Frazzled Junior must focus on winning
By Jenna Fryer| Associated Press
Tuesday, October 20, 2009

CHARLOTTE, N.C. --- Nobody is trying to sugarcoat the trainwreck that is Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s season.

He knows it's bad. His car owner knows it's bad. All of NASCAR knows it's bad.

Only nobody knows how to fix it.

And as the most prolific pairing in NASCAR history teeters on the brink of disaster, car owner Rick Hendrick is in a race to figure out what to do with his No. 88 team before Earnhardt loses what's left of his crumbling confidence.

"I'm as frustrated as those guys are," Hendrick said of Earnhardt's team. "But I can tell you this ... I'm as committed as I know how to be, and we're all committed to each other. We're just going to keep digging."

It's bizarre how bad things are for Earnhardt, who is stuck in a maddening slide at the same time his Hendrick Motorsports teammates hold down the top three spots in the Sprint Cup standings.

When he runs well, it's still not good enough to compete with points leader Jimmie Johnson, Mark Martin or Jeff Gordon. And when he runs bad, it's really, really bad.

Throw in all of the bad luck and broken parts, and it's a wonder he's still able to show up at the race track each weekend.

Earnhardt did everything asked of him last weekend at Lowe's Motor Speedway, though it seemed as if NASCAR's most popular driver was at times just going through the motions. He thought he had a decent race car but instead qualified a humiliating 39th while his teammates grabbed spots inside the top nine.

It might as well have been the straw that broke the camel's back.

Earnhardt appeared defeated the rest of the weekend and said little to contradict that assessment.

He chose his words carefully, but he was unable to hide the mounting frustration of a disastrous second season driving for the best organization in NASCAR. He's won just one race since joining Hendrick Motorsports, in June 2008, and has just five top-10 finishes all season.

The struggles have led many to question Earnhardt's talent level. After all, if he can't perform in Hendrick equipment, he can't be all that good, right?

Longtime family friend Richard Childress, who fielded championship-winning cars for Earnhardt's father, said it's not that simple.

"Everybody's got their expectations so high, and when you don't fulfill those expectations, people think you're not there," Childress said. "But Junior can still drive a race car. He can compete. He can win. And he will win a championship someday.

"It's just a matter of going through a few of these peaks and valleys."

However, Earnhardt is tired of all the lows, and he complained that his highs aren't even all that high anymore. He gave McGrew a resounding endorsement to stay on in 2010 just three weeks ago, but he is now disqualifying himself as capable of knowing what's best for his team.

"Rick has been put me in a great position, but I haven't made the most of it," he said. "For whatever reason, we're just not getting it done. So, I don't know what to do."

All he can do is keep plugging away and look forward to the Nov. 1 race at Talladega, where he's got an opportunity to snap out of his funk. The five-time winner at the Alabama track finished a season-high second there in April, and another strong finish would give him a much-needed boost.

Hendrick knows from experience that strong runs can cure everything for a driver, and that's what Earnhardt must focus on.

"Every driver that I've had drive for me has had a period somewhere in that stretch where their confidence is shaken. That's just normal," Hendrick said. "But nothing will help a driver's confidence any more than a couple of back-to-back runs and good finishes.

"He knows he can do it, and we know he can do it."

From the Tuesday, October 20, 2009 edition of the Augusta Chronicle
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