You know, as sad as you can imagine
somebody in that moment being
losing their spouse.
I didn't want to go any closer.
I stood at the door and again,
Dad's 15 feet away.
And I
didn't want to, um,
remember him that way.
And so, I just left.
[Darrell] We went to the hospital,
and they weren't gonna let me in.
They said, you can't go in there.
You're not family.
I said, I am, too.
Teresa said, you want to go see Dale?
I said, can I?
And I walked in the room,
and he's laying on the stretcher, dead.
And, uh, I kissed him on his forehead.
That was the end of the day.
[Kerry]
I was on the lawnmower mowing.
Wife, René, come out,
wanting to know if I've talked to Kelley.
And I hadn't, so I called her,
and she's bawlin'.
I remember, we always thought
he was invincible.
You know, just never thought that a race
would take his life like it did.
[Kelley] That whole night,
more and more family just kept comin'.
You know, tons of crying,
tons of disbelief.
And the news started showing up,
you know,
with the news vans
around my grandmother's house.
We just all were shocked
and wondering what was next.
Sad news this morning. Dale Earnhardt
was killed in a high-speed crash
The death of race car driver
Dale Earnhardt.
[Tom Brokaw]
For millions of Americans,
the grief is as great
as when Elvis or Diana died.
[Bryant Gumbel] And in Morrisville,
North Carolina, fans are creating a shrine
outside the shop where the seven-time
Winston Cup winner created his legacy.
[Dale Jr.] Every hour,
his face would be on the screen.
It would say 1951 to 2001.
Everybody was recognizing
that he had passed.
And you're thinkin', damn, dude,
he was farther out there
in the stratosphere
and into the mainstream
than I ever even thought.
[reporter] President Bush is among those
mourning the loss of legendary racer
(overlapping)
Dale Earnhardt
the greatest race car driver ever.
[man] When Dale died,
you could not open up the funeral.
It was a zoo. It was
thousands of people there.
And there were thousands of people
outside, all over the street.
[reporter 2]
So, how long was the trip?
Oh, I would say eight hours.
[fan] To us, he'll always be
the greatest driver there is.
There'll never be another Dale Earnhardt.
[Dale Jr.] We were standing there
at the church, and I'm like, holy shit.
All these people want to be here for this.
[reporter 3] Sixty-two hundred seats
are filling with Dale's NASCAR family.
The florists in the surrounding areas
say they have orders
they will not be able to fill
for more than three weeks.
[Dale Jr.] In a weird way,
that gave you some kind of a good feeling
that he was so appreciated,
that people would want to be there
for that moment.
I thought he was just ours.
I thought he was just this NASCAR icon.
And in that moment,
I just remember thinkin',
I feel so lucky
that I got to be his son.
A lot of people will never get to have
the moments I had with him.
And Kelley certainly doesn't
look at it that way.
She's going to miss him terribly,
every day.
And uh, my heart breaks for her.
[Kelley] It was three weeks,
the last time I had talked
to my dad before he died.
Three weeks.
I mean, there's nothing I can do about it,
you know.
There's not a conversation that I can have
to have that closure with my dad
on what I felt like
I was missing in that relationship.
You know, listening to stories of,
oh, your dad was so proud of you.
Your dad was so this,
your dad was so that, your dad is like
I didn't feel that way.
You know, there's a lot of hurt
and, um,
things that needed to be healed
and overcome.
The next morning, Monday morning,
got up and went to work.
Like I always do.
Kinda quiet in the garage area.
Couldn't talk to each other.
We just lost, not only our best friend,
but we lost the guy
that we make a living with.
Everybody was in limbo.
What are we gonna do?
I told my wife, I said, "Honey, we're
gonna sell everything and close it down."
I was ready to quit, ready to leave.
It was hard on everybody.
Teresa had tough decisions to make
for DEI.
I had tough decisions at RCR.
But I, uh, made the decision
that we were going forward.
Because I think that's
what Dale wanted us to do.
[Chocolate] We realized, if we were
gonna race, we gotta have a car ready.
Then we find out,
it's not gonna be number 3.
So, we start taking those numbers
off of everything.
And when I say everything,
you have no idea.
Every piece of equipment we got,
every jack stand, every wheel
has a number 3 on it.
And we're taking those 3s off.
We'd take a 3 off,
and we'd cry for a while.
And I'm sure that we are doing
exactly what he would want us to do.
We're racers. This is our life.
This is what we do.
Once all of the tears were dried up,
Friday, we have a press conference
because we had a business to run.
As cold as that sounds, what do you do?
Tell 200 people, "Go home,
we don't race anymore"?
Tell sponsors
with millions of dollars committed,
"We don't need your money anymore"?
I mean, I miss my father.
I've cried for him,
but out of my own selfish pity
is the reason for those emotions.
And, uh,
our main focus is to progress
with the vision my father had
with Dale Earnhardt Incorporated
to the best of our ability.
That's really all I have to say.
[reporter]
Drivers return today for their first race
since the death last Sunday
of stock car racing legend Dale Earnhardt.
[newscaster] Dale Earnhardt's son
will race again today.
One week after the crash
that killed his father at the Daytona 500.
[commentator] Kevin Harvick tapped
to drive the Richard Childress car.
Richard has said the number 3
will never be raced again
out of the Childress racing shop.
So, here this car is in white
with the number 29.
[Dale Jr.]
I wanted to be at the track.
'Cause I didn't want to have to be
in my thoughts about Dad.
My mind was in a really bad place.
Dale was not the kind of guy that would
walk around cryin' or complainin'.
He would say, boys, we got a job to do.
Let's get goin'.
When you get in that race car
and you put that helmet on,
you wipe away the tears.
You start to focus and concentrate.
Because every lap that you run,
you gotta have your mind
on what you're doin'.
And it's not about Dale.
It's about you today.
I'd like to ask you to do something.
I'd like you to take the hand
of the person beside you.
And let's all take a few moments
to remember Dale
as we deal with this loss.
We pray for Teresa,
Dale Jr., the entire Earnhardt family.
Comfort them, Lord.
Amen.
[crowd cheers]
[engine revs]
[commentator]
Lights are out atop the safety car.
This will be the start of 400 miles
from Rockingham.
Green flag, we're racing.
Steve Park dropped right in single file,
but Tony Stewart challenged
Oh, we got trouble, trouble already.
- Three cars, four cars
- [commentator 2] Dale Jr., Dale Jr.
[commentator]
And it is Earnhardt Jr.'s car
who comes to rest
against the outside wall.
[Darrell] This cannot be happening
to that young man.
From the last lap of last Sunday
to the first lap of this.
[Kelley]
I didn't go to the race,
but I remember
feeling really sorry for my brother.
I could just see the sadness on his face.
Just still in shock, you know.
[commentator]
And there is the result.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s car is going home
without completing a lap.
It was just defeat. You know,
like, is this how it's gonna go
from here, right?
[cashier]
Can I help someone?
[man]
You got any visors?
Like this one? Is that it?
Thank you, sir. You have a good day.
[Kelley] At that time, I was
on the side of the business and licensing
where everybody was fiending for product.
So, you couldn't make enough stuff.
You couldn't have enough t-shirts
and die casts,
and anything that anybody wanted
with my dad's name or face on it.
[newscaster] Sales of NASCAR merchandise
growing to a whopping $1.2 billion.
At one point, for auction today on eBay,
61,000 Earnhardt items.
[Ty] Everywhere you looked,
there's a 3, 3, 3.
They just couldn't stop coming after it.
[cashier]
Twenty-five.
[Ty] So, they started creating
new Earnhardt designs.
And let's go find anything
that we didn't do before.
[Joe Mattes]
It just went through the roof.
It was major. It was everywhere.
And Kelley's in the middle of,
"I'm grieving for my dad,
and I got this business that's exploding."
[Kelley]
It just put me in a really awkward spot,
because you're still trying to figure out
where's my passion
to continue to work there.
And what it means to you, you know,
for Dad to be gone.
[announcer over PA]
The Budweiser car number 8,
how about a nice, warm round
of applause for Dale Earnhardt, Jr.!
[cheers and applause]
[Jade Gurss] When his dad died,
a lot of tracks would say,
we're gonna give you an award
before the race
that we want to give,
recognizing your father.
And it would kind of take Junior
out of his, you know, his race mode,
or his game face.
At the same time,
his father had this long list
of appearances for his sponsors.
So, suddenly,
Teresa and others are saying,
Dale Jr., you have to go do this.
And that really bothered him,
because he didn't want to do appearances
that his father was meant to do.
[newscaster]
There is growing controversy in Florida
over the death of NASCAR legend
Dale Earnhardt.
Lawyers for a college newspaper
and a website
have been trying to gain access
to photos taken after his death,
but they're facing staunch opposition
from Earnhardt's widow.
[Dale Jr.] When all this went down,
Teresa was in protect mode.
She's consumed,
doing what she thinks is right.
And what we all thought was right.
[Teresa] This is the first time I've
spoken in public since we've lost Dale.
I am here to tell you that the trauma
we have suffered has only grown,
because we have been caught up
in an unexpected whirlwind
of efforts to gain access
to the autopsy photographs of Dale.
We can't believe that anyone
would invade our privacy
during this time of grief.
[Dale Jr.] When Dad died,
that first month or that first two months,
there was so much going on.
You just couldn't believe
that this was real.
[newscaster] An independent medical expert
who reviewed the autopsy photographs
says that Earnhardt died when
his head whipped violently forward
as his car crashed into a wall.
He had what I feel were life-ending-type
injuries at the time of impact.
And really, nothing could be done.
It is a nightmare.
That you don't wake up from.
[lawyer] If someone was able to view
these autopsy photographs,
how does that viewing
violate your privacy?
Because it would be of me.
Dale was a part of me.
He was half of me.
And the thought that at any time,
for the rest of our lives,
they could pop up,
I just can't imagine.
[Kelley] There was so much goin' on
with Teresa and the autopsy photos,
I knew that Teresa would not have
my brother's best interests in mind.
That was like back burner for them.
[reporter] Dale, is this whole thing
like a business to you,
or is it just like,
hey, this is pretty fun?
[Dale Jr.] I don't really see much
of the business side of it.
I just handle the personality side of it.
And then, we got people behind the scenes
that work the calculator.
[Kelley]
Again, we were raised all those years
that you just let Dad handle it,
let Dad control it, let Dad do it.
So, Dad had it all in place.
And then you lose your dad.
So, who's gonna take care
of Dale Jr.?
[fan]
Junior!
[crowd cheering]
So, what do you gotta do
to get a hug?
I know you hear this all the time,
but I love you, so
[fan]
Junior!
Breathe, man, breathe.
[man]
One at a time.
[Kelley] With my dad's death, my brother
was just thrust into a limelight.
And he had this legion of fans
that wanted him
to win 76 races and
seven championships just like Dad.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. inherited
Dale Sr.'s fan base.
He didn't ask for it.
But I cannot imagine the pressure
to become what his dad was.
The first half of the year,
you were just goin' through the motions.
Like, you'd just go to the track
go to the next track
And you didn't even know if you really
wanted to be doing what you were doing.
[Dale Jr.] When I didn't run good,
I was a miserable person.
It was this cycle, week after week.
[Tony]
He enjoyed racing,
but his whole drive was
to get his dad's attention.
Well, he's gone.
So, who's gonna pat me
on the back?
[Dale Jr.]
Everybody has their own opinion
about how you need to be,
and how you need to live your life.
My father was in the same situation.
I mean, he lost his father
at about the same age.
And I still ain't really
got it figured out.
Even if I wanted to stop,
I couldn't get off the merry-go-round.
You just don't get off this machine.
There's too much at stake.
There's too many responsibilities,
too many obligations, partners,
people that are depending on this.
[Jade]
Everyone in that first six months
was so full of loss and grief
that they just did what needed to happen
to get through that time.
But behind the scenes,
there were some cracks.
And you could kinda see
that Dale's leadership was missing.
[Wesley Sherrill] If you had a problem,
there was nobody to go to.
We couldn't walk in Teresa's office.
You've been left with all these people,
this huge company.
But at the same time,
she only has so much power.
She's Teresa Earnhardt,
she's not Dale Earnhardt.
[Tony]
You know, it's not one person's fault.
It was just a matter
of not having a leader.
[Teresa] Just to continue building
what we have started,
I couldn't do it all without him,
and he couldn't do it all without me.
It takes two of us.
So, uh, you know,
just real dedicated
and committed to the cause.
[Kelley] So, being the kind of
mother-figure for Dale all of my years,
I just begged and begged Dale,
like, let me come work for you.
You know, it's just kind of
always unwritten that
we take care of each other.
Whatever it was, I mean, it was me and him
lookin' out for each other.
[Dale Jr.] Of course,
Kelley dives in and wants to help.
Because I think she saw
that I was ill-equipped
to handle my future
without Dad's direction.
And so, Kelley took a 50% pay cut
to come and work in a little office
out of my house.
You know, she was always
lookin' out for me.
[soft music]
[birdsong]
[Dale Jr.]
Before Daytona, there was a week off.
You could spend that however you wanted.
It was a great pause
or half-time in the year.
Eury started kickin' it around,
"Hey, we ought to go to Daytona.
This is a weekend with the boys,
you're gonna have some fun.
We're gonna blow off some steam."
[laughing]
So, we got a crew of us,
and we got a Suburban.
We put some 20-inch wheels on that thing.
We thought we were big shit.
'Cause 20-inch wheels
was a big deal back in 2001.
We were so pumped.
Rollin' on DUBs down to Daytona!
So, the whole damn trip
kicked off right.
You want a piece of pizza? [laughs]
[Dale Jr.] And so, we drive down there,
we're jammin' out.
And we get to Daytona.
It's afternoon, sun's out,
it's a beautiful day.
And I got it in my head, I was like hey,
I want to go see if we
can go inside the track.
Because I couldn't drive past that track
and go into town,
and hang out, just knowing
what had happened there.
[Josh] So, he just rolls
that old Suburban on in there.
Then there was a little gate opened
and we kinda just got on the track.
We were out there, we rode around it,
and we stopped at turn four.
[Dale Jr.] I don't know
exactly where Daddy hit the wall.
I don't know
exactly where his car came to rest.
But I kinda came to that general area,
and I just got out.
My buddies, they all kinda
got out for a second,
but I just walked off by myself
and stood around a little bit
and just looked around.
Just didn't even really think,
I just was just there.
And I wanted, I think,
really to see how I would feel.
Would I get emotional? Would it
be too much? Would it feel too heavy?
Would I have a problem with it?
I didn't know.
If I was gonna have
some kind of a reaction,
I didn't want to have it
in front of everybody.
And I thought about it in that moment.
I was like, you know
my dad loved racing here.
He loved Daytona.
And he loved winning there.
He was proud of it.
And I just had this feeling
that I shouldn't be mad at it.
You know, I shouldn't dread
going to Daytona.
But at the same time,
there was this weird
feeling. Oh, man,
I almost hesitate to say this,
because it isn't gonna make
any sense to anybody.
But there was this really strange
feeling of freedom.
And I felt guilty,
even about feeling that way at all.
I felt so guilty.
I mean, I'm still in the very beginning
of my, hopefully, a long career.
And so, I kind of decided then and there
that I wasn't gonna hold anything
against the track.
And if anything,
Daytona was maybe even more special,
because it's where Dad had passed away.
[orchestral music rises]
[commentator]
Watch that circle.
[commentator 2]
There goes the grass.
[crowd cheers]
[soft orchestra music continues]
[seagulls squawking]
[reporter] The Winston Cup series
returns to Daytona.
Most of the drivers don't want to talk
about Dale Earnhardt this weekend,
but they will certainly have the late
seven-time champion on their mind.
[commentator]
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is on the track.
What must he be thinking right now?
I kinda had this really, like,
"I don't care" attitude.
What are they gonna say,
what are they gonna do?
What are they gonna do to me?
I don't give a fuck.
[upbeat drumming music]
In this moment, I'm like,
this car is amazing.
[Tony] I worked on
that Speedway car for a long time.
I mean, that was everything that we had.
It was one of them deals where,
like he went there with such an attitude
and such a drive.
We were gonna go to Daytona
and just take back what was ours.
[drumming music continues]
[crowd cheering]
[Michael Waltrip] Returning to Daytona
as a winner of the 500,
as a guy that needed
to get his shit together,
I had only one thought in mind,
and that was to win the race.
[jet engines roar]
[announcer over PA] And now,
for the most famous words in motorsports,
Miss Britney Spears.
Gentlemen
start your engines!
[crowd cheering]
[Michael] When the race started,
I had a pretty strong car.
Dale was really fast.
[commentator] And check out
the battle for second spot,
and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
and Michael Waltrip.
[commentator 2]
Dale Earnhardt Jr. goes for the lead.
Out front, Earnhardt leads at Daytona.
The fans all jump to their feet.
[commentator 3]
This young man, Allen, wants this race
as badly as he's ever wanted anything
in his life. He wants this one today.
[commentator]
Lead change. Mike Skinner out front.
And look at Junior go by
on the outside of Skinner.
Is he going to take the lead back?
Yes, he is.
Oh! Trouble off the corner.
Several cars involved.
Three, four, five, six, seven.
Sterling Marlin, Mike Skinner.
Jeff Gordon's in it. Bobby Hamilton.
Caution's out.
But it all happened
behind Dale Earnhardt Jr.
We had a caution.
And now I gotta come down pit road.
And so, we come down
and put four tires on.
Some people didn't take any tires.
But we're shuffled back in
like sixth spot.
[engine revs]
And Tony Sr. gives this interview.
[interviewer] Tony Eury, Sr.,
as the crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
you've led 111 laps tonight, but it seems
like time might be running out.
[Tony Sr.] You don't have
no control over your own destiny.
Ain't no tellin' what's gonna happen.
[commentator 2] Oh, man, six laps to go,
and they throw the green flag.
We've seen cars unable to pass him
all night long.
But we haven't seen how easily
he can pass.
[Tony Sr.]
We definitely got the car to pass 'em.
If we can get there, we'll get there.
If we can't, hey
we know who had the fastest car tonight.
[commentator]
Seven laps left.
Now it'll be six
as they come to the start/finish line.
Time to settle the Pepsi 400 at Daytona.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is sixth in line
and Benson leads on the restart.
[commentator 2]
All right, it's free game. Let's go.
Earnhardt Jr. lying back,
trying to get him to run.
He has that run, but Tony Stewart
moves up in front of him.
Look at Junior go!
[commentator]
Up to fourth.
Junior to the outside of Mayfield
for third.
Here's Dale Jr. to the outside
for second spot.
[commentator] To the outside
for the lead in turn four.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. rockets to the front
at Daytona! Listen to the crowd!
[commentator 2]
And look at this crowd!
[cheering]
Tony Eury's clapping, said,
"Come on, Junior, come on!"
[commentator]
Two to go.
Michael Waltrip
dives underneath Bobby Labonte.
They bump on the back stretch.
Waltrip in second. Elliott Sadler
and Rusty Wallace with him.
[Michael] I think I drove
the best seven laps of my life
to get right there,
and I had a split-second decision,
because I was going way faster
than Dale Jr.
So, when it was time to turn the wheel
to the right to go up beside him,
I don't know what happened.
I just went right behind him.
I'm right behind you.
I gave him a shove,
just like he'd given me in the 500.
[commentator] White flag is out.
Final lap at Daytona.
180,000 on their feet screaming wildly.
Two and a half miles to go.
[crowd cheering, shouting]
[commentator 2] Just exactly
the opposite of the Daytona 500.
It was 15 and 8.
[commentator] Here they come,
turn four. Final lap of the Pepsi 400.
Michael Waltrip in second,
but it's going to be Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
using lessons learned from his father
to go from sixth to first, and score
- the victory in the Pepsi 400.
- [Dale Jr. cheering]
[all cheering]
[man on radio]
That's unbelievable.
Love you, man. You did it.
- [cheering]
- Yeah! Hey!
[shouting indistinctly]
[commentator 2]
I am speechless.
[orchestral music rises]
I see Dale Jr. win that race
and I can't take it anymore.
And I was able to run out there
and congratulate him.
It shows me open my uniform up,
and I've got a number 3 t-shirt.
I'm kind of an emotional guy.
And that was
one of the most emotional things
that's happened in my racing career.
[commentator]
All right, Mikey, you celebrate, too.
He never got to celebrate your win
in February. You celebrate now.
[Michael]
You know, it was magical.
You know, I get back to my camper after
all the crazy celebration and all that,
and I'm sittin' on the bed thinkin',
now, why didn't I do that?
Why didn't I try to pass Dale Jr.
and win this race?
And then I just laughed, because I think,
maybe if I had did it and screwed it up,
I knew how pissed Dale would be.
You never know. Maybe I don't
make the move and we don't run one, two.
Maybe I don't have the greatest memory
of my career.
[cheering]
When he jumped up on my car
and gave me a hug,
I thought, everything's
going to be okay now.
And I'll have that in my heart forever.
[cheering]
[popping]
[Dale Jr.] Up until that moment,
I didn't care about nothin'.
The most important thing in my life
was gone.
But it flipped that night.
When we won that race,
stuff mattered.
Friends mattered, my future mattered,
my existence, my team.
A lot of people said
that was kind of like closure for them,
but for me, it was like
the very beginning of healing.
He was with me tonight.
I don't know how I did it.
And he was there.
I mean, ain't nobody else
I could dedicate it to,
that it would mean more to me.
I dedicate this win to him.
[interviewer]
One last question.
What do you think your dad would say?
Well, I feel like he would be proud of us.
Uh, me and the family and everybody
that is involved.
I think he would be proud.
He's a pretty independent-type guy.
He'd probably been pretty hard on me,
the way we, you know, raced,
and to get to where we've gotten.
You know, he'd probably crack the whip
a little bit on me,
but I think he'd be proud of us.
On this day, the 23rd of May 2010,
it's truly my honor and privilege
to induct Dale Earnhardt
into the Hall of Fame.
[Teresa]
This is an achievement of a lifetime.
And to be able to celebrate it
is a moment of pride for Dale
I just can't put into words.
Some call him legend.
Some call him hero.
Some simply call him Dad, or son.
Or to me
He was the love of my life.
[Kelley] My dad achieved
what he wanted to achieve.
You know, what he dreamed about.
He was great.
And with greatness comes sacrifice.
Do I wish that things
would've been different?
Absolutely.
But a lot of that made me who I am.
And I like who I am.
Who's in that picture with Mamaw?
In the blue shirt.
Um, Papa Dale.
[Kelley]
Who's with Papa Dale in that picture?
Uncle Junior, look,
you're in the picture, too.
I mean, it's still there
a little bit today,
it's like, you just can't believe
that he can't be here.
He deserves to be here,
he deserves to see all this.
He deserves to see
what Kelley did with her life,
and what Kerry did with his,
and what Taylor's doing with hers.
And what I did with mine.
[commentator] Dale Earnhardt Jr.
is the Daytona 500 champion of 2004.
[Kelley] You sit there and you talk
about the Earnhardt family,
and how joined to racing
and what this family does.
I mean, we do it
because we don't know any better.
This is what we do.
I would be lost without racing.
[Dale] You know, I've made mistakes,
and I've paid dues,
and I went through life as it is,
and you can't go back
and change your life.
So, I have to go on
and be happy with what I've got
and be ashamed of my mistakes,
and say I'm sorry and go on.
["Hands on the Wheel"
by Willie Nelson]
♪At a time when the world♪
♪Seems to be spinnin'♪
♪Hopelessly out of control♪
♪There's deceivers and believers♪
♪And old in-betweeners♪
♪That seem to have no place to go♪
♪Well, it's the same old song♪
♪It's right and it's wrong♪
♪And livin' is just somethin' that I do♪
♪And with no place to hide♪
♪I looked in your eyes♪
♪And I've found myself in you♪
♪I looked to the stars♪
♪Tried all of the bars♪
♪And I've nearly gone up in smoke♪
♪Now my hand's on the wheel♪
♪I've something that's real♪
♪And I feel like I'm goin' home.♪