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			Notebook: Earnhardt Jr. not ruling out Daytona 500 run 
			
		 
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			 [June 24, 2017] 
			By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service 
			 
			Distributed by The Sports Xchange 
			 
			SONOMA, Calif. -- As he retires from 
			full-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series racing, Dale Earnhardt 
			Jr. has two Daytona 500 victories to credit. 
			 
			But that doesn't necessarily mean he won't ever have a third. 
			 
			During a question-and-answer session with reporters after opening 
			practice at Sonoma Raceway, Earnhardt allowed he might consider an 
			encore appearance in NASCAR's most prestigious race -- under the 
			right circumstances. 
			 
			True, next week Earnhardt will compete for the last time at Daytona 
			as the driver of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. But that 
			doesn't mean it's the last time he'll compete at Daytona. 
			 
			"Well, you never say never," Earnhardt said. "I'm just retiring from 
			full-time racing. I'm going to run some Xfinity races next year. I 
			don't know that I won't ever run the Daytona 500 again, if the right 
			deal comes along. All these tracks you have memories at, all of 
			them, Daytona included. 
			 
			"I'm going to be coming back to these tracks, and I want to continue 
			to be part of the sport. I don't know how it's going to affect me 
			really. It's hard for me to put that into words, because I don't 
			know what that is going to feel like. It will be pretty weird I 
			think to come back to the 500. I'm going to go to the 500 whether 
			I've got any work to do or not. It will be pretty weird to be there 
			and not race." 
			 
			To some degree, Earnhardt can draw on the experience of his former 
			crew chief, Steve Letarte, who left the pit box for a perch in the 
			NBC Sports television booth. 
			 
			"When he wasn't working a race he had a hard time being there," 
			Earnhardt said. "He had a hard time watching it and not wanting to 
			be a part of it. ... It will be interesting I guess when we get to 
			the 500 next year and see how that all feels emotionally." 
			
			
			  
			
			Earnhardt also addressed reports that he, too, might be under 
			consideration for a broadcasting role. 
			 
			"We are certainly open to discussing the possibility of seeing what 
			options I have," Earnhardt said. "Who wanted us, what kind of job 
			they want me for, and we are sort of in the middle of understanding 
			that, and that just goes along the lines of doing due diligence on 
			everything. I'm not retiring from work. I want to keep seeking out 
			opportunities to make a living and make money and be relevant and be 
			a value to my partners. 
			 
			"I want to continue to be a part of the sport, and not just as an 
			owner in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. I want to be a valuable asset to 
			the growth of the sport and continue to help raise the bar and raise 
			the awareness of the sport and promote the sport as much as I can. 
			So we were just kind of looking at what opportunities there are out 
			there for me." 
			 
			IS LIGHTNING MCQUEEN A GOOD-LUCK CHARM FOR BOWYER? 
			 
			Kyle Larson won last Sunday's Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race 
			at Michigan International Speedway sporting Lightning McQueen, the 
			lead character from the hit film "Cars 3," on his No. 42 Chip 
			Ganassi Racing Chevrolet. 
			 
			This week, Lightning McQueen adorns the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing 
			Ford driven by Clint Bowyer, who hopes some of the good karma from 
			Larson's win will carry over into Sunday's Toyota/Save Mart 350 at 
			Sonoma Raceway (3 p.m. ET on FS1). 
			 
			In his first year at Stewart-Haas, Bowyer is looking for his first 
			victory this season -- and his first since winning the fall race at 
			Charlotte in 2012. 
			
			
			  
			
			
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            "Hopefully, lightning strikes again," Bowyer quipped. 
			"The kid (Larson) won in the Lightning McQueen scheme last week, and 
			it would be cool to take Lightning McQueen to Victory Lane again 
			this week. We got an early showing of the movie as an industry. 
            "Lorra (Bowyer's wife) took Cash (Bowyer's 2-year-old 
			son) to it. I was out of town, and he had a ton of fun at that. 
			They've done a good job promoting that, and it's a big deal for our 
			sport. I'm proud to have that paint scheme on the side of my car 
			this weekend." 
			 
			The paint job isn't the only good talisman for Bowyer, who is 
			driving the same chassis team co-owner Tony Stewart used to win his 
			49th and final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at Sonoma last 
			year. 
			 
			Bowyer's own past performance at the 1.99-mile road course is 
			another strong omen. With six top fives (including a victory in 
			2012) and eight top-10s in 11 starts, Bowyer has to be considered 
			one of the favorites on Sunday. 
              
			ERIK JONES' TOYOTA SUFFERS TKO IN DISASTROUS PRACTICE SESSION 
			 
			Erik Jones had a tire deflated during Friday's opening practice at 
			Sonoma Raceway. That turned out to be the least of his worries. 
			 
			In the first two minutes of the second session, Jones missed a 
			downshift and wheel-hopped into Turn 11, the hairpin. His No. 77 
			Furniture Row Racing Toyota slid across the corner and slammed into 
			the tire barrier near the apex. 
			 
			"I just got some wheel hop and then got loose and hit the fence," 
			Jones said of the accident. "I've been frustrated all day, and this 
			just compounds that. We have to get the backup out and try to learn 
			more and try to get some speed out of the 5-hour Energy Camry." 
			 
			As a Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender who is racing at Sonoma for 
			the first time, Jones said he would have liked an opportunity to 
			test at the track, other than on a simulator. 
			 
			"I don't have a lot of road course experience anyways, and then to 
			get thrown into the fire, I wish we could do any kind of testing 
			anywhere," he said. "It's hard to show up and get out there to do 
			it. Just one of those things trying to learn, and you make a 
			mistake." 
			 
			After his team prepared the backup car, Jones got back on track with 
			roughly 25 minutes left in final practice. 
			 
			Jones, however, wasn't the only driver who had issues in practice. 
			In the first session, road course ace Billy Johnson spun early in 
			the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford. Ty Dillon spun heading up 
			the hill into Turn 2. The engine in Matt Kenseth's No. 20 Joe Gibbs 
			Racing Toyota expired, and the car came to rest in Turn 10. 
            
			  
			Practice was winding down when Chase Elliott spun near the entrance 
			to Turn 10, all the way through the corner before nosing into the 
			barrier beyond the exit. 
			 
			The No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team rolled out a backup 
			car after the incident, and Elliott will have to qualify on Saturday 
			with no laps on the car. 
			 
			Kyle Larson topped the speed chart in final practice at 94.389 mph, 
			followed by Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and AJ Allmendinger. 
			 
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