Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Every athlete wants to 'find their Foreman Grill'

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It is far more difficult than people assume for most athletes to launch their own businesses once they retire from sports.

Nascar legend Dale Earnhardt Jr. is doing it just fine a year after retiring: He co-owns the JR Motorsports racing team; he does broadcast commentary on NBC; and he opened a restaurant called Dale Jr.’s Whisky River in Charlotte, N.C.

Nevertheless, Earnhardt knows the daunting task athletes face when trying to launch their second career.

“It’s like trying to figure out if you can create the Foreman Grill,” Earnhardt says. “George Foreman has the Foreman Grill, and that’s what every athlete or entrepreneur wants to do, is find their Foreman Grill. So we’ve started up a lot of stuff, and a lot of it is still going, and some of it didn’t work. Now that I’m not driving, I can focus a lot more time into those businesses.”

Dale Earnhardt Jr. discusses his new book “Racing to the Finish” behind-the-scenes at AOL Build studio on Oct. 16, 2018. (Photo: Yahoo Finance/BUILD)
Dale Earnhardt Jr. discusses his new book “Racing to the Finish” behind-the-scenes at AOL Build studio on Oct. 16, 2018. (Photo: Yahoo Finance/BUILD)

‘I’m a little nervous’

It may be hard to believe that anything could make Dale Earnhardt Jr. “nervous,” but that’s how the Nascar legend, who retired from racing last year, felt about inadvertently becoming “the spokesman for concussions in our sport.”

Earnhardt’s new book, “Racing to the Finish,” focuses on the many head injuries he sustained during his racing career, and includes private notes he wrote to himself on his iPhone when he was suffering symptoms after concussions.

“I’m a little nervous about how my peers feel about it,” he told Yahoo Finance in a candid interview at AOL Build Studio last week. “There’s this worry that once you’ve had a head injury … you’re labeled as damaged goods. You don’t want it to be who you are, it’s just something that happened to you.”

Luckily, Earnhardt’s advocacy for concussion awareness in auto-racing is having a positive impact: He says his specialist, Dr. Micky Collins at the University of Pittsburgh, has told him that a number of patients who have come to see Collins lately are telling him Earnhardt is the reason they’ve come in.

Dale Earnhardt Jr., driver of the #88 Nationwide Chevrolet, removes his helmet in the garage area after being involved in an on-track incident during the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series 59th Annual Coke Zero 400 Powered By Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway on July 1, 2017 in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)
Dale Earnhardt Jr., driver of the #88 Nationwide Chevrolet, removes his helmet in the garage area after being involved in an on-track incident during the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series 59th Annual Coke Zero 400 Powered By Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway on July 1, 2017 in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

‘My saving grace, my big break’

Earnhardt is unlikely to face any backlash from his comments on head injuries. He is one of the most recognizable professional athletes in America. The “partners” section of Earnhardt’s website is a sampling of the best-known consumer brands in America: Chevrolet; Goodyear; Nationwide; Pepsico and more.

In fact, Earnhardt tells Yahoo Finance that a partnership with Budweiser early in his career was pivotal to his success. “My saving grace, my big break, was being partnered with Budweiser,” he says. “That changed my whole life—the trajectory, the awareness of my profile and brand, exploded when I got the chance to do Rolling Stone, MTV Cribs.”