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Michael Edwards for Newsweek
Powerful Engine: Hendrick at his team shop in Charlotte, N.C.
BUSINESS

The King of Nascar

Rick Hendrick is the force behind racing's biggest stars. But can he handle Dale Earnhardt Jr.?

 
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It's lunchtime at Hendrick Motorsports in Concord, N.C., and 550 employees gather in a hangar-size meeting hall. The workers—who power four of NASCAR's 43 racing teams—bow their heads in prayer. Then, after they eat, owner Rick Hendrick takes the stage. He congratulates them for their performance last year, when Hendrick's drivers won half of NASCAR's 36 races and his breakout star, Jimmie Johnson, earned his second consecutive championship. "But that was last year, and we're not going to talk about that anymore," Hendrick says. "We're in a new year."

At this week's 50th running of the Daytona 500, fans will get a sense of whether Hendrick's winning streak continues. This season, Johnson, superstar Jeff Gordon and up-and-comer Casey Mears will be joined by the sport's most popular driver, Dale Earnhardt Jr.Adding Earnhardt to the roster is a coup—but injecting Junior's outsize personality into this tight-knit group may test Hendrick's management style. "That's the story everybody is waiting for—that there's no way we're going to have those roosters in one henhouse," Hendrick says. "But I'm damned determined to make it work."

Hendrick has much riding on that bet. His operation consumes nearly $200 million a year, much of it provided by sponsors who demand wins. Hendrick had raced as a teenager before starting a string of car dealerships (now a $4 billion business), but when he launched his first race team in 1984, conventional wisdom held that it was best to bankroll a single driver; running multiple teams would create dilution, division and favoritism. Hendrick disagreed. "He was regarded as fanciful, pie-in-the-sky," says Liz Clarke, author of "One Helluva Ride: How NASCAR Swept the Nation." "Racing isn't a collaborative thing—it's an 'I-want-to-put-the-other-guy-into-the-wall' kind of sport."

But by 1987 Hendrick owned three teams, and as the costs of building competitive race cars skyrocketed, other owners gradually adopted his view that spreading costs over four teams (NASCAR's maximum per owner) is the only way to compete. "It's very clear there are economies of scale here," says Smith College economist Andrew Zimbalist.

Inside Hendrick's sprawling garages are some clues how his teams do it. To share information, his crews use a database that lets Jeff Gordon's crew chief instantly see if, say, Jimmie Johnson's team reduces tire pressure. The four drivers aren't required to cooperate on the track (which NASCAR rules allow), but since 2006 they've begun meeting each week to compare notes. Hendrick has even toyed with compensation schemes to make everyone play nicely: starting last year, employees received a bonus for each race won by any Hendrick driver.

Upstairs, Hendrick, 58, presides from a conference room filled with photos of his son—a reminder that, had things worked out differently, he'd likely be semiretired now. During the 1990s, Hendrick was diagnosed with leukemia (he beat it) and faced bribery charges in a dealership kickback scandal (he pleaded guilty to lesser charges and was later pardoned by President Clinton). But his biggest tragedy came in 2004, when his private plane crashed en route to a race, killing his only son, Ricky, 24, Hendrick's brother John, two nieces and four other employees. Hendrick had planned to turn the racing operation over to Ricky by now, but "for me to walk away from this, it'd almost be like they died for nothing," he says.

 
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  • Posted By: yungan @ 02/12/2008 5:46:47 PM

    Comment: Amen! I think a direct connection in monies donated and the pardon. There was way to much smoke surrounding Hendrick for there not to be any fire

  • Posted By: CHYNADAD @ 02/12/2008 3:38:16 PM

    Comment: Another GENIUS speak up.....................................please explain how there would be "less" people in jail if more Americans took accountability for their actions? Perhaps my thinking is in direct disproportion to yours, but I would say that MORE people being held accountable for crimes they committeed would result in MORE people in prisons. I do agree with your disdain for lawsuits with no merit, however it is the SAME lawyers who are keeping people OUT of prison -- by having their clients NOT assume accountability for their actions. In the future, follow old Chinese proverb "Before putting mouth in motion, make sure brain in gear". Oh...........one more thing : the noun "American" refers to a citizen of my country. In the future, please show our nation its due respect and capitalize it !!

  • Posted By: CHYNADAD @ 02/12/2008 3:27:22 PM

    Comment: Well done...........spoken like a TRUE LIBERAL !! Since when is "really knowing" someone a condition for guilt in a
    Federal crime conviction? If that were the case, I guess John Wilkes Booth did not actually assinate President Abraham Lincoln -- because I did not really know him. What a concept you have invented..............criminals are only guilty if you really know them. Keep that course of logic, and help to elect the next President in 2008, also. If you put your trust in a guy who waffles an aide in the oval office, you are just the citizen we need to chart the future of this country. Do you really believe what you wrote earlier? SAD...............................

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