Dale Jr. doesn’t plan to drive #3 after Daytona NNS race: UPDATE:

On Friday evening, #88-Dale Earnhardt Jr. will slide through the window and into the seat of the #3 Wrangler Chevy for 300 miles of Nationwide Series racing at Daytona International Speedway. Until that moment, he cannot know how that car number on his door, and that blue and yellow paint before him on the hood, and memories of his father’s win-at-all-costs attitude while driving them may affect him. Especially at that track. But he is fairly certain about one thing: July 2, 2010 will be the last time he drives a race car with the #3 on the door. “I just want to go to the racetrack and run it once before I retire, and this will probably be it,” he said. “After this, I’ll probably never drive a car with a 3 on it again. I can pretty much say I’m 99% sure that will never happen again.” This is a stark revelation, especially for long-suffering Earnhardt fans who dreamed Junior would close out his career in a black #3. Junior, too, once thought that was his destiny. No more. “It’s not [my number] to take and use whenever I feel like using it,” he said through a sheepish grin. “You just don’t grab the car keys off the counter and go run out the door and haul down the road with your dad’s car. I didn’t do it when he was alive, and I won’t do it now. I’m borrowing it once, and then maybe sometime down the road some kid will come up, and he’ll have a connection to the 3 — whether it’s through my father or whether it’s what his number’s been since he was playing teeball. Whatever, you know, that will be his. It will be someone else’s.” The current Wrangler program is a dual initiative — partly to honor Big E, partly out of necessity. Junior’s sister, Kelley Earnhardt, Sprint Cup team owner and owner of the #3 trademark Richard Childress, and Teresa Earnhardt all played a role in putting the deal together, and wanted to tie it into Dale Earnhardt’s Hall of Fame induction.(see full story ay ESPN)(6-27-2010)
UPDATE: After winning the Nationwide Series race Friday night, Earnhardt spoke about the #3 car: “I will never do it. I’ll never rethink it. I’ll never consider it. I think that it’s important for everybody to know that that’s as concrete as it gets. I’ll never do it again. So I enjoyed it. It’s hard for me. It’s a balancing act between you and the public and myself and my own feelings. I mean, I kind of, you know, look to what you guys are putting out there to kind of get a temperature of how the public’s feeling. It’s such a tough deal. It’s real emotional for me preparing for it and putting it together. Is Rick okay with it? Did Rick mind? Is Richard happy with his role? Is Teresa truly okay? It’s just so damn hard to know how everybody feels about it. Hell, I just want to come race. I just like cool-looking cars. This was a helluva cool-looking car. I always loved the scheme. That’s all that mattered to me, was just the scheme. I just love the car. I wanted to race it once, and I did. I’d run the number before in this series, so I didn’t really put a lot of stock in the fact that the 3 was coming back like a lot of people did. I didn’t approach it that way mentally, where everyone else was thinking, you know, 3 is back, Earnhardt’s 3 is back. But when I started hearing all that, you know, how everybody was making such a big deal about it, I was like … man, this is like pressure, man, this is a big deal. So I was a little nervous. But I don’t know if I’d have liked that or not. Regardless of whether I did or not, I made my life pretty much driving that 8 and now the 88. It doesn’t make sense for me to do this again. I think in the Nationwide Series, it makes enough sense, and I really wanted to do it, and I’ve done it. I don’t ever want to do it again. And I’ll never change my mind, ever.”(NASCAR Media transcript)(7-3-2010)