NASCAR

Did Dale Earnhardt Jr. Nearly Wreck While Taking His Wife, Amy Earnhardt, Around Bristol at Full Speed?

Disclosure
We publish independently audited content meeting strict editorial standards. Ads on our site are served by Google AdSense and are not controlled or influenced by our editorial team.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his wife, Amy Earnhardt, pose for pictures.

With the brief NASCAR offseason in full swing, Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s media production company — Dirty Mo Media — has been using its Twitter feed to share some of the top moments from 2022 on The Dale Jr. Download, the weekly podcast Earnhardt co-hosts with friend and longtime business associate Mike Davis.

Recently, Dirty Mo shared a hilarious segment from a September podcast in which Earnhardt and Davis discussed a near-mishap that occurred when Earnhardt was driving around Bristol Motor Speedway at full speed with his wife, Amy Earnhardt, riding shotgun.

Suffice it to say, it’s probably a good thing Dale Jr. logged thousands of laps at the high-banked .533-mile oval over the course of his 18-year career in NASCAR’s top series. Otherwise, what was supposed to be a fun pace car ride-along with his bride could’ve turned downright ugly.

Even with his extensive experience at Bristol, it almost did.

What went wrong in the Dale Earnhardt Jr.-Amy Earnhardt Bristol ride-along?

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Bristol ride-along with his wife started off in fun fashion, with Amy Earnhardt clearly enjoying herself, as evidenced by the NBC camera inside the car that captured her facial expression.

But just as the couple was cruising along, probably at well north of 120 miles per hour, Dale suddenly jerked the wheel when he ran over a part of the track where drivers tend to lose grip. For a brief moment, it even appeared that he might wreck — with Amy at his side, no less.

Thankfully, the 2004 winner of the Bristol night race gathered it back up and was able to avert potential disaster and continue on.

No harm, no foul.

So what exactly happened to make the car get all squirrely?

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s dialogue with Mike Davis helps here as the two discussed the matter at hand while watching an in-car video recording of the ride-along that included Amy’s arm-waving, “I’m-done” reaction to her husband’s slipup in Turn 2.

Junior: “She’s not happy.”

Mike: “Did you almost wreck?”

Junior: “We just got loose.”

Mike: “That feels like almost wreck. She went from having the thrill of her life to not having fun. Her face changes. That is hilarious.”

Junior (smiling): “Yep, yep.”

So did Dale Jr. really almost wreck with his wife in the car?

Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his wife, Amy Earnhardt, pose for pictures.
Amy Earnhardt officially inducts her husband, Dale Earnhardt Jr., into the NASCAR Hall of Fame during the 2021 NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony | Chris Graythen/Getty Images

If you can believe Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s account of the Bristol ride-along with his wife, Amy Earnhardt, the two were never in any real danger of wrecking.

“It just turned sideways, and we slid out to the wall right at the flag stand,” NASCAR’s 15-time Most Popular Driver said, still grinning from ear to ear. “We just kind of dirt-tracked off the corner.”

Davis then offered some slightly comical, albeit candid, perspective on what could’ve happened if Earnhardt had lost full control of the car.

“I’m glad you saved it. I really am,” he said. “And ‘saved’ may not even be the right word because you don’t think you almost wrecked. I’m going to tell you something. Let’s just think for a second. Had you hit the wall with your wife in the car, are we even remotely aware of the attention that would have gotten? I mean, that would have been news. That’d have been big news.”

“I guess, yeah,” Earnhardt replied. “Oh, that would be interesting. We’d have had to have brought her in here to tell her side of it.”

The look on Amy’s face and her arm gestures after Junior’s slipup in Turn 2 say everything that needed to be said, though. For at least a brief moment, she was scared out of her wits.

Author photo
Jared Turner
Sports Editor

Jared Turner is a motorsports writer who has covered NASCAR for 20 years. He has interviewed over 20 NASCAR Hall of Famers and around 100 drivers, crew chiefs, and team owners, both past and present. He has also covered the sport for FOX Sports (where he was a two-time recipient of the FOX “X” Award for “Xtraordinary” job performance), NASCAR.com, Sporting News, NASCAR Pole Position Magazine, the SPEED network, and plenty of other online and print-only publications throughout his career. Notably, Jared has penned dozens of articles for NASCAR souvenir programs, including several featured prominently in Daytona 500 keepsakes. A Virginia Press Association award winner and former member of the National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA), Jared has racked up accolades both for his writing and his academic work. He studied both Communication and Psychology at Virginia Tech, where he was permanently enshrined in Phi Beta Kappa — the nation’s oldest and most prestigious academic honor society. Jared excels at feature writing and opinion writing, much of which stems from his dedication to all levels of racing.

Get to know Jared Turner better
Author photo
Jared Turner Sports Editor

Jared Turner is a motorsports writer who has covered NASCAR for 20 years. He has interviewed over 20 NASCAR Hall of Famers and around 100 drivers, crew chiefs, and team owners, both past and present. He has also covered the sport for FOX Sports (where he was a two-time recipient of the FOX “X” Award for “Xtraordinary” job performance), NASCAR.com, Sporting News, NASCAR Pole Position Magazine, the SPEED network, and plenty of other online and print-only publications throughout his career. Notably, Jared has penned dozens of articles for NASCAR souvenir programs, including several featured prominently in Daytona 500 keepsakes. A Virginia Press Association award winner and former member of the National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA), Jared has racked up accolades both for his writing and his academic work. He studied both Communication and Psychology at Virginia Tech, where he was permanently enshrined in Phi Beta Kappa — the nation’s oldest and most prestigious academic honor society. Jared excels at feature writing and opinion writing, much of which stems from his dedication to all levels of racing.

All posts by Jared Turner