DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. —  Danica Patrick slid into her chair at NASCAR media day Thursday and  promptly informed her audience it would be race questions only. Yeah,  right. The ensuing 20-plus minutes consisted mostly of questions about  her relationship with fellow driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and Patrick  dutifully answered them all. She and Stenhouse better get used to this,  at least in the early going. Patrick and Stenhouse confirmed in  January they are dating, and the duo will be competing against each  other this year for Sprint Cup rookie of the year. “Initially, it  was a little bit of a mental hurdle of like, ’We compete against each  other,’ ” Patrick said of the relationship, which she likened to Romeo  and Juliet. “It’s like the Capulets and Montagues with (me in) Chevy and  (him in) Ford, this just doesn’t work. But you can’t tell your heart  who to like or not like.  And so in the end, it ended up being something  that I just didn’t think was a big deal at all.” The two spent  the last two seasons racing in the Nationwide Series and Patrick leaned  on Stenhouse, the two-time Nationwide champion, for friendship and  advice after her move to NASCAR. She said the relationship grew deeper,  and they went public after she filed for divorce in early January from  her husband, Paul Hospenthal. She and Hospenthal announced in November  they were splitting up after seven years of marriage. The  30-year-old Patrick rarely talked about her personal life while married  to Hospenthal, but she was open Thursday about the 25-year-old  Stenhouse. “I’m just relaxed,” Patrick said. “I feel happy. I feel  like I am enjoying my life. It makes me smile to talk about him. I feel  like I’m on ’The Bachelorette.’” Stenhouse was equally as open,  saying “she’s hot!” when asked what attracted him to Patrick before  adding “she loves to cook, and I love to eat.” He admitted he’d never  heard of the Capulets and Montagues, and refused to say who he would  push on the last lap of a race at Daytona if Patrick was battling for  the win with one of his Roush Fenway Racing teammates. “I’m going three-wide,” he smiled. “There’s enough room at Daytona.” Although  the two did not publicly interact Thursday, they are clearly content  with their relationship. And because Patrick, who leads all celebrities  with 12 Super Bowl ads, is used to being under the media spotlight  Stenhouse said he can lean on his girlfriend for guidance as he finds  himself suddenly scrutinized. “I’m fine. The headlines don’t say  anything about me,” he said. “I’m taking this seriously. But if I win a  race, it might be ’Danica’s boyfriend won a race.’” The  relationship is fodder for endless jokes and razzing from fellow  competitors, and most were eager to dive into the topic Thursday. “Pat on the back for him,” said Ty Dillon. “We  can come up with plenty of jokes and how humorous it could be on the  track and what each of them are thinking — we’ll all be watching with  great curiosity, for sure,” said Jimmie Johnson. But if the two  have an incident on the track? “That would be one heck of a show,”  Johnson said. “I’m sure ratings would go up quite a bit. You never know.  Danica has shown she can get quite upset at times, so there could be  something going on.” Patrick was ready for all the ribbing, and even joked about what would happen if Stenhouse wrecked her on the track. “He better have a really good, ’I’m sorry,’” Patrick said with a wink. The  duo is moving forward with their relationship, with Patrick saying she  planned to cook for Stenhouse on Valentine’s Day and she packed an  entire suitcase full of gifts for her boyfriend (he got her “fancy  playing cards” he said). She also told reporters how after so many  months of hanging out with Stenhouse, she had to push him to ask her out  on an official date — an account Stenhouse confirmed before sheepishly  admitting he couldn’t remember what restaurant they went to for the  date. Defending Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski cautioned that things could get sticky with the happy couple. “It’s  difficult because there’s that part of you that thinks, ’Ah, this is a  little hokey. Can we just focus on the on-track part?’” he said. “But  you have to understand that as a race car driver, you make life  decisions that put you in a position of danger all the time, 24-7, and  that inherently makes you a unique person and the decisions you make in  your mental process to get there unique. And whatever outside influences  you have are going to affect how you perform. “So it makes it a  story because there’s no way for it not to affect their performance. It  ties back in. I think it’s not really much of a story that their dating  as it is as much of a story if they were to break up. That would be  incredible to watch, to be quite honest with you. There’s so many  different ways that could go. I mean, imagine if they were to break up  and then wreck each other for like the next six races because they were  mad?” Stenhouse dismissed Keselowski’s take, “coming from a guy who has never had a girlfriend?” Johnson had a recommendation: Patrick and Stenhouse need to keep their relationship from spilling onto the track. “If  it does, it’s going to impact their lifestyle and their job,” Johnson  said. “We’re paid to go on the racetrack and race. So if they’re  handling things differently on the track because of their personal  relationship, it’s going to affect their jobs; their owners aren’t going  to be happy or their sponsors.”
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