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BackFor Martin, maybe this is year where it all goes right (cont'd)

But right now, you have to list Martin among those top contenders, even if perhaps he's reticent to do it himself. "You know how I look at it? If we don't win another race this year, we still did good," Martin said after his Michigan victory.

"I'm not going to deal with expectations that cut my legs out from under me again ever in my career. I'm going to go out and drive the race car as hard as I can drive every time I get in it. I'm not going to expect anything other than a tremendous effort by my team and from myself. I'm really pleased that we are having such a great year.

"But the thing that pleases me more than the trophies is just that we've been fast. That's really important," he said. "When you're not fast, there's not a whole lot you can do. But when you are fast, if you keep doing that every week, sooner or later you get great results. So, I just don't feel any pressure. I'd like to see us make the Chase because this race team deserves it, and because you never know. It would be awesome. It would be an honor to be a part of that elite group again. We have got the equipment to do it, and we've just encountered so many setbacks. If we can keep our roll here going, the car's plenty fast. We've just got to avoid more disasters."

Get your All-Star Winner gear!

Setbacks are something Martin has become all too familiar with. The caution flag that never came out after Clint Bowyer flipped onto his roof on the final lap of the 2007 Daytona 500, which he lost to Kevin Harvick by .02 seconds. The 25-point penalty assessed for a left front coil spring in 2002 that hampered his pursuit of Stewart in 2002.

The 46-point penalty for an improper carburetor spacer levied in 1990, which ultimately cost him a title he would lose to Dale Earnhardt by 26 points. The sting of four times finishing second in the championship race.

No wonder Martin prefers to live in the moment, and take these small successes race by race as they come. He's been burned by the big picture too many times.

Even now, the old insecurities occasionally pop up. Martin qualified 32nd for the Michigan race and told car owner Rick Hendrick that if he kept qualifying that poorly, he ought to be fired. "Everybody acts like that's stupid, but it really isn't stupid," Martin said. "I'm serious. If I can't do better than that in the stuff they're giving me, they're going to need to get somebody else."

That seems highly unlikely. Martin is riding a wave unlike any he's been on in a long time, and it's carrying him directly toward one place that's historically been rather painful for him -- the thick of the championship hunt. He got into this two-year stint with Hendrick because he loved driving the race car, not to make some dramatic, final charge at the title that's always eluded him.

And yet he seems destined to do so anyway, as if carried forward by forces beyond his control. Maybe this time, all the breaks and circumstances will go his way. Maybe one Sunday afternoon in the Irish Hills of Michigan was a harbinger of bigger things to come.

Martin, whose own history has taught him to be cautious around such matters, will simply drive and see what happens.

"I'm not going to lay in bed at night and think about what it will be like to lift that trophy. It just doesn't exist, you know, in my brain," he said. "I'll just go out there and race every time. I raced [Sunday]. I raced to win. I didn't tell anybody I was going to win before the race. I didn't expect to win before the race. I knew we had a great car. I went out and drove it.

"We've won some races this year. I don't expect them. I just hope that they come. Same thing with the Chase. I just want to make the Chase. We'll worry about how we do in it after we find out we're in it."

The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.

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