NASCAR News

Broken radio, two helmets and no glasses

Dale Earnhardt Jr, JR Motorsports, Hellmann's Chevrolet Camaro

Dale Earnhardt Jr. had to swap helmets mid-race while trying to fix a broken radio — and lost his glasses in the process. Despite all that, he rebounded to finish seventh and emerged from the car smiling.

“Yes, I did (have fun),” he told The CW. “I was worried because it was heading in the wrong direction there quickly. We were having some problems with our helmet and wiring and  stuff on the late model, but there may be something in this harness … You do your best, right? We tried not to lose any laps, we tried to figure out how to get it right, and finally got it to where I could hear.”

Dale Earnhardt Jr, JR Motorsports, Hellmann’s Chevrolet Camaro

Photo by: Danny Hansen / NKP / Motorsport Images

The drama began from the drop of the green flag when Dale Jr. was unable to hear his race team at certain parts of the half-mile short track. He pitted under the first caution but the JR Motorsports crew wasn’t prepared to fix the issue.

He drove from the very back to 24th when a caution involving race leader Justin Allgaier gave him another opportunity to pit. The team scrambled to give him a new helmet while keeping the No. 88 Chevrolet on the lead lap.

Fixing the issue but losing his glasses

At first, he thought the issue was fixed, but Earnhardt quickly realized it wasn’t. He came back down pit road where they replaced the wiring harness and finally, it was working properly. With the stressful ordeal resolved after 60+ laps, jokes started to fly across the newly fixed radio. Earnhardt humorously questioned why he needed longtime friend and spotter T.J. Majors after running the entire first run without being able to hear him.

The team then asked if he wanted his glasses back, which he thought were lost on the floorboards of the car while switching the helmets. As it turned out, they left the car with the old helmet. 

“Can you wipe them off? I’m sure they’re tore to sh*t after that,” remarked the 49-year-old.

The ensuing restart nearly saw his day end as Greg van Alst slid up the track, leading to contact between Junior and Leland Honeyman as they tried to check up. He then began the march forward, ending the first stage in 19th place.

He stayed out as the leaders filed down pit road, moving up to eighth in the running order. Around this time, the radio fell down and the volume turned itself up, so he asked his team not to yell at him as the race got back underway. He hung on well despite those with fresher…

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