Dale Earnhardt Jr. has been here before. The high banks of Daytona International Speedway are where his family’s legacy was cemented, where he triumphed twice in the Daytona 500, and where he suffered the greatest loss of his life. But this time, he’s here as an owner, not a driver.
After 21 years of building JR Motorsports, his team has finally punched a ticket to NASCAR’s biggest stage. With Justin Allgaier and the No. 40 Traveller Whiskey Chevrolet securing a spot in the Daytona 500, the Earnhardt name will once again take center stage at The Great American Race—something that seemed unthinkable when Dale Jr. retired in 2017.
And now that they’ve made it, they’re going all in.
A No-Holds-Barred Strategy: “Mash the Gas”
Most teams at Daytona approach the race with fuel conservation in mind, carefully calculating every stop and adjusting strategies to make sure they don’t run dry in the final laps. But Dale Jr. has different plans for his Cup Series debut as an owner.
“I am lobbying for the rest of the weekend with Greg Ives to let him mash the gas on Sunday,” Dale Jr. revealed. “We’re going to the front. If we lose the Daytona 500, it’ll be because of fuel mileage… I would rather lose the race because the cautions did not fall perfectly, not because I was sitting in 20th and it was time to go and I couldn’t go.”
It’s a bold, aggressive strategy, but why hold back? JR Motorsports isn’t running for points. They aren’t chasing a championship. They are here to win.
The Emotional Ride to Daytona 500 Qualification
Allgaier’s drive in Duel 1 wasn’t just about making the race—it was about proving that this team belongs.
The 2024 Xfinity Series Champion didn’t just hang back and hope for the best. Instead, he charged through the field, using the high line and drafting his way into the top 10. A brilliant three-wide move in the closing laps sealed his ninth-place finish, securing JRM’s first-ever Cup Series start.
“This was rough emotionally, but damn it, it worked out,” Allgaier said, his voice filled with pride. “This means a lot to our team, this little team of JR Motorsports. Dale Jr. is an amazing race car driver. He’s an amazing dad, car owner. You can tell how much he wanted this and our whole shop wanted this.”
And that’s what makes this moment special. It’s not just another team making the Daytona 500. This is Earnhardt country.
For Dale Jr., the emotions run even deeper.
The Earnhardt Legacy Lives On
It’s been 24 years since Dale Earnhardt Sr. won his only Daytona 500, breaking through after two decades of heartbreak. Three years later, he was gone—lost in a tragic crash on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500.
Dale Jr. could have walked away from Daytona forever. Instead, he embraced the place that took his father from him, winning the 2004 and 2014 Daytona 500s and cementing his own legacy.
Now, seven years into retirement, his team has a car in the race, and it’s hard not to feel the weight of history.
“Dale Jr. said back in 2004, ‘If it becomes a Busch [Xfinity] team or a Cup Series team, so be it,’” one fan posted online. “Well, he just made the biggest race in NASCAR. That’s pretty damn special.”
With a no-holds-barred approach and nothing to lose, JR Motorsports is ready to make the most of this moment. Win or lose, the Earnhardt name is back where it belongs: at the front of the field in the Daytona 500.