NASCAR RacePoints Earn Points View Rewards
Superstore
AUCTIONS
type size: + -

BackTruex steps into spotlight as Earnhardt's exit looms (cont'd)

Winning proved the missing link. Since the final race of last season, when he finished second at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Truex's cars have steadily improved. But at every turn, some sort of misfortune lurked -- getting caught on pit road during a caution at Daytona, blowing an engine at California, suffering damage in an accident somewhere else. Those incidences chipped away at his confidence, and made the breakthrough seem further away than it really was.

Lineup

Citizens Bank 400
Pos. Driver Make
1. J.J. Yeley Chevrolet
2. Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
3. Kyle Busch Chevrolet
4. Ryan Newman Dodge
5. Joe Nemechek Chevrolet
6. Jeff Gordon Chevrolet
7. Denny Hamlin Chevrolet
8. Martin Truex Jr. Chevrolet
9. Jeff Burton Chevrolet
10. Kurt Busch Dodge
• Complete Lineup: click here

"For a while there, it seemed like things would never go right for us, and I always just wondered why, what did we do to deserve this? You get down when things are going bad, and they weren't necessarily going bad, but we'd pit and the caution would come out. Just stupid things would happen, and you'd get so aggravated and so mad that you start to question everything," Truex said.

"Luckily, these guys [on the No. 1 crew] have always done a good job of keeping me focused and keeping me pumped up and keeping me looking at the positives -- how well we ran, the lap times as compared to everybody else on the racetrack, and things like that. They've done a good job of keeping me focused on the things I need to focus on."

And then came Dover, and performance near his home state where Truex led 216 of 400 laps to record his first Nextel Cup victory. (watch video) Earnhardt has seen it before -- a young driver finds that first win, the pressure melts away, confidence grows and results improve across the board.

"I told him when he won that race, 'You're going to run better on average now just because.' When you win that first race, your whole program just steps up a notch, for no apparent reason. There's no real rhyme or reason to it, but you'll just be running better," Earnhardt said.

"It's sort of like the kid who doesn't write on the doorjamb how tall he is over the years. You don't notice yourself getting taller, but you are. That's what I told him he was going to do. I feel really good now that he's doing that, because it takes a lot of pressure and worry off of me as to what everybody's plans were at DEI and what would happen. I think he's going to be able to provide that company the success it needs to garner the sponsorship and bring in the corporate interest it needs to compete."

Truex's run of success shows all signs of continuing at Michigan, where his No. 1 Chevy topped Friday's opening practice session and has been one of the fastest cars all weekend (Practice 2). His team has progressed from wondering if it can win races, to thinking it can win every weekend. Elliott Sadler crossed that threshold himself in 2001, and vividly remembers what it was like.

"It's the difference between looking at someone and saying, 'I think I can do it,' and saying, 'I know I can do it.' I've done it," said Sadler, who has won twice more since. "That's a big relief, and it's especially a big relief for you and the team that you're with. There's a big difference between going, 'We can do this,' to, 'We did this, and we can do it again.' It's just a big momentum boost. It's big for your confidence, and it makes you feel like you belong in this sport. If you can win in this sport, if you can beat 42 other guys on a given Sunday ... you feel like you've done a good job and you deserve to be here."

Truex has made strides off the track as well. Gilmore recalls the April race at Phoenix, where Truex's advice helped DEI driver Paul Menard figure out the quirky 1-mile track. Before last week's race at Pocono, Menard called Truex and asked about the line he needed to take around the triangular layout. That conversation helped Menard, outside the top 35 in owner points, qualify for the race.

It's all part of the maturing process for a driver who may very well be the face of his franchise at this time next year.

"We still know the things we have to get better on, and we still know the challenges we're going to face," Truex said. "But we've got the confidence now to know that we can meet all those challenges, and we can go out there and win the race if we do things right. It's a good feeling."

The End

Previous12Next
Save Article Email Article Print Article RSS

Also

Most Popular

Remember To Check Out

Online CommunityOnline CommunityJoin the Discussions Now!

Help/Contact Us|Privacy Policy|Terms of Use|About NASCAR|About NASCAR.COM|Jobs|Official Sponsors|Advertising

All External sites will open in a new browser window. NASCAR.COM does not endorse external sites.

© 2008 NASCAR | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Turner Entertainment Digital Network NASCAR.COM is part of the Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network