(NOTE: This story appeared in the Hickory Daily Record the year Dale Jarrett went into the NASCAR Hall of Fame.)
The Jarretts: Champions and hall of famers
The Jarretts: Champions and hall of famers
By
Tom Gillispie
My
first contact with the Jarrett racing family came around 1987. I was writing
auto racing for the Wilmington Star-News,
and Ned Jarrett was trying to work out a deal to put son Dale in Hoss Ellington’s
No. 1 Fords.
DALE JARRETT (PHOTO BY ESPN) |
Dale,
who will join Jack Ingram and Maurice Petty in being inducted this week into
the NASCAR Hall of Fame, never drove for Hoss, but he wound up driving for some
good teams: the Wood Brothers, Joe Gibbs Racing and Robert Yates Racing.
In
1990, Ned and I crossed paths again. I don’t remember why, but we talked on the
phone and decided to get together at Rockingham. On a cold day, we sat in his
automobile with the heat on, and Ned talked about taking the Dale Carnegie
course and drawing wisdom from Carnegie’s classic book, “How To Make Friends
and Influence People.”
I
already knew a good bit about Ned’s hall-of-fame career: 50 wins and two Cup
championships (1961 and 1965). I knew that he retired young, 33, and he also
had a long TV career. He was inducted into NASCAR’s Hall of Fame in 2011.
Ned
talked about how he once bought a car from Junior Johnson that had the No. 11
on it; apparently that’s how Ned became famous for the number.
At
some point, Ned also talked about Fireball Roberts’ last race and how he, Ned,
got out of his car and tried to help him. I’ve always wondered if Fireball’s
death in 1966 had anything to do with Ned’s retirement in 1967.
Dale
got his first big break when Neil Bonnett was injured in the spring of 1990 at
Darlington. Dale took over the No. 21 Wood Brothers ride and later got one of
the most dramatic wins ever, a “by-a-nose” victory over Davey Allison in 1991
at Michigan. That was the first of his 32 career Cup victories.
I
slowly got to know Dale. I had some great interviews with him, but one of them
didn’t go so well. He’d just signed on with Joe Gibbs Racing to drive the No.
18 Chevrolets, and I found him on the Busch garage at Darlington. He was almost
hiding in his team’s stall, and all I got out of him was the fact that Gibbs’
Chevys would be green.
Otherwise,
Dale, like Ned, has been a joy to interview. He’d roll in with a wide smile and
a big handshake (maybe he’s followed Carnegie as well), and he’d offer up five
or 10 minutes of good (or better) quotes. He was thoughtful, and he didn’t
struggle for words. It’s no surprise that he’s done so well in retirement as a
TV broadcaster.
I
was in Daytona in 1993 when Dale battled Dale Earnhardt in the 500, and Ned was
doing TV. “It’s the Dale and Dale Show, and you know which Dale I’m rooting
for,” Ned said on TV. “Come on, Dale!” Or words to that effect.
Dale
did win that Daytona 500 in ’93, and it’s a highlight on his racing resume that
features two more Daytona 500 wins (1996 and 2000) and the 1999 Winston Cup
(now Sprint Cup) championship.
Last
year, I asked several former stars who their favorite driver was, and several
took that as “Who was your hero?” Not surprisingly, most of them mentioned Ned
Jarrett.
“I liked the way he did things at the
racetrack and how he handled himself,” said Ingram, a two-time champion at
Hickory Motor Speedway. “I chose that number (11) because of Ned Jarrett.”
Now,
Ingram, like Ned Jarrett and Junior Johnson, is a hall of famer famed for 11.
Morgan
Shepherd, another HMS stalwart, is another long-time Ned Jarrett fan.
“Ned
Jarrett because he was such a great racer and such a gentleman. He has never
changed,” Shepherd said.
People
call him Gentleman Ned, and certainly he was one of the people I most looked
forward to seeing at races or the Winston Cup Preview in Winston-Salem. Few
people — maybe Benny Parsons and Buddy Baker — were like Ned, always making you
feel welcome.
My
favorite Ned Jarrett story also includes Dale Jarrett and Dale Earnhardt, and
Ned told it himself. After the “Dale and Dale Show,” Ned felt bad, and he tried
to apologize to Earnhardt for blatantly rooting against him on TV. He said that
before he could get far into his apology, Earnhardt told him not to worry; he
told Ned to remember that Earnhardt was a daddy, too. He understood.
The
story seemed to be typical Ned, worried about his friend’s feelings.
In
this case, it was OK.
Contact me at tgilli52@gmail.com or nc3022@yahoo.com. Also, my Twitter handle is EDITORatWORK.
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(the book of great NASCAR stories)
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