Zero2Cool
14 years ago
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In the underrated and altogether enjoyable film Zombieland, Woody Harrelson's undead-killing lead character motors through the apocalyptic landscape in a big black truck with a familiar-scripted number 3 on the side. He never offers any explanation, never mentions his affinity for a former race car driver, never defines the connection between himself and another intimidating figure behind the wheel. He doesn't need to. When his ride is stolen and he commandeers a new one, the first thing he does is paint the same numeral on the driver's side door.

[img_r]http://i2.cdn.turner.com/nascar/2010/news/opinion/05/01/inside.line.dcaraviello.dearnhardt.no3.dearnhardtjr/caraviello.193.jpg[/img_r]Putting the No. 3 back on the track with Dale Earnhardt Jr. behind the wheel honors his father, his family and the fans, writes Joe Menzer.

That's how entrenched Dale Earnhardt's car number is in popular culture -- clarification is no longer required. Even a movie aimed at a youthful, hipster audience doesn't have to spell out who the man was or what he stood for. His legacy has become so ubiquitous and far-reaching that there's the assumption you can figure it out for yourself. By now, people just know, just like they know that a flag with a bear on it represents the state of California, or that a helmet with a star stands for a football team from Dallas.

A vehicle with a No. 3 on the side of it represents one man -- which is why it's so easy to have so many mixed feelings about the announcement earlier this week that Dale Earnhardt Jr. will drive a No. 3 car in the July 2 Nationwide Series event at Daytona. No question, this is being done with the right combination of people behind it, with Teresa Earnhardt, Earnhardt Jr., and Richard Childress (who retains rights to the No. 3 and will technically field the entry) all on board. And it's being done in the right way, the vehicle unveiled on what would have been Earnhardt's 59th birthday, and painted in the same Wrangler scheme he used in the 1980s.

And while this effort is designed to honor Earnhardt's forthcoming induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame -- which will be two month's past by the time the car takes to the track -- it can't help but have something of a been-there, done-that feeling to it. In 2002 when Earnhardt Jr. returned to Daytona one year after his father's death and drove a No. 3 car in the Busch race, the atmosphere was electric. Even though the vehicle was sponsored by Oreo and not Goodwrench, in the right light parts of the dark blue car looked almost black. Grown men wept when Dale Jr. won the race and returned the car to Victory Lane. It was a cathartic moment that everyone needed, proof that while the man was gone, his legacy was still alive and well.

Another effort later that year at Charlotte didn't have the same kind of juice, maybe because the vehicle had a tropical-fruit-colored paint scheme that would have made Peter Max blush, maybe because Earnhardt Jr. was caught up in an accident and was never a factor in the end. Or maybe because once was enough. Maybe because that Saturday afternoon in Daytona was the great, victorious sendoff that a fan base and an industry never got a chance to give the man himself, and anything else is going to suffer by comparison. Maybe because the timing of and the meaning behind that first endeavor was so perfect, any others feel like they're pulled randomly from the deck.

That's not to say that Earnhardt Jr. and Childress, two men who knew the Intimidator as well as anyone, don't have the right intentions. And no question, some folks are going to get goose bumps when that vintage-painted No. 3 car rolls out onto the track at Daytona. But it's precisely the opposite -- the lack of use of the No. 3 car -- that's made the vehicle so iconic that it can appear without preamble in a zombie flick aimed at 20-somethings, kids who never even saw Earnhardt compete, and everyone immediately understands. The man and the number have become so tightly intertwined that you'll never be able to separate them. It's Earnhardt's car, and it always will be, forever and ever. Anything else feels like an imitation, like somebody besides Buddy Holly fronting the Crickets.

All of this is surely to revive the now-nine-year-old debate over whether we'll ever see the No. 3 back at the Cup level, something Childress has never really ruled out, but doesn't have any explicit plans for, either. Childress' grandson Austin Dillon currently drives a black No. 3 in the Truck Series -- let's not forget, R.C. used the numeral before Big E did -- but it's a truck, not a car, and that tour exists enough below the radar that such a thing can happen without exactly stirring strong feelings on either side. That would surely change if Dillon ever carried the No. 3 with him up to the Nationwide Series, which gets more national coverage and races in tandem with the big show almost every week.

And what if Dillon, who has an average finish of 16.5 in four Truck starts entering Sunday's event at Kansas Speedway, proves good enough to advance to NASCAR's highest level? Then the polarization would begin. "I don't know that you'll ever see the 3 back in Cup," Childress said earlier this season, and he reiterated as much Thursday, although you'd have to imagine that if it were his grandson behind the wheel, he might be tempted. That would seem one of only two viable scenarios, the other being some future union between Earnhardt Jr. and RCR, and at the moment both of them feel like long shots at best.

That would leave the No. 3 exactly where it is today, in some sort of permanent hibernation, not exactly retired but with everyone respectful enough to not push for its use, either. Tributes like the Wrangler-backed effort for Daytona are nice, but honestly not necessary anymore. We've seen Dale Jr. come back to Daytona in a No. 3 car, seen him win in it, and nothing will ever top that. The idea of somebody using it on the Cup level seems too ludicrous too discuss, like the Dodgers giving Jackie Robinson's jersey number to a call-up. It's as synonymous with the man as his mustache or his heavy right foot, and because of the way he lived and died, nothing will ever change that.

Earnhardt's race team is effectively gone, having been merged into another operation. His victories exist only on highlight reels. But nine years later the No. 3 is still very much a part of him, still something people can cling to, still something that shows up on flags and bumper stickers and license plates with regularity, all precisely because of its disuse. It's Earnhardt's car. It's only Earnhardt's car. And it should ride in one place -- memory.


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Zero2Cool
14 years ago

Junior addresses criticism

RICHMOND, Va. -- Dale Earnhardt Jr. knows some fans are upset about his plan to drive a replica of his father's famous No. 3 car at Daytona in July but thinks it is a fitting way to honor the seven-time champion's NASCAR Hall of Fame induction.

"I think everybody knows I'm pretty careful about all that kind of stuff," he said Friday at Richmond International Raceway. "It just seems like a reasonable opportunity and it seemed like if there is a time to ever do it, this is one of those times."

Earnhardt Je. announced his plan Thursday to drive the Wrangler car in the Nationwide Series race at Daytona. The announcement came on what would have been his father's 59th birthday. Dale Earnhardt died in a crash in the season-opening Daytona 500 in 2001.

Earnhardt is one of five members of the first class of inductees into the hall of fame, joining NASCAR founder Bill France Sr.; Bill France Jr., who spent 30 years running the top series; Richard Petty, the only other seven-time champion; and driver Junior Johnson. The induction ceremony will be held May 23.

Earnhardt's number is owned by Richard Childress, the car owner he raced for in the Sprint Cup Series, and has not been used in NASCAR's top series since "The Intimidator" died.

Earnhardt Jr., though, doesn't think it's fair to expect it to remain shelved forever.

"It's ridiculous to try to retire numbers or favor numbers for certain drivers," he said. "The 3 meant a lot to Daddy and meant a lot to a lot of race fans, but there's some kid that's growing up that really was never a Dale Earnhardt fan that drives the No. 3 and he might want to be No. 3 all his life, and to not give him that opportunity just ain't fair."


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packerfanoutwest (15h) : 49ers are underdogs at Packers, ending streak of 36 straight games as favorites
Zero2Cool (22h) : 49ers might be down their QB, DL, TE and LT?
packerfanoutwest (22-Nov) : Jaire Alexander says he has a torn PCL
Zero2Cool (20-Nov) : Even with the context it's ... what?
Mucky Tundra (20-Nov) : Matt LaFleur without context: “I don’t wanna pat you on the butt and you poop in my hand.”
beast (20-Nov) : We brought in a former Packers OL coach to help evaluate OL as a scout
beast (20-Nov) : Jets have been pretty good at picking DL
Zero2Cool (20-Nov) : He landed good players thanks to high draft slot. He isn't good.
Zero2Cool (20-Nov) : He can shove his knowledge up his ass. He knows nothing.
beast (20-Nov) : More knowledge, just like bring in the Jets head coach
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : What? Why? Huh?
beast (19-Nov) : I wonder if the Packers might to try to bring Douglas in through Milt Hendrickson/Ravens connections
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : The Jets fired Joe Douglas, per sources
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : Jets are a mess......
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Pretty sure Jets fired their scouting staff and just pluck former Packers.
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Jets sign Anders Carlson to their 53.
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : When you cycle the weeks, the total over remains for season. But you get your W/L for that selected week. Confusing.
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : the total and percentage are the same as the previous weeks
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : the total and percentage are the same as the previous weeks
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : the totals are accurate..nrvrtmind
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : I don't follow what you are saying. The totals are not the same as last week.
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : ok so then wht are the totals the same as last week?
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : NFL Pick'em is auto updated when NFL Scores tab is clicked
Martha Careful (19-Nov) : The offense was OK. Let's not forget the Bear defense is very very good.
packerfanoutwest (19-Nov) : Who updates the leaderboard on NFLPickem?
beast (19-Nov) : Has the Packers offense been worse since the former Jets coach joined the Packers?
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Offense gets his ass in gear, this could be good.
Zero2Cool (19-Nov) : Backup QB helped with three wins. Special Teams contributed to three wins.
bboystyle (18-Nov) : Lions played outside thats why. They scored 16 and 17 in the only 2 outside games this year
Zero2Cool (18-Nov) : The rest of the NFL is catching up to Packers ... kicking is an issue throughout league
packerfanoutwest (18-Nov) : Packers DL Kenny Clark: We knew 'we were going to block' Bears' game-winning field goal attempt
Zero2Cool (18-Nov) : Lions seem to be throttling everyone, but only (only) got 24 lol maybe the rain is why
Zero2Cool (18-Nov) : Packers vs Lions game doesn't seem so bad.
beast (18-Nov) : Dennis Green "They are what we thought they were, and we let them off the hook!"
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : comment of the day Z2Cool "Bears better than we want to admit. Packers worse than we think. It's facts."
Mucky Tundra (17-Nov) : my worst case scenario: Bears fix their oline and get a coach like Johnson from the Lions and his scheme
Zero2Cool (17-Nov) : Bears get OL fixed amd we might have a problem
buckeyepackfan (17-Nov) : Pretty sure they already have scouting reports on guys who aren't even starting for their college team. The future is now for me.
buckeyepackfan (17-Nov) : I tend to let Gute and Co. Worry about the future.
beast (17-Nov) : That's great news and Packers need to keep upgrading their OL, DL and DBs this off-season, so missing one guy doesn't kill them
beast (17-Nov) : That's great news and Packers need to keep upgrading their OL, DL and DBs this off-season, so missing one guy doesn't kill them
buckeyepackfan (17-Nov) : Jaire and Evans Williams are both ACTIVE! Good news.
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : The badgers really need to change the whole offensive scheme. No draws no screens plus the quarterback is marginal
Cheesey (17-Nov) : If the Badgers had a decent QB, they would have won. The guy can't hit a wide open receiver
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : chop block
Martha Careful (17-Nov) : there was a very questionable job Block call that upon viewing replay was very borderline
beast (17-Nov) : How so? (I didn't watch)
Zero2Cool (17-Nov) : Badgers got hosed vs Oregon
packerfanoutwest (16-Nov) : damn,he hasn't played since week 2
Mucky Tundra (15-Nov) : poor guy can't catch a break
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