Most race car drivers would rather wreck than watch someone else drive their cars.
From that perspective, Jimmie Johnson can understand why Hendrick Motorsports teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. hasn’t been frequenting NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race tracks as he spends the rest of the season recovering from a concussion.
Yes, Earnhardt made a brief appearance at Watkins Glen in August, and he participated in a longer press conference at Darlington a month later. But Sunday will be the first time Earnhardt will stay for a Sprint Cup race.
“I completely understand how difficult it is to come to the track and feel productive,” Johnson said. “But I guess many of you haven’t had a chance to see him in our team meetings, at the shop, and various ways we interact and being a part of the discussions week-to-week on what’s happened when we’re getting ready for the next week.
“He’s been deeply involved in all of that. I can only imagine how hard it is to go to the track and watch your car race, and then also how boring it would be, because we do have the coolest job to sit in that race car. And then just to come to a track and watch, I don’t know if I could do it.
“It’s great from a public perception that he’s coming and that people can really see how hard he’s working and then kind of tie that together with his recovery process. But I’ve seen a lot of him and I know he’s dying to get back in the race car and eager to feel amazing again, and I think he’s on a great road of progress right now.”
Part of Earnhardt’s recovery involves participation in high-stress public situations. On Friday, before coming to Dover, he attended a high school football game at his alma mater, Mooresville High School.