Tag: Retirement

  • Martin Truex Jr. announces retirement from full-time NASCAR Cup Series racing

    Martin Truex Jr. announces retirement from full-time NASCAR Cup Series racing

    Martin Truex Jr. announces retirement from full-time NASCAR Cup Series racing
    By Reid Spencer/NASCAR Wire Service

    NEWTON, Iowa — Martin Truex Jr. felt it was time to regain control over his own life and his own schedule.

    “I’m obviously here to let y’all know that I won’t be back full-time next year,” Truex said Friday in a press conference with team owner Joe Gibbs, confirming the widely reported news that he will exit the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota at season’s end.

    “It’s been incredible. It’s been a hell of a ride. I’m excited about the future, and I’m not really sure what that looks like yet,” Truex added.

    There are several issues, however, that are already settled. The 2017 NASCAR Cup Series champion will continue with JGR in what is vaguely defined as an “ambassadorial capacity.” He likely will compete in an occasional NASCAR Xfinity Series race for the organization.

    And Truex will fulfill a stated purpose of reclaiming his time as his own.

    “It’s the right time for me. I’ve thought about it a lot for the last few seasons — just waited for that feeling in my mind to be positive, like ‘This is OK, I’m good, and I want to do something else,’” Truex said.

    “In the 21 years that I’ve done this, I’ve never missed a race. I’ve never missed a practice. I’ve never been late for anything. I’ve never missed an appearance. You live your life by a schedule that somebody makes for you, and it’s just time for me to make my own schedule.

    “That’s really what it boils down to. I want to go do the things I want to do, and I don’t want anyone to tell me when I can and when I can’t do those things. I still love racing. I’m still going to race some — I don’t know what, when, how, why — but I feel very fortunate to be in this position to make this decision.”

    Gibbs said he had a sense of what Truex’s decision would be. Truex will turn 44 on June 29. That makes him the elder statesman of JGR by less than five months over teammate Denny Hamlin, a three-time winner so far this season.

    “I did everything I could to keep it going,” Gibbs said of his efforts to retain Truex for another season. “I think we’ve got two 43-year-olds that are at the top of their game.”

    Now in his 19th season of full-time Cup racing, Truex has accumulated 34 victories, 23 poles, 146 top fives and 287 top 10s in 673 starts in NASCAR’s top series. He also won consecutive NASCAR Xfinity Series titles in 2004 and 2005 with Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Chance 2 Motorsports.

    Truex’s high-water mark in the Cup Series came in 2017. Driving for Furniture Row Racing and paired with crew chief Cole Pearn, he scored career bests in victories (eight) and top 10s (26) en route to the series championship, which he claimed with a win in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

    After stints with Dale Earnhardt Inc., Earnhardt-Ganassi Racing, Michael Waltrip Racing and Furniture Row, Truex joined Joe Gibbs Racing in 2019. He won seven times that season and finished second in the final standings for the second straight year.

    Though winless so far this season, Truex currently is fifth in the Cup Series standings, despite running out of fuel and finishing 27th in last Sunday’s road course event at Sonoma Raceway.

    NASCAR President Steve Phelps acknowledged Truex’s achievements in a statement extolling his successes as a competitor and a person.

    “Martin Truex Jr. has been a consistent figure over the last two-plus decades in NASCAR — a consistent winner, champion and fan-favorite,” Phelps said. “Though he especially excelled on NASCAR’s biggest stages, Martin performed his craft with a quiet tenacity, allowing his immense success tell his incredible story.

    “On behalf of the France Family and all of NASCAR, I congratulate Martin on a wonderful career and wish him the best of luck for the remainder of his final full-time season.” 

    As he plans his exit from full-time racing, Truex has few, if any, regrets.

    “I would say I’ve achieved more than I ever thought I would,” he said. “That being said, there’s a lot of heartbreakers. There’s a lot of things you go back and think about like, ‘Man, if that had turned out different.’

    “But a championship and three runners-up in this (elimination) format, I feel like that’s really good. I’m proud of what I’ve done. I feel like I gave it everything I had, and I feel I’m really, really good at what I did, so I’m happy with that—I’m content.”

  • Darrell Waltrip’s five most memorable calls from the booth

    Darrell Waltrip’s five most memorable calls from the booth

    Darrell Waltrip announced his retirement as a broadcaster in an exclusive interview on Thursday in the Tennessean.

    When I read the announcement, my mind immediately flashed back to my countless memories of hearing his voice through my television set. As a kid, I still recall his K-Mart No. 66 Ford as he raced in his final two years for Travis Carter Enterprises. And then, he hung up his racing helmet, replaced it with a suit and tie, and grabbed the mic. After 19 years in the FOX broadcast booth, Waltrip will retire at the end of FOX Sports’ 2019 NASCAR race coverage on June 23 at Sonoma Raceway.

    There had been some speculation and rumors of his potential retirement last year, but Waltrip assured everyone on Twitter at the start of the year that he was still in the booth for one more year.

    “FOX Sports is putting together an amazing group of young and enthusiastic journalists,” shared Waltrip over his Twitter account in January 2019. “But they still need “old guy” wisdom, I’m happy to say that for another year that “old guy”will be me!”

    Waltrip had what he called an “old school” style that he felt may have clashed with Jeff Gordon’s younger crowd style. Gordon’s retirement from driving to continue his involvement in the sport was an exact replica of Waltrip’s footsteps 15 years later. As social media developed over the years, it seemed that some fans shared controversial opinions about Waltrip’s remarks, either in the booth, on pit road or during the week.

    But that didn’t stop him from calling racing as it was.

    “Race fans are very intelligent. They know what happens,” Waltrip stated just days before his retirement from driving in 2000. “How are you going to try to tell them something didn’t happen when they saw it? You can’t try to fool them. You’ve just got to tell it like it is.”

    So after getting the green light from former head of Fox Sports David Hill, Waltrip used his personality to create his most well-known catchphrase: “Boogity, boogity, boogity – let’s go racing, boys!”

    So as a former champion and race winner aspiring to become a lap-by-lap announcer myself, here are my five favorite calls by Darrell Waltrip.

    #5 – Darrell’s First “Boogity”

    The story goes that Waltrip grew tired of the same calls for each race.

    “I hated the way a race started on the radio,” said Waltrip in 2017 to Scott Fowler with The Charlotte Observer. “The announcer would say, ‘The green flag is in the air, and the cars race off into Turn 1.’ Are you kidding me? That’s the best we can do?”

    Waltrip recalled listening to Ray Stevens’ ‘The Streak’ on country radio. He and Ray were great friends and golfed often, so he was already familiar with a lot of his music. However, the idea dawned on him during one section of the song: “Here he comes – Boogity, boogity! There he goes – boogity, boogity!” That’s when he caught it.

    If you’ve watched a NASCAR race for the past decade or so, you would fall into one of two categories. You love it, or you hate it. But for FOX Sports and NASCAR, it became their signature sound clip. Waltrip subtly said it over the air at the start of the 2001 Coca-Cola 600 after Mike Joy announced the green flag. Throughout FOX’s share of broadcasting the first half of the season, Waltrip would say the iconic phrase sporadically, but would lock it in starting at Sonoma in 2001.

    #4 – McDowell’s Massive Qualifying Crash at Texas

    Waltrip had a distinctive ability to catch things mere seconds before they actually took place. His championship experience behind the wheel allowed him to show fans and his colleagues what exactly to look out for as they watched on television. As each driver would make their way around the circuit, his body language would translate through the broadcast as if he were behind the wheel himself.

    The first major test of the Car of Tomorrow was during qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway in 2008 when Michael McDowell was fighting a tight race car. In most cases, if the car got loose into a turn, it was common to see drivers overcorrect to compensate for what would be a loose condition. That’s exactly what happened to McDowell heading into Turn 1. The car got light going into the turn, slid sideways ever so slightly, and Waltrip caught that from the booth to bring immediate attention to what would be a disastrous crash that would test both the SAFER barrier and the new COT package.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5MrquaBBXQ

    #3 – Sharing a Hall of Famer’s Insight on Racing

    Starting in 2006, NASCAR started to see big changes across the sport. Some of those changes were fantastic and even influential to other racing series across the world. SAFER Barriers and the mandatory HANS device has helped save many lives in vicious crashes. The investment and technology installed at tracks within the schedule have already been tested many times, but other changes have not been taken as well.

    The Car of Tomorrow made its debut at Bristol in 2007, and Kyle Busch, the winner of the race, said the new car “sucked”. The year before, Waltrip called the car “ugly” and even gave a perspective as a team owner wondering why the designers couldn’t take the technology in the Car of Tomorrow and put them into their current generation cars to save teams “$2 to $4 million dollars a year”.

    The biggest controversy for today’s package in the 2019 season has been the high downforce, high drag and low horsepower racing. Qualifying sessions have been all about drafting for the best run instead of the fastest lap and the practice sessions have given teams little information about race day. And during the races, while we have seen more passes in the middle of the pack, there has been a “catch the leader and stall” style of racing. Fans across social media have been controversial about the new package, but they weren’t the first to say something negative. Waltrip, during the 2009 Auto Club 500, said that restrictor plates, or a draft-focused style of racing, would “destroy racing of any kind.” NASCAR had tried this before at New Hampshire, resulting in Jeff Burton leading every lap in 2000.

    #2 – The Closest Finish in Cup History

    The year before the Chase was introduced into NASCAR, there was a lot of scuffle about many things regarding NASCAR. One was the debate of taking the iconic Labor Day race weekend away from Darlington, and fans fought hard to keep the grassroots tradition with the Southern 500. The Lady in Black had bigger plans when the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series first visited the egg-shaped raceway in March of 2003.

    The battle between Ricky Craven and Kurt Busch would not only be one of the most exciting and closest finishes in the history of NASCAR, but would subtly have fans remember the most classic of lines in motorsports history; “Have you ever? No, I’ve never!”

    #1 – From Tearful Joy to Tear-Filled Sorrow

    Who would have ever guessed that Waltrip’s first race from the booth would be one that would change NASCAR as my generation would know it. NASCAR on FOX kicked off the season with the 2001 Daytona 500, and what would be a special day for the Waltrip family would quickly be overshadowed by the death of Dale Earnhardt. As Michael Waltrip crossed the line to win his first Daytona 500, televisions across the nation would hear the cheer of older brother Darrell proclaiming, “Mikey! Mikey!”

    A few brief moments later, Waltrip would look to the left and say the sorrowful words, “I just hope Dale’s okay. I guess he’s alright, isn’t he?”

    And one week after NASCAR’s darkest hour, Waltrip stood on the front stretch at Rockingham Speedway to share a prayer for fans in the stands (or in attendance) and around the globe.

    “Lord, our hearts are hurting. We’ve lost a great friend, and it all seems so unfair. People ask us how can we go out and race today. We can do that first of all because we know that’s what Dale would want us to do, and second of all, because Lord we know without a doubt that he is dwelling in your house and will forevermore. Amen.”

    It’s not just Waltrip’s calls from the booth, his memories of racing history or his race wins and championships that made him a NASCAR Hall of Fame member. It is also his personal care and attention to every single member in the garage and to all the fans across the world on a weekly basis. All of this and more will be be missed when Waltrip calls his last race.

  • Kasey Kahne reveals 2018 will be his last full-time season

    Kasey Kahne reveals 2018 will be his last full-time season

    Staff Report | NASCAR.com

    Fifteen-year premier series veteran Kasey Kahne revealed that 2018 will be his last full-time season in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. Kahne, 38, currently drives the No. 95 Chevrolet for Leavine Family Racing.

    “I’ve thought about this decision for many months, if not longer,” Kahne wrote on his Twitter account. “It’s time for me to step away from racing in NASCAR full time.”

    (See the full statement in the Twitter post at the bottom of this article.)

    Kahne has compiled 18 wins in 527 starts in the Monster Energy Series, most notably capturing the Coca-Cola 600 three times (2006, ’08, ’12) and the Brickyard 400 once, his last victory driving for Hendrick Motorsports.

    Kahne’s best finish in the season-ending standings was fourth in 2012 while driving for Hendrick and with Kenny Francis as his crew chief. He was the Sunoco Rookie of the Year in 2004 while driving for Ray Evernham. He had a series-high six victories in 2006 for Evernham.

    Leavine Family Racing sent out the following tweet on social media in response to the news:

    “Thank you @kaseykahne for allowing us to be a part of your memorable career in NASCAR! Thanks for everything you’ve done for this sport & all of your fans over the years. We’re ready to close out this season together on a positive note as you then chase after your next adventure!”

    Kahne’s first race was the 2004 Daytona 500 in which he finished 41st after bowing out early with an engine issue. However, Kahne won his first pole a few weeks later at Las Vegas and now has 27 Busch Pole Awards to his credit.

    Kahne has the distinction of winning in all three of NASCAR’s national series with eight wins coming in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and five wins in the Camping World Truck Series.

    Here’s Kahne’s full statement:

    MORE: Recap of Kahne’s final Hendrick season | Career in photos

    All of Kasey Kahne’s Monster Energy Series wins | Full career stats

     

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. to Retire from NASCAR Cup Series Following 2017

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. to Retire from NASCAR Cup Series Following 2017

    CONCORD, N.C. — After 18 seasons and more than 600 races behind the wheel, Dale Earnhardt Jr. will bring his NASCAR Cup Series driving career to a close at the conclusion of 2017. Today, he shared the news with members of his No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports team.

    The fan favorite and two-time Daytona 500 champion will discuss his decision in a press conference this afternoon. He will be joined by Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick, for whom Earnhardt has driven since 2008. The two first met about the driver’s decision on March 29.

    Earnhardt, who will turn 43 in October, made his first career Cup Series start on May 30, 1999, at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Since then, the Kannapolis, North Carolina, native has captured 26 points-paying Cup race wins and been voted by fans as NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver a record 14 consecutive years. He has qualified for the NASCAR playoffs eight times.

    Now in the midst of his 18th full-time season at the elite Cup level, Earnhardt made his 600th career series start on March 26 at Fontana, California. He will compete in his final NASCAR Cup Series race on Nov. 19 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

    Hendrick Motorsports will announce plans for its 2018 team alignment at a later date.

    Update:  Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Rick Hendrick will hold a press conference at 3 p.m. ET to discuss his retirement. It will be streamed live on NASCAR.com.

  • Finley Factor: The Smoke Show

    Finley Factor: The Smoke Show

    When it comes to racing drivers who have won across vastly different series around the world, there can be hundreds of debates and viewpoints on who the greatest of all time is. Names like Mario Andretti, the Unsers, Aryton Senna and Nicki Lauda come to mind.

    To me, though, there are two at the top of the list, ahead of all the others. These two drivers won in just about everything they raced in, and they could and would race in anything at any time.

    One of them is A.J. Foyt. The other is Tony Stewart.

    “This one’s for every one of those fans in the stands who pull for me every week and take all of the bull**** from everyone else,” Tony Stewart proclaimed in victory lane after winning the 2007 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard.

    Stewart announced his retirement on September 30 from the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series following the 2016 season, adding that Clint Bowyer will replace him in the No. 14 Chevrolet. It is not the end of a long and storied career, however. Stewart made it extremely clear in his press conference that he isn’t retiring from racing. When asked if he would run in just about anything outside of Sprint Cup cars, the only race he gave a definite no to, is an Indianapolis 500 start.

    After being asked if he had spoken to A.J. Foyt yet about his retirement from the Sprint Cup Series, Stewart said, “I haven’t yet. He’s probably going to yell at me like he normally does when I call him.  I’m sure I’m going to get a bunch of grief, but I’m trying to be as nice today as I can. But I’m sure he’s going to give me a lot of grief over this.”

    Stewart is the splitting image of Foyt, his boyhood hero and idol, even in retirement from the big leagues. Foyt continued on after driving by owning and operating a top race team, which he continues to do today. The three-time champion made certain to point out during his press conference that he would remain involved in the highest levels of racing via Stewart-Haas Racing.

    “I made sure to send (Mike) Helton and (Steve) O’Donnell messages this week,” Stewart emphasized, “and say, listen, don’t get too excited about this because I’m taking a suit and helmet off, but I’m still going to be at the track harassing everybody, so nobody is getting a free pass now.”

    Stewart is a driver’s driver. Keeping an extensive dirt racing schedule until 2013 and hoping to resume it in 2017, he was right at home in whatever car he drove. It could be slingin’ dirt at Eldora, hitting speeds well over the 200 mph range in an IndyCar, dominating in go-karts at the Daytona road course, going up on the high banks at the same track in a big NASCAR stock car, or just competing at your local track in a quarter midget. Stewart has done it all and won it all.

    However, these last few years have easily been the toughest years of Stewart’s career. A leg injury in 2013 capped off what had been a mediocre season that saw him sitting out The Chase. The next year, 2014, was a disappointing season even before the now infamous Kevin Ward Jr. incident. So far, 2015 has far and away been the worst full-time season in Stewart’s entire Cup career.

    Before Stewart’s press conference, I thought it would be one of the saddest moments of the year. Instead, however, I saw something else. Stewart, for the first time in what seems like forever, is back to being himself. Not the doom and gloom version, but the Stewart of old, happy and joking around.

    “A lot of you probably were here yesterday or some of you might have been here for the press conference here in the same room yesterday for Gene’s Formula 1 announcement. He didn’t announce his second driver for the F1 team, and you’re looking at him,” Stewart said with a smile.

    Stewart’s life in racing isn’t ending. You probably won’t see him racing on television much after 2016, but at your local dirt track? They say if you get really lucky, you may see Smoke rise again.


    New Hampshire Preview, the Third and Final Race of the Challenger Round of the 2015 Chase for the Sprint Cup.

    Challenger Round Logo (Given to media members at Richmond)

    The Favorites

    Jimmie Johnson is going to be very hard to stop. The June winner at Dover, Johnson, hasn’t finished outside of the top three since the 2013 June race here, when he jumped the last restart, got a black flag, and finished 17th. Outside of that finish, Johnson hasn’t ended the day outside of the top-10 since 2010.

    Although Matt Kenseth only has two victories at Dover, this has always been a good track for the Wisconsin native. In 33 starts, Kenseth holds 15 top fives and 21 top 10s at the Monster Mile. A fun fact – this was the site of his very first start in 1998. The then 26-year-old XFINITY Series driver drove the No. 94 McDonalds Ford to an impressive sixth place finish in relief of team owner Bill Elliott, whose father passed away the day before the race.

    The Sleepers

    Kyle Busch enters this weekend a single point out of the final transfer spot of the Chase. A solid race for “Rowdy” should get him into the next round. This definitely isn’t his worst track, either. If you take out all five of his DNFs, none of which were really his fault, Kyle has finished outside of the top-10 only three times in his career at Dover.

    Jeff Gordon is the defending race winner and hasn’t won since that race nearly a year ago. Iron Man seems to be finding his way back on track lately, however, a win-contending run ending in a disappointing 14th place finish at Chicagoland due to a poor restart, was sandwiched between sevenths at both Richmond and last week at New Hampshire.

    The Wildcard

    Kevin Harvick enters Dover needing a win to make it to the Contender Round of The Chase. A top-five finish could be enough, but he’d need a lot of help to get into the top 12 in points. Although Harvick has never won at Dover in the Cup Series, he has led laps in the last three races here, including 223 laps last fall before blowing a tire while leading and 93 laps in June before settling for a second place.

    All stats for the Finley Factor are as per Racing Reference unless otherwise noted.