Baltimore Sun

Earnhardt cleared to drive again in wake of concussion

Star missed 18 races; team says he’ll be at Daytona

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CONCORD, N.C. — NASCAR star Dale Earnhardt Jr., who missed the final 18 races of last season because of a concussion, has been medically cleared to return next year.

Hendrick Motorsport­s announced Thursday that Earnhardt will take part in the season-opening Daytona 500 on Feb. 26.

Dr. Micky Collins, medical director of the UPMC Sports Medicine Concussion Program in Pittsburgh, in consultati­on with Charlotte neurosurge­on Dr. Jerry Petty, cleared the 42-year-old driver Wednesday after a test session at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina. Petty attended the session.

“Dale is one of the hardest-working patients I’ve ever encountere­d,” Collins said. “He’s done everything we’ve asked, and we believe he is ready to compete at a profession­al level again and can withstand the normal forces of a racecar driver. Dale has been very open with us, and we’ve had plenty of time for his treatment, so we feel very good about his long-term prospects and how this has been managed by everyone involved.”

Earnhardt completed 185 laps during a nearly five-hour session at Darlington under the guidance of his Hendrick Motorsport­s crew chief, Greg Ives. In addition to the on-track test, which was observed by NASCAR, the driver has logged more than 15 hours in a racing simulator during his recovery.

“I feel great, and I’m excited to officially be back,” Earnhardt said. “I expected things to go really well [Wednesday], and that’s exactly what happened. Actually getting in a racecar was an important final step, and it gives me a ton of confidence going into 2017.”

Earnhardt said he would do more testing in January “to help knock the rust off” ahead of the season-opening race he has won twice.

“When it’s time to go to Daytona, I’ll be ready,” he said.

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