Ward Burton getting used to playing role of coach to son, Jeb

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By then, Jeb was already well on his way up the racing ladder. He started at 12, and progressed from motocross to go karts, then limited late models and finally late models before the family decided he was ready to go on to more ambitious things.

To ease the transition, Ward teamed Jeb up with Trip Bruce, who was crew chief for Ward later in his career. It’s an arrangement Bruce said he and Ward discussed in 2000, and one that has helped Ward step back, at least a little bit.

“You have to learn to kind of sit back and watch, be not as involved,” Bruce said, “and Ward said, ‘You know, I was always nervous before a practice session or qualifying as a driver, but nowhere near as much as he is standing here watching Jeb do it.’”

Jeb would have raced in the season-opening truck race at Daytona, but hadn’t been cleared yet by NASCAR, so Ward drove the truck and finished eighth. That was just fine with Tabitha, who wasn’t ready to see her son driving on a 2 1/2 mile trioval.

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