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NASCAR: Rick Hendrick credits Steve Letarte for rebuilding Dale Earnhardt Jr.

By Jenna Fryer
Associated Press

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. celebrates after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Quicken Loans 400 auto race at Michigan International Speedway, Sunday in Brooklyn, Mich. (AP Photo/Bob Brodbeck)

CHARLOTTE, N.C.: Rick Hendrick gave little warning to his crew chiefs when he decided to make widespread organizational changes after the 2010 season.

Among the swaps? Moving Steve Letarte away from four-time NASCAR champion Jeff Gordon after five full seasons for a daunting job — guiding Dale Earnhardt Jr. out of his lengthy slump.

“I walked in one day unannounced and said, ‘Next year, you’re not going to have Jeff Gordon, you’re going to have Dale Earnhardt,’ ” Hendrick said. “No one knew what was going to happen. When I told him, within 15 minutes he was in his car driving to Dale’s house, and he said, ‘I’m going to sit down with Dale and we’re just going to talk about racing, about life, about each other, what each of us want to accomplish.’ ”

It was a critical moment for NASCAR’s most popular driver, who in his 51st race with Letarte finally broke a four-year losing streak with his victory Sunday at Michigan.

Earnhardt had been through the wringer. It started in 2007, when he made the difficult decision to leave his late father’s race team and chose Hendrick Motorsports after the most frenzied free-agent pursuit in NASCAR history. The first season with Hendrick in 2008 was OK as Earnhardt won a race and made the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.

The next two years were terrible, and Hendrick had to fire Earnhardt’s cousin, Tony Eury Jr., when the two could no longer function as driver and crew chief. Then came Lance McGrew, who couldn’t get the No. 88 team turned around.

So it was up to Letarte, a Hendrick Motorsports lifer who had started as a part-time employee as a teenager in 1995. Hired full-time as a tire specialist, he had risen through the company ranks to crew chief working only with Gordon.

Starting over was going to take some relationship-building, and Letarte went right to work.

“They were together all the time. That created that trust ... Dale does not trust everybody,” Hendrick said. “Chemistry is so important. Sometimes you never hit the right combination. But, man, I look back and I think we’re very fortunate — didn’t have any idea it was going to be this good. But I think that the chemistry between these two guys, and I’ve been doing this for 30 years, is as good as or better than any I’ve ever seen.”

Letarte’s biggest responsibility was rebuilding Earnhardt’s confidence, shattered during his slump. He coached Junior outside the race car, and cheered him over the team radio, and it didn’t take long last season to see Earnhardt starting to believe in himself again.

Only that’s not where Earnhardt believes Letarte made the biggest difference. Letarte’s best work, the driver said, was in setting some rules for NASCAR’s biggest superstar.

“He didn’t really have to sell me on anything, I just did whatever he said,” Earnhardt said. “And the first thing he said was, ‘Man, this is going to be a little different. I’m going to need you to be accountable.’ He gave me all kinds of little restrictions and things he needed me to do, and places he needed me to be.

“That structure and accountability was good for me. This team has been successful for years, and I knew he’s got to have a pattern for it to be that way, so I just did what he told me.”

Earnhardt heads to the road course race Sunday in Sonoma, Calif., where he never has notched a top-10 finish, ranked second in the standings and a legitimate championship contender.

Hendrick, two days after Earnhardt’s dominating win at Michigan, couldn’t praise Letarte enough for the job he’s done.

“Stevie has a unique way of putting his arm around him and saying, ‘Look, Bubba, we’re in this together. Together we’re going to do this. This is what I’m going to do, this is what you need to do,’ ” Hendrick said. “To go from doubting what he had, to feeling like he has the best [team] in the garage, that’s a tremendous job. I think it’s probably the hardest job out there.”




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