Dale Earnhardt, Amazon Prime Video
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Teresa Earnhardt has often been referred to as the "Wicked Witch of the South" in NASCAR circles. The ugly nickname is the result of her involvement in various family and business disputes, particularly with Dale Earnhardt Jr., including the No. 8 trademark, which he got earlier this year after Teresa unexpectedly surrendered the rights to it.
Approaching the age his dad was when he died at Daytona, a second-generation legend went looking for answers. I went looking, too.
Noticeably absent from the first two episodes of Earnhardt is Dale Sr.’s widow, Teresa Earnhardt. After her husband’s tragic death, Teresa has mostly retreated from the public eye. From her life today to the daughter they share, here’s the latest on Dale Earnhardt Sr.’s wife.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. says despite the lawsuit between Michael Jordan and NASCAR, He believes NASCAR is better off with Michael Jordan as part of the sport.
NASCAR’s iconic No. 8 made famous by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. will return to Bristol as part of MLB's Speedway Classic between the Atlanta Braves and the Cincinnati Reds.
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Teresa was the third wife of Dale Earnhardt, and the stepmother to Dale Earnhardt Jr. And when Earnhardt tragically lost his life in the final turn of the Daytona 500, Teresa suddenly inherited another role as NASCAR team owner and executor of all things Dale Earnhardt.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. has seen enough of NASCAR's top series racing at Martinsville Speedway and wants to see it kicked off the schedule. Martinsville
Joshua Altman provides a detailed glimpse into the four-part docuseries that recently made its debut on Amazon Prime.
Dale won his first NASCAR championship in 1980, which was his sophomore season. He became the first driver to have ever won it the year after winning Rookie of the Year, which he had done a year prior in 1979. He came into the Winston Cup Series hot, and put everyone on alert that he was not only there to race with the big boys, but beat them.