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Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the most popular driver award for the fifth straight year with  1.5 million-plus votes.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the most popular driver award for the fifth straight year with 1.5 million-plus votes.
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NEW YORK — Despite a year of personal upheaval and on-track failures, Dale Earnhardt Jr. remains as popular as ever.

Earnhardt was selected the most popular driver for the fifth consecutive year, drawing more than 1.5 million of the 3.8 million votes cast online. The award comes after he decided to leave the NASCAR team founded by his late father to join powerhouse Hendrick Motorsports with a new sponsor and a new car number.

“After the year I had statistically and off the track, that isn’t the response I expected from my fans,” Earnhardt said Thursday. “Next year, I hope to earn more hardware on the track, too.”

Earnhardt is moving from his signature No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Inc., Budweiser Chevrolet to a No. 88 Hendrick entry, sponsored by a couple of Pepsi products. He said he has not talked with stepmother Teresa Earnhardt, owner of DEI, since they last faced each other at a meeting during his ill-fated negotiations to stay with the family team.

But that doesn’t mean he is harboring any kind of grudge about having to move on.

“I don’t think it’s a closed chapter,” Junior said. “I don’t want to sound like I’m writing her off for the rest of my life. I want to do right by myself. That’s what’s important right now.

“If that’s something I’ve got time to fix down the road, then I’ll fix it.”

Earnhardt said he can hardly wait to join two-time reigning Nextel Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, four-time series champion Gordon and Casey Mears at Hendrick.

“Yeah, I want to start now,” he said. “I want to race tomorrow, the Daytona 500. Let’s skip all the testing and race the Daytona 500 right now.”

Other awards included:

  • Buddy Shuman Award to retiring team owner Robert Yates for his longtime contributions to the sport of stock car racing.
  • Rookie of the year trophy and $50,000 to Juan Pablo Montoya.
  • Manufacturers Championship Award to Chevrolet, which won 26-of-36 races in 2007 on the way to its 31st Cup championship.
  • Pole Award and $100,000 to Jeff Gordon, who led the Cup series with seven poles.
  • Commit to Win Award and $75,000 to Gordon.
  • Lap Leader Award and $75,000 to Gordon, who led more than 900 laps in 2007.
  • Crew Chief of the Year Award and $100,000 to Mike Ford, second straight year for crew chief for Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing entry.
  • Fastest Lap Award and $75,000 to Jimmie Johnson, who had the fastest lap of a race six times.
  • Most Valuable Pit Crew Award to the crew of Johnson’s championship team.
  • Command Performance Driver of the Year Award and $100,000 to Kurt Busch.

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