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EARNHARDT HOSPITALIZED AFTER WRECK
Updated 6:29 PM ET February 18, 2001
By DICK BRINSTER, AP Sports Writer

DAYTONA BEACH, FL (AP) - Seven-time Winston Cup champion Dale Earnhardt was taken to the hospital after a crash Sunday on the final lap of Daytona 500 and believed to be badly urt. "It's serious," said Nascar spokeswoman Danielle Humphrey, who had no further details on the condition of the 49-year-old driver. Earnhardt, considered the greatest star of his era and the biggest fan attraction in Nascar history, had to be cut out of the car. Earnhardt's son, Dale Jr., left Daytona International Speedway to be with him immediately after teammate Michael Waltrip won the race. The elder Earnhardt owns both cars. "My heart is hurting right now," Waltrip said in his postrace interview. "I would rather be any place right this moment than here." "I want to be with him to try to help. It's so painful." He said learned of the accident from driver Ken Schrader, a close friend and hunting companion of Earnhardt. "He came to Victory Lane to give me a heads-up, and that's all I know," Waltrip said before quickly ending his interview. "I haven't been able to find out anything more than Schrader told me. "I have to go." The accident happened a half-mile from the finish of the Nascar season opener when Earnhardt, running fourth, hit Sterling Marlin, hit the wall in the high-banked fourth turn and was smacked hard by Schrader. "We were three deep and he hit me," Marlin said. "Then he turned around." It was the second major wreck in five years in the race for Earnhardt. He flipped wildly on the backstretch near the end of the race in 1997 but was not seriously hurt. He came back to win the race the next year on his 20th try. Earnhardt is the leader among active Winston Cup drivers with 76 career victories. The crash was not as spectacular as an 18-car wreck 25 laps earlier that took out 18 cars. Tony Stewart was injured in that accident, but the track said he did not have life-threatening injuries. Stewart had a concussion. Earnhardt was a factor in the race throughout, and spent the final laps in close proximity to his son and Waltrip, trying to block Marlin. The Dodge driver had just passed Earnhardt, who was trying to get back by him on the low side of the track when there was slight contact that set his Chevrolet spinning up the 31-degree banking. It turned to the right and hit the wall, and Schrader could not avoid hitting it. Both cars slowly began to slide down the banking to the bottom of the track as the rest of the field race by, but there was no further contact. Earnhardt Jr. quickly left the postrace celebration for Waltrip, and sprinted to the infield care center to be with his father. It took several minutes to get the elder Earnhardt out of the car, and he was quickly taken to Halifax Hospital. With his crewmen chanting "DEI, DEI," for Dale Earnhardt Inc., which owns the cars, Waltrip was not immediately aware his boss was injured. "I think Dale Sr. might have been in an accident," he said. "I hope he's not hurt." The winner's circle celebration, which usually lasts 30 minutes, was quickly curtailed. "He wasn't there in Victory Lane, and I didn't know he was hurt," Waltrip said later." Earnhardt was doing what he does best throughout the race, being the crowd favorite, bumping and drafting throughout the race. Two days earlier, he crashed during an IROC all-star race, being pushed down into the infield grass by Eddie Cheever. The race was the season-opening event for Nascar, which had three driver deaths last year. Busch Series driver Adam Petty, the grandson of stock car great Richard Petty, was killed in May in Loudon, NH, in May. Two months later, Winston Cup driver Kenny Irwin also was killed at New Hampshire International Speedway. Nascar truck series driver Tony Roper was killed in October at Texas Motor Speedway.

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Dale Earnhardt's (3) window pops out of the car after being hit by Ken Schrader (36) during the Daytona 500 Sunday afternoon, Feb. 18, 2001, at the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, FL. Earnhardt had to be cut from the wreck and was taken to a nearby hospital. His condition was not immediately disclosed. Photo by Greg Suvino (AP)

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EARNHARDT DIES AFTER DAYTONA WRECK
Updated 3:32 AM ET February 19, 2001
By MIKE HARRIS, AP Motorsports Writer

DAYTONA BEACH, FL (AP) - The Intimidator. Old Ironhead. Tough and unyielding, a winner on the racetrack and often sarcastic and calculating off of it. Even people who knew nothing about racing knew Dale Earnhardt's craggy, mustachioed face and his reputation as a driver never afraid to bang fenders or shake his fist at a rival. Despite those traits and his rough appearance - or maybe because of them - Earnhardt was a key figure in the explosive growth of Nascar during the past 20 years from a regional sport into a mainstream America powerhouse. That's what made his death in Sunday's Daytona 500 so shocking. "This is incredible, just incredible," driver Jeremy Mayfield said. "You figure he'll bounce right back. Your first thought is, 'Hey, he'll probably come back next week at Rockingham and beat us all."' As word of the fatal, last-lap wreck spread, fans cried and the big flag in the middle of Daytona International Speedway's vast infield waved forlornly at half-staff. The death of Earnhardt - still a championship contender at 49 - was the biggest blow to auto racing since the 1994 crash that killed Formula One star Ayrton Senna. On the day Nascar began a new era with the return of Dodge after a 16-year absence and the beginning of a six-year, $2.8 billion TV contract, it's biggest draw was suddenly gone. Earnhardt was the first driver killed in the Daytona 500, which began in 1959. Six drivers have died of injuries from wrecks during practice or qualifying races for the 500. Neil Bonnett, one of Earnhardt's best friends, was killed in 1994. Rodney Orr died in a wreck three days later, also in practice, and was the last Winston Cup driver killed at the track until Earnhardt's crash. Earnhardt died perhaps because of an uncharacteristic decision to let his son and the newest driver on his own team fight it out for the victory while he protected their flank. Earnhardt crashed on the last turn of the last lap vying for third place at the front of a tight five-car pack. In front of him, Michael Waltrip held off Dale Earnhardt Jr. for what should have been the biggest moment in the short history of Dale Earnhardt Inc. Earnhardt had to be cut from his battered car and was taken to Halifax Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead of head injuries. Safety personnel tried furiously to save him, three EMS workers leaning into the car, working on Earnhardt, and two firefighters ripping off the roof to get him out. "He had what I felt were life-ending type injuries at the time of impact and nothing could be done for him," said Dr. Steve Bohannon, an emergency physician at the hospital who also works for the speedway. The crash began when the back left corner of Earnhardt's famed black No. 3 Chevrolet bumped with Sterling Marlin's Dodge. Earnhardt's car fishtailed slightly and briefly slid to its left, down toward the infield, before suddenly swinging back to the right and cutting across traffic at a sharp angle. He hit the wall headfirst and Ken Schrader's yellow Pontiac crashed into the passenger side of his car. With Earnhardt's Chevy already smoking and shredding at the front, Schrader's car stayed lodged into its side, forming a T. The cars careened again off the wall, plowing into the final turn and sliding to a stop. Both cars ended up in smoking heaps on the infield grass. "I guess someone got into Dale because Dale got into me and then we went up," the uninjured Schrader said. "We hit pretty hard and Dale hit harder." The accident removed all the luster from a glittering race that kept the record crowd of 195,000 spectators on their feet most of the afternoon. Nearly two hours after the race, Nascar president Mike Helton, his voice breaking with emotion, walked into the infield media center with the unbelievable news. "This is undoubtedly one of the toughest announcements I have ever personally had to make. We've lost Dale Earnhardt," Helton said. Earnhardt was a seven-time Winston Cup champion, and his 76 victories were the most among active drivers. He continued to race for longtime friend and boss Richard Childress while starting his own team, which expanded to three cars with the addition of Waltrip this year. His other drivers were Earnhardt Jr. and Steve Park. The elder Earnhardt's death was a particularly devastating blow for Nascar after a 2000 season in which three of its young stars were killed in separate accidents. Adam Petty, the fourth generation of stock car racing's most famous family, and Kenny Irwin died in crashes two months apart at New Hampshire International Speedway. Tony Roper was killed later in October in a crash during a truck race at Texas Motor Speedway. All three died of the same type of head injuries that apparently killed Earnhardt. Since those deaths, safety has become a major issue, with a debate over possible rules changes and the use of new safety equipment. Earnhardt wore an old-fashioned open-faced helmet and shunned some of Nascar's other basic safety innovations. He didn't like the restrictor plates Nascar used to slow speeds at its fastest tracks, where he was a master. He also refused to wear a HANS brace that recently has been touted as a way to help prevent serious head injuries. Bohannon said Earnhardt probably died of head injuries, particularly to the base of the skull. "I know the full-face helmet wouldn't have made a difference," Bohannon said. "I don't know if the HANS device would have helped. I suspect not." The crash, however, didn't look that serious at first. Most of the fans' attention at the time was on the fight for the checkered flag between Waltrip and Earnhardt Jr. With two and three wide racing and constantly changing positions, there was a far more dangerous looking wreck 26 laps earlier. The 19-car accident sent Tony Stewart's Pontiac flying through the air and over the roof of another car. Stewart also was taken to the hospital, where he was treated for a concussion. Earnhardt's death completely overshadowed the victory by Waltrip, his first in 15 years and 463 races on Winston Cup circuit. At first, Waltrip, the younger brother of retired three-time champion Darrell Waltrip, was jubilant, scrambling from his car in Victory Lane and shouting in a raspy voice: "This is the Daytona 500, and I won it! I won the Daytona 500! I can't believe it!" But he was somber as it became apparent that his new boss, who gave him a chance to race with the best equipment of his career, was badly injured. "The only reason I won this race is Dale Earnhardt," Waltrip said. Waltrip took the lead 16 laps from the end of the 200-lap race and stayed in front. Thanks to the aerodynamic package that Nascar came up with to promote better racing after last year's yawner at Daytona, the 43rd version of the stock car Super Bowl produced 49 lead changes among 14 drivers. Last year, there were just nine lead changes and virtually no real racing. The excitement was back this year...so was the danger. And now the sport has been left without one of its greats.

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RACING FANS PAY TRIBUTE TO EARNHARDT
February 19, 2001 5:39 pm EST

CHARLOTTE, NC (Reuters) - Hundreds of Nascar fans made pilgrimages on Monday to Dale Earnhardt's North Carolina racing headquarters to pay their respects to one of the sport's greatest drivers and an icon of modern stock car racing killed on the final lap of Sunday's Daytona 500. A makeshift memorial of flowers, racing caps and shirts, and handwritten posters went up along a fence outside his racing team headquarters in Mooresville, north of Charlotte, as tributes were posted on Internet Web sites dedicated to the driver known as "The Intimidator" for his aggressive style on and off the track. "Everyone deals with the tragedy in their own way, but the way I look at it is...when Earnhardt's life was ready to come to an end, the pearly white gates of Heaven opened up and that No. 3 Chevrolet Monte Carlo came roaring in and God helped him out of that car," race fan Michael Oberg of Jefferson, South Dakota, posted on a message board at DaleEarnhardt.net. Earnhardt, 49, was killed instantly on Sunday when his car slammed into a concrete wall just as Michael Waltrip took the checkered flag marginally ahead of Earnhardt's son, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., in the opening race of the Nascar season. Born in nearby Kannapolis, North Carolina, Earnhardt made his Nascar Winston Cup debut in 1975 in the World 600 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway, finishing 22nd and winning about $2,500. He went on to win more than $41 million in purses and seven Winston Cup titles, and won the Daytona 500 in 1998. Earnhardt's aggressive driving style...he was known to tap other racers out of the way and once drove on the grass to pass a rival...and marketing of his trademark black No. 3 car helped propel Nascar racing from its regional Southern roots into a national sport. "North Carolina lost a great friend and a true competitor," North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley said in extending condolences to the Earnhardt family and racing fans.

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April and Gary Smith of Ormond Beach, FL (R), along with hundreds of racing fans, gather to mourn the death of racing legend Dale Earnhardt at Daytona USA on February 19, 2001. Earnhardt died of head injuries when he crashed during the last lap of the Daytona 500 February 18, race officials said.

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