RELATED: Kenseth turns final lapsJunior’s final driver introduction

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — The crew in black and yellow fire suits went methodically about its business, check-listing last details before the beginning of the final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race of the season at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

A few feet away, the crew in the red and black fire suits were performing the same series of tasks, but a throng of onlookers and well-wishers pressed in at every movement.

It was a surreal scene, or rather scenes, both on Sunday and 14 years ago. But in each case, the careers and personas of NASCAR’s most popular driver and his understated friend and contemporary had intersected. In 2003, it was in the garage bays in the hours before Matt Kenseth finished off his first and only championship at NASCAR’s highest level. On Sunday, it was as he and Dale Earnhardt Jr. posed for a series of photographs for friends and family beside their cars staged in Turn 4 as they prepared to undertake their final races before retirement.

Earnhardt Jr. eventually broke from his gathering on Sunday, slinked under a rope and waited through a television interview to speak with Kenseth. He’d been “adamant” Kenseth said, that their cars be parked next to each other for their moments, and was particularly intrigued that they were both using versions of their early career paint schemes for their farewells. They shared a quip and a hug and then prepared to get on with the last vestiges of their careers. In keeping with their divergent personalities — Earnhardt Jr.,compelled to accommodate the scores who wanted to share in the moment with him — and Kenseth joined the field of cars to begin the start of the race, and NASCAR’s 14-time most popular driver slowly drove pit road to exchange handshakes with crewman from other teams waiting near the wall.

GALLERY: Dale Jr. and Matt Kenseth through the years

Earnhardt Jr. and Kenseth have always been different people seeking the same career goals, since they entered first the Busch Series (now XFINITY Series) and then Cup together, and it can be argued that Kenseth accomplished more. Both won the Daytona 500 twice, but Kenseth claimed the 2003 championship and contended for others more frequently than his friend, who finished a career-high second in the same season. Kenseth won 39 career Monster Energy Series races, Earnhardt Jr. 26. When Earnhardt Jr. won consecutive XFINITY titles in 1998 and 1999, Kenseth finished second and third, respectively.

But Earnhardt Jr. always was and always will be the focus. It was his birthright and burden. Understated and wry, Kenseth saw up close the scrutiny and demands on his friend and wanted no part of them. He learned that early. In 2002, the bachelor Earnhardt Jr. hitched a ride with Kenseth and his wife, Katie, driving back from a race at Rockingham, when they cruised into a McDonald’s. Earnhardt Jr. was inundated. Kenseth and Katie walked to the front of the line. Demands came with such fame and Earnhardt Jr. came to accept them as his part of the bargain.

NASCAR legend dictates that Kenseth’s march to his championship for Roush Racing was so banal — after winning one race he entered the finale 226 points ahead of Jimmie Johnson — that it prompted the series to institute the first version of what was then called the “Chase” in 2004. Earnhardt Jr. arrived in third place, 264 behind for Dale Earnhardt Inc. and still gathering momentum as the standard-bearer of the sport and a crossover marketing star just two years after his father and namesake perished on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. In keeping with the Budweiser sponsorship on his red No. 8 Chevrolet, the mood on the edge of his camp that November was festive bordering on hysterical. Such was the reason that security stations theater ropes extended several feet beyond the mouth of his garage bay so crew members could work and push through mobbing fans carrying gear back to their transporter. Kenseth’s crew went about its business unbothered.

WATCH: Thank you, Matt Kenseth — career highlights

Ultimately, their departures from the series were in keeping with the way they conducted their careers, or at least had them dictated to them. Returning this season after missing half of the 2016 season because of a recurrence of concussions, Earnhardt Jr. announced in April that he would discontinue full-time racing at the end of the season. A hashtagged farewell tour ensued, allowing his scores of fans and appreciative admirers to partake in his moment. Kenseth, who will be replaced next season at Joe Gibbs Racing by 21-year-old Erik Jones, refused to accept a lesser job and eventually accepted his career was over.

Earnhardt Jr. chugged a beer as a massive mob surrounded his rubber-clumped car and engaged in a long embrace with team owner Rick Hendrick after exiting the car following a 25th-place finish. Hendrick, whose son, Ricky, died with nine other Hendrick family members or employees in a 2004 plane crash, claimed Earnhardt Jr.’s helmet as a souvenir and slid away from the scene. He’d done the same in 2015 after four-time series champion Jeff Gordon’s last race as a full-time driver at Homestead and wouldn’t be without a token from someone he said he loves “like he’s flesh and blood.”

PHOTOS: Junior’s pit road party and more Miami memories

“I don’t want to get any more helmets,” Hendrick said, becoming emotional. “He and I have such a special relationship. We were talking about it. Now we can go fishing. So, it’s unbelievable to see his driving career come to an end, but he’s excited about the next stage and I am, too, We have a special bond, so we are going to do a lot of fun things together, and that’s a commitment we made this year, early on when he told me he thought it was time. I’ve turned the page now and we’re going to start planning the trip tomorrow morning.”

At the absolute end of pit road, in the quiet, Kenseth sipped on a sports drink and joked with crew chief Jason Ratcliff. It was fitting.

There is the feeling that their paths will cross again, as Earnhardt Jr. remains around the sport as an XFINITY Series team owner and NBC analyst. Kenseth, with three daughters younger than eight and another imminent said his life will become filled with recitals and sports events. In the near-term, he planned to “go up to Wisconsin and be cold.”

“That was fun,” he said of exiting alongside Earnhardt Jr., including taking a group photo with their teams on Friday. “We went for a bike ride when we were in Darlington and I told him this was going to be it, but I never really announced it just because I kind of knew by September, I pretty much had my mind made up the way things were going and kind of knew it then. It’s kind of cool we came into Cup together and now we go out together.”

And in their own ways.

MORE: Full coverage of Dale Jr.’s weekend

RELATED: Full race results | BUY NOW: VIP Tickets

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Before the shadows crept over Turns 1 and 2 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Kevin Harvick had a car capable of challenging fellow title contenders Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski.

In the early stages of Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400, he often had the best car among those eligible for the championship.

But as the sun set, Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford tightened up in the corners. Then a piece of flying debris from David Starr’s Chevrolet shot a hole in his championship hopes.

The debris punched a hole in the nose of Harvick’s car below the right-side headlight decal. Though his crew did an admirable job repairing the damage, the handling of Harvick’s Fusion wasn’t where he needed it to be over the final 34-lap green-flag run.

After a restart on Lap 234 of 267, Harvick harried eventual race winner and Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Truex before falling back to fourth at the finish.

WATCH: Frenetic championship finish

“We just got really loose and then got a hole in the nose and it started to get tight in (into the corner),” said Harvick, who in 2014 became the first driver to win a Cup title under the elimination format. “We got that fixed. We were pretty good on the next-to-last run, and we were just really loose on the last run.

“It was great to have a chance. We were in the mix all day. Didn’t quite have what we needed at the end.”

MORE: Full Miami race results

It was one of those moments that will linger long after the burnout smoke fades. Martin Truex Jr., in tears and a champion, climbing out of his car and engulfing girlfriend Sherry Pollex in a monster hug: The capstone moment of a weekend that will long be remembered as one of the most iconic in this era.

Years from now, Ford Championship Weekend 2017 will be mentioned in the same breath as “1992 Atlanta.” Twenty-five years ago, NASCAR’s season ended with what would become one of its most memorable races. Richard Petty’s final race; Jeff Gordon’s first. Five drivers with a reasonable shot at winning the title, with Alan Kulwicki taking the crown.

RELATED: Truex Jr. wins championship

The similarities are abundant. Truex Jr. is the unheralded upstart-turned-powerhouse, winning his first title in the same race that was likely the last one for his good friend Dale Earnhardt Jr. and fellow veteran Matt Kenseth. Truex Jr. held off perhaps the driver of this generation in Kyle Busch, who stalked him over the final 35 laps but couldn’t quite sneak by.

Prior to Sunday’s race, a shift in the balance of power to the burgeoning young superstars was apparent.

Christopher Bell, 22, won his first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series title on Friday. He did so by outrunning a two-time champion (Matt Crafton) and the defending champ (Johnny Sauter) — with an average combined age of 40 years old.

And get this — Bell actually is older than the NASCAR XFINITY Series champion, William Byron. Byron’s title, at age 19, caps a rookie season in the series that yielded four wins and a performance so strong that he earned a promotion to powerful Hendrick Motorsports in 2018.

Two of the pre-eminent budding superstars in the sport, capturing their first national series titles on back-to-back nights. How many wins will they have over the next several years? How many championships?

Then there’s Truex, who said earlier in the week he was sitting on his porch four years ago, wondering if he’d ever race again. Now, he’s the series champion, winning eight races in 2017 — the last of which came at Miami and capped a championship season. He’s the face of a budding power of an operation in Denver — yes, Colorado — that has many more wins ahead of it.

Truex Jr. and Earnhardt Jr. swapped paint post-race, with Junior driving his No. 88 Chevrolet over for a celebratory high-five. Truex Jr. got his NASCAR shot, of course, when Junior put him in a Dale Earnhardt, Inc. car.

All these years later, Earnhardt Jr. is stepping away as a full-time driver, but his enduring legacy continues. One had to simply look at the championship stage, where Truex Jr. was celebrating, to see that.

RELATED: Full race results | Detailed breakdown 
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HOMESTEAD, Fla. — At the end of a riveting, breathtaking battle that had fans in the grandstands on their feet long after the checkered flag, Martin Truex Jr. held off Kyle Busch by .681 seconds at Homestead-Miami Speedway to win Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 and his first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series title.

In Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s last race in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Truex — one of Earnhardt’s closest friends — kept Busch behind him during a 34-lap green-flag run to the finish.

“It’s just overwhelming,” a tearful Truex said in Victory Lane. “To think about all the rough days and bad days, the days that we couldn’t run 20th, to be here — I never thought this day would come, and to be here is so unbelievable.”

The victory was a timely gift for Furniture Row Racing owner Barney Visser, who is back home in Denver, Colorado, recovering from a heart attack and subsequent bypass surgery. It was also a gift to Truex’s longtime girlfriend Sherry Pollex, who has been battling ovarian cancer.

“A lot of it was for her,” said Truex, who won for the first time at Homestead and the 15th time in his career. “A lot of it was for me. A lot of it was for this team — just, I don’t even know what to say. We just never gave up all day long. We didn’t have the best car. I don’t know how we won that thing. Never give up. Dig deep.”

RELATED: Truex’s Victory Lane interview

The victory also was entirely appropriate. For the bulk of the season, Truex was the top driver in the series. Sunday’s victory was his eighth of the year, a series-best, and his seventh on 1.5-mile intermediate speedways. Truex had the No. 78 Toyota out front for 78 laps on Sunday, bringing his season total of laps led to a career-best 2,253, also tops in the series.

With an excellent long-run car, Busch slipped to fourth after the final restart on Lap 234 of 267 and needed nine laps to pass the stubborn No. 22 Ford of Joey Logano. Seven laps later, Busch slipped past fellow Championship 4 contender Kevin Harvick into second and set his sights on Truex.

Busch closed rapidly, but Truex found a line that allowed him to maintain an edge that shrank to as little as two car lengths. But Busch never could pull alongside his fellow Camry driver, and Truex inched away over the last four circuits.

“I told my guys we were going to dig deeper than we ever have today, and (with) 20 (laps) to go, I thought I was done — they were all better than me on the long run all day long,” Truex said. “I just found a way. I found a lane that I could use, and I found a lane that was blocking enough of their air that they couldn’t use it and just made it happen.

“I can’t believe it. I’ve wanted this since I was a little kid and just never give up. Just never give up on your dreams, no matter what happens and what kind of crap you go through. And thank you, Barney. I wish you were here, buddy.”

Kyle Larson finished third, closely trailing the championship battle after moving past Harvick for third on Lap 252. Harvick came home fourth, after debris from David Starr’s Chevrolet punched a hole in the nose of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford.

“I was just really loose the whole last run,” Harvick said. “When it started to get dark, we started to get tight in the corner, and then we got a hole in the nose. We got that fixed and just couldn’t quite get it where we needed to be to make good times.

“Some runs we fell off. Some runs we were tight on entry. There at the end we were just too loose.”

Chase Elliott and Joey Logano ran fifth and sixth, respectively. Playoff driver Brad Keselowski finished sixth, ending the season fourth in the series standings.

Busch opted for a one-pit-stop strategy during the final stage of the race and appeared headed for the title until his brother, Kurt Busch, spun in Turn 4 on Lap 227 to bring out the fifth and final caution of the event and bunch the field for the restart on Lap 234.

RELATED: Kyle Busch: Thought we were better today

“Yeah, it wasn’t quite what we wanted there at the end,” Busch said. “I thought we had a really great race car. Especially on the long runs, we were really, really good. Just came down to there at the end, not having enough tire when I got to the 78.

“So I just overused my stuff, and I knew I overused my stuff when I was running with the 22 (Logano) trying to get by him and just overworked everything, and got to the 4 (Harvick), got by him pretty quick. I tried to make sure that I could do that pretty quick so then I could have at least a little more tire life, but didn’t seem to pay me off any when I got to the 78.”

Notes: Earnhardt finished 25th in his final run in the No. 88 Chevy. … Danica Patrick cut a tire and clobbered the Turn 2 wall on Lap 142 in her final trip in the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford. She plans to race in the Cup series for the final time in the 2018 Daytona 500. … Patrick also collected Kasey Kahne in her wreck. Kahne ran his final race for Hendrick Motorsports on Sunday and will move to the No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Chevrolet next season. … Truex’s teammate, Erik Jones, was crowned Sunoco Rookie of the Year in the series after finishing 21st. Jones will take Matt Kenseth’s place in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs racing Toyota next season. Kenseth finished eighth Sunday in his final ride in the car. He was found with two unsecured lug nuts during post-race inspection. Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford was also found with one lug nut not safe and secure.

MORE: Dale Jr. delivers helmet to Rick Hendrick

MORE: Truex wins titleMiami race resultsFinal standings
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HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Kyle Busch managed his best sheepish grin Sunday evening when asked to assess his season for the television cameras. His No. 18 Toyota had fallen just short in his pursuit of a second Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship, finishing .681 seconds behind race and title winner Martin Truex Jr.

Taking solace in his season-long performance might come later. Minutes after exiting his Joe Gibbs Racing machine, not so much.

“I guess,” Busch shrugged.

Busch’s runner-up finish in Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 was a heart-wrenching end to his third straight appearance among the Championship 4 in the NASCAR Playoffs. He placed third among the final four last year, one season after his lone premier series title in 2015.

Busch led 43 of the 267 laps, but was unable to close within a bumper’s reach of Truex in the 34-lap green-flag run that closed the season finale. But the race hinged on a late caution period — for his brother Kurt’s spin on Lap 228 — that foiled crew chief Adam Stevens’ alternate pit-stop strategy.

RELATED: See the scenes from Miami | Recap every 2017 race winner

When Truex and other title contenders Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski all pitted on Laps 198-199, Busch stayed on the track in an attempt to complete the race’s final stage with just one pit stop, which he made on Lap 215. 

Had the race continued under green conditions the rest of the way, Stevens said “we were going to win by a large margin,” and that the other title hopefuls would have needed an extra stop. That solid strategy never got the chance to bear fruit after the yellow flag unfurled on Lap 229.

“That’s what happens when you lose in this format, but we gave it everything we had,” Busch said. “We gave it our all. So congratulations to the 78. They deserved it probably on every other race, but today, I thought we were better. Doesn’t matter, though. They were out front when it mattered most.

“Just unfortunate that that caution came out and kind of ruined our race strategy and we weren’t able to get back to where we needed to be, and then I had to fight too hard with some of those other guys trying to get back up through there. That’s racing.”

The prime offender among “those other guys,” he said, was Joey Logano, a driver outside the postseason field who lined up fourth for the final restart but inched ahead and kept Busch at bay for 10 laps. It took Busch another eight laps to dispatch Harvick for second place, but by then only 17 laps remained and his forward progress was hampered.

Logano chalked their contest up to “that’s just racing,” as he left his Team Penske No. 22 hauler for the night, but Busch hinted that more played into their battle for position.

“The 22 was just air-blocking,” Busch said of Logano’s late-race tactics to disturb his aerodynamics. “He was racing me really, really hard. He and I aren’t friends, so that’s what you’d expect from the guys in that situation. He’s just got to remember the back side of that what happens.”

Finding consolation in finishing second — both in the race and the season-long standings — wasn’t a popular emotion in the No. 18 camp post-race, even against the backdrop of a sterling surge to five wins in the second half of the season.

“The season as a whole is just immensely frustrating,” Stevens said. “We had great speed all year. We could’ve won another half-dozen races easy and we didn’t. I’d put this one in that category, too. We had the car to do it, the stops to do it and cautions didn’t fall our way.”

RELATED: Full Junior coverage | Warm welcome from fans in final intro

HOMESTEAD, Fla. – After all the hugs and handshakes, well wishes and heartfelt thank yous, the only thing left for Dale Earnhardt Jr. to do was climb in his No. 88 Chevrolet, fire the engine and begin his final start as a full-time competitor in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway signaled the end of more than just a driver’s career, it signaled the end of an era of sorts as well.

The record will show that Earnhardt finished 25th, two laps down and never quite in contention at the 1.5-mile track in south Florida.

But the disappointment of his final finish with crew chief Greg Ives and crew won’t last, he said. He’ll look back fondly on the day, thanks in part to a big reminder located nearby.

“I’m going to keep the car so I’ll always be reminded about how the race went,” Earnhardt said shortly after sharing a hug with Hendrick Motorsports team owner Rick Hendrick.

“I’ll never forget being with my crew before the race and right now. I’ll never forget shaking all the over-the-wall guys and crewmen’s hands on pit road. That meant a lot to me to be able to shake their hands because I have so much respect for everybody in the garage and the commitment it takes to work in that garage is very difficult.”

RELATED: Junior swaps helmet for car

Crew members from all the teams in Sunday’s field greeted the 43-year-old as he rolled off pit road prior to the start of the race.

No less memorable, he said, was the fact that former teammate and good friend Martin Truex Jr. won the race and the series championship

“I ran into (him) with my car so I would have marks on it and would remind me of Martin,” Earnhardt said of the side-by-side contact on the cool-down lap. “I think I wasn’t the only one that hit him though.”

Earnhardt is stepping aside but is scheduled to compete in select XFINITY Series races next season. He will continue to be a co-owner of JR Motorsports along with sister Kelly Earnhardt Miller and Hendrick, and he will do television work with NBC next season, as well.

He wasn’t one of the Championship 4 contenders – Earnhardt had missed qualifying for the playoffs for the second time in as many years – but in the eyes of many, Sunday’s season-ending race was as much about what he has meant to the sport as it was the battle for the 2017 title.

PHOTOS: Dale Jr.’s weekend

Earnhardt qualified 24th for his final start, and paced the field for one “honorary” pace lap before dropping to the rear for an engine change made by the team on Friday.

An early caution sent him to pit road and he lost much of the track position he had gained but the trade-off was fresh tires and a few adjustments to his car.

But by Lap 56 he was a lap down in 20th; he later brushed the wall, and 130 laps into the 267-lap race found him two laps behind the leader.

The throng surrounding the car once he pulled onto pit road afterward couldn’t have been any bigger had he won the event.

Earnhardt was on social media early on race day, giving his followers something of a “good morning” when he posted via Twitter.

The son of seven-time series champion Dale Earnhardt, the younger racer made his 631st career start Sunday at Homestead. In a Cup career that began in 1999 when he made five starts, Earnhardt won 26 times, including twice in the series’ biggest race, the season-opening Daytona 500.

He is also a two-time champion in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, where he won titles in 1998 and ’99 and 24 races.

There were non-points wins as well for the series’ 14-time most popular driver. He is a two-time winner of the series annual All-Star race at Charlotte Motor Speedway and the annual Bud Shootout held at Daytona. He has five career wins in qualifying races at Daytona (used to set the field for the Daytona 500) as well.

WATCH: Junior takes special lap, gets salute from crews

Moments after taking the stage for what has become an annual wrap-up of the NASCAR season and state of affairs in the sport, NASCAR CEO Brian France singled out Earnhardt for his role on Sunday morning at Homestead.

“He has made an obviously big contribution on and off the track for a long time,” France said. “So while we’re going to miss him for obvious reasons, he is not going to be that far away, being an owner and working with NBC. So he’s going to be glued to the sport, and that’s a good thing for us.”

Fellow drivers and team owners, dignitaries and officials gave him a standing ovation at the conclusion of a video presentation featuring athletes, fellow competitors, actors and numerous others from across the sports and entertainment industry.

As for the car, Earnhardt said it will go “wherever (wife) Amy lets me put it.”

“We’ve got that 2 car coming from Talladega, which still ain’t there yet, dammit,” he said.

As a parting gift from Talladega Superspeedway, officials there and in conjunction with the International Motorsports Hall of Fame arranged for him to obtain the No. 2 Chevrolet Monte Carlo driven by his legendary father in 1979 and ’80.

“She said that (car) is going in the main garage,” Earnhardt said, “and we’ve only got four (garage) stalls. We’ll put this one in there and have to park the good (expletive) outside I guess.”

Fingerprint: Dale Jr.’s mark on NASCAR

RELATED: Race resultsPlayoff standings
MORE: Buy Truex Jr. championship gear

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Martin Truex Jr.’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship run certainly was among the most emotional, feel-good moments in NASCAR history.

The juxtaposition between relief and happiness was unmistakable.

As the 37-year-old driver stood on stage alongside his crew chief Cole Pearn and longtime girlfriend Sherry Pollex, who is battling ovarian cancer, Truex wiped away tears in between public address, television and radio interviews — understandably caught up in the emotional triumph of hoisting his first Cup trophy, and the first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup.

And just behind them on another stage, his Furniture Row Racing team celebrated heartily — their arms in the air, shouting and cheering — so appreciative of the moment. A fan was invited to stand on the corner of the stage alongside the team members to hoist a homemade, blown-up head shot of team owner Barney Visser, who couldn’t travel to the race as he recovered from a heart attack and bypass surgery two weeks ago.

This little team that could … did.

Hailing all the way from humble Denver headquarters in a warehouse located in the industrial corner of the city — a setting far away and far different from NASCAR’s more traditional Southeastern corridor — these team members have operated in the ultimate racing anomaly. Their race shop is completely under the radar, but their accomplishments are regular front-page news.

And now, the result is the most cherished trophy in NASCAR.

“This means the world,” Truex said, emotional in the car as he circled the track to begin his formal celebration.

“I couldn’t even talk,” he said. “I was a wreck thinking about all the tough days, the bad days, the times where I thought my career was over with, the times when I didn’t think anyone believed in me. But the guys who mattered did — my fans, my family and then when I got with this team.

“They are unbelievable and they resurrected my career and made me a champion.”

RELATED: Truex caps off season with title

One of Truex’s best friends, retiring superstar Dale Earnhardt Jr. jumped on the champion’s stage to offer congratulations and snap a selfie in the moment.

“It’s so important to see him win this title,” Earnhardt said, grinning. “We’ve been friends for a long, long time. He’s just such a great guy. I am so proud of him. The sport needs drivers like Martin Truex Jr.

“And everything he’s went through as a driver and beyond that in his personal life, what Sherry has gone through. It’s just great. It’s just fun to watch and they are sort of the outsiders out in Denver beating all us boys in North Carolina. It’s impressive.

“I’m proud of Martin and can’t wait till his life slows down a bit and we can have a cold beer together.”

Visser was told he wasn’t allowed to watch the race Sunday out of caution for his heart health. And while FRR General Manager Joe Garrone texted him updates, there’s a “distinct possibility” — wink, wink — that Visser found a way to watch his team at least take the most important checkered flag in its eight-year history of full time Cup competition.

There was a definitive feel and general opinion among most that if any team deserved to win the championship this year, it was Truex. His title-earning win at Homestead-Miami Speedway was his series-best eighth victory of the year in an effort that included an impressive 19 top-five and 26 top-10 finishes in 36 races. Eight of his top-five finishes were either runner-up or third-place showings.

It was a career year for Truex and a transformational year for his unorthodox team that succeeds as much because of their shared underdog vibe, one that will undoubtedly be harder to pass off going forward now with a huge trophy on the shelf.

“Honestly, it’s just a lot of love on our team,” said Pearn, whose best friend passed away the week Truex won at Watkins Glen International.  “We all believe in each other and believe if you live your lives right, good things will come. We’ve been together a long time and we battle like brothers. All I did the last few laps was think of my friend Jake and his family.

“It’s just unbelievable we’ve been able to do this. I’m still speechless about it. I just hope that what comes out of this are accolades for (what) an unbelievably good driver Martin is.”

Truex’s longtime girlfriend Pollex, who is undergoing chemotherapy right now for a recurrence of cancer, has been a philosophical source of calm and perspective.

“I told him that’s why you never give up, because these guys are so cool,” Pollex said. “That’s been our motto all along, ever since I started my cancer battle. We are never going to give up and we didn’t.”

And there’s a lot of great feelings and a huge trophy to show for it.

WATCH: Pollex on the championship, win

What channel is NASCAR programming on this week? We answer that and provide all the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

RELATED: Watch on the NBC Sports App |  How to find FS1, FS2How to find NBCSN

Monday, Nov. 20
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Tuesday, Nov. 21
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR Scan All 43, NBCSN
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Scan All 43, NBCSN

Wednesday, Nov. 22
3:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceHub, FS1 (re-air)
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of NASCAR Race Hub, Part 1, FS1

Sunday, Nov. 26
2 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of NASCAR Race Hub, Part 1, FS1 (re-air)
3 p.m., Refuse to Lose: Jeff Gordon and the 1997 Daytona 500, FS1

RELATED: Patrick steps away from racing | NASCAR community on Danica

Danica Patrick’s final race as a full-time driver in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series ended early in Miami following a wreck on Lap 142 that brought out the caution, and produced some flames in her No. 10 Ford.

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver drilled the wall in Turn 2, her car previously hampered by a tire rub. This crumpled her Stewart-Haas Racing machine, collecting Kasey Kahne in the incident.

“I hit the wall in (Turns) 3 and 4 and just got a tire rub, blew the right rear; I think it was a right rear,” a disappointed Patrick said. “It’s kind of just the story of the year … I’d start to run better and things would happen. Yeah, that was my fault, it’s my fault I hit the wall. But I asked if it looked OK and they said it looked alright and it blew.”

PHOTOS: Danica over the years

On Friday, Patrick announced the 2017 finale would be her final race as a full-time Monster Energy Series driver. She will run the 2018 Daytona 500 — which is a silver lining, she said.

“What I’m not looking forward to is I have to go sit in my bus and wait for everyone to get done with the race before I can go home,” she said with a laugh. “That sucks, but I think that what’s coming ahead is bright for me and for the way it feels, so I’m excited.”

RELATED: Danica talks after wreckDanica, Ganassi discuss possibilities for 2018

RELATED: Stage 2 results

Kyle Larson continued to run the high line in dominating fashion and won Stage 2 in the Ford EcoBoost 400 Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway. For Larson, it was his second stage win of the day as the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet finished ahead of Championship 4 contenders Martin Truex Jr., Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski.

Danica Patrick’s final race as a full-time driver for Stewart-Haas Racing did not end favorably. An accident in Turn 2 involving Patrick’s No. 10 Ford and Kasey Kahne’s No. 5 Chevrolet brought out a caution on Lap 141. Patrick’s smashed car burst into flames as it came to a stop, but she emerged from the vehicle unharmed.

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Truex Jr. seemed to come to life on the restart, jumping up to second place in the No. 78 Toyota. Earlier in the stage, Truex had a slow pit stop when a lug nut got caught up, and he dropped to the back of the pack among the Championship 4 drivers.

Harvick, who finished third, had a strong run and battled Larson early in the stage. That set up an intriguing clash of philosophies at the front with Larson, who preferred the high line, and Harvick, who told NBC Sports he’d stay off the high line early in the race and delivered on that promise.

Busch, who finished fourth, almost missed the entry to pit road with 39 laps left in the stage. Smoke flew from the tires of the No. 18 Toyota as it slid in Turn 4 before darting just inside the commitment line and onto pit road. Busch moved past Keselowski late in the stage, putting the No. 2 Ford at the back of the pack as the race entered the final and deciding stage.

Note: Championship 4 drivers are not awarded stage points in the season finale, but can get credited for stage wins.

Finish Driver Team Race points
1. Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing 10
2. Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Racing
3. Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing
4. Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing
5. Brad Keselowski Team Penske
6. Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Racing 5
7. Matt Kenseth Joe Gibbs Racing 4
8. Joey Logano Team Penske 3
9. Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports 2
10. Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing 1

RELATED: Stage 1 results

Kyle Larson took the lead from Martin Truex Jr. on Lap 13 and did not let go the rest of the way, winning Stage 1 in the Ford EcoBoost 400 Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Brad Keselowski finished second with fellow Championship 4 drivers Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. rounding out the top five.

Keselowski was the only Championship 4 driver to pit after a caution on Lap 4 when Joey Gase’s No. 83 Toyota got into the wall in Turn 1. Keselowski was dealing with an ill-handling No. 2 Ford and restarted 13th after the pit stop. The strategy worked as he moved up to third place within two laps on the fresh tires and stayed competitive throughout the stage.

Conversely, Kyle Busch restarted third and dropped back to 13th while reporting an ill-handling car. Busch moved up to 11th place before coming to pit road on Lap 39 with the rest of the Championship 4 contenders. Busch reported a vibration in the No. 18 Toyota following the pit stop but decided to stay out. Busch managed to methodically move up into the top three.

Truex Jr. grabbed the lead early from Denny Hamlin and led the first 12 laps. But after falling behind Larson, Truex reported concerns with the brakes on the No. 78 Toyota. Then, with 25 laps to go in the stage, Kevin Harvick engaged Truex in a battle for third place, with Harvick eventually taking the spot. Then, Busch passed Truex with eight laps to go.

Finish Driver Team Race points
1.  Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing 10
2.  Brad Keselowski Team Penske
3.  Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing
4.  Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing
5.  Martin Truex Jr.  Furniture Row Racing
6.  Chase Elliott  Hendrick Motorsports 5
7.  Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Racing 4
8.  Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing 3
9.  Joey Logano Team Penske 2
10.  Clint Bowyer Stewart-Haas Racing 1