Albuquerque Journal

Many successful veteran drivers being kicked to curb

- BY JENNA FRYER

CONCORD, N.C. — Jamie McMurray set a record at Charlotte Motor Speedway by winning his second career Cup Series start. Back for the 16th anniversar­y of that surprise trip to victory lane, McMurray is just another veteran at a career crossroads in NASCAR.

McMurray doesn’t have a job for 2019. Neither does AJ Allmending­er or one-time Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne. Ryan Newman was released from Richard Childress Racing , Kurt Busch won’t be back at StewartHaa­s Racing and reigning series champion Martin Truex Jr. is a free agent because his Furniture Row Racing team is shutting down after the season.

Kasey Kahne and Elliott Sadler are retiring at the end of the season. Casey Mears never got a retirement tour, his job prospects simply dried up and he moved his family to Arizona over the summer.

That’s how it goes these days

in NASCAR. The former “Young Guns” who came in as a youthful wave of new energy early this century are now a bunch of aging greybeards fighting to hang on to their rides.

The youth movement continued Friday when JTG Daughtery Racing opened the weekend at Charlotte by introducin­g 27-year-old Ryan Preece as Allmending­er’s replacemen­t. A few hours later, Richard Childress named Daniel Hemric , another 27-year-old, to Newman’s seat.

Both drivers have navigated a challengin­g ladder system in which competitiv­e opportunit­ies can be few and far between. Some of those “Young Guns” put together careers that have lasted 15 years or more with their earnings well into eight digits. The latest crop has had to wait for seats to open, had to secure their own sponsorshi­p and sometimes drive for free.

That Hemric and Preece were promoted on the same day was not lost on either.

“Everybody says the path or whatnot of how we got here may not have been ideal, but at the end of the day you did whatever you could with what you had,” Hemric said. “And when you hear about things that can’t be done, I think today is a huge step in that direction to show that it can be.”

Hemric said he was hopeful the moves would inspire young racers in this uncertain market to keep going and trust their decisions.

“If you do that, no matter how it shakes out, you’ll lay down at night knowing you gave everything you had. I think that’s what today is all about,” he said.

NASCAR is full of blue-collar kids who have scrapped to get to this level. Preece had a full-time job in the Xfinity Series in 2016 but was never going to win in the cars he was given. So he gave up the seat and took a chance that if he could get just a handful of races in one of Joe Gibbs’ cars, he was certain he could win.

Preece got a four-race deal for 2017 and won in his second start. It led to a few more races with Gibbs this year, another victory, and now a spot in the Cup Series next season. The path was Preece’s shot-in-the-dark at making it big.

“I just knew that I had tried everything to get the opportunit­y that I needed, and it just wasn’t happening,” Preece said. “And it wasn’t because of not being able to win. I’ve won a minimum of 17 races for the past four years. There have been plenty of wins. It’s just I haven’t gotten that opportunit­y.”

As NASCAR’s economics have changed with sponsors more scarce than ever, team owners have been forced to dramatical­ly cut costs and cheaper drivers have become the norm. Hendrick Motorsport­s replaced Jeff Gordon with Chase Elliott, Dale Earnhardt Jr. with Alex Bowman and Kahne with William Byron. At 25, Bowman is the oldest of the trio.

Drivers like McMurray, Mears and Kahne have been the ones left standing without a ride. McMurray has been offered a job by Chip Ganassi to drive the Daytona 500 next season and then move into a leadership role with the team. The offer is presumably to make room for Busch, who has sponsorshi­p in hand but wasn’t retained by SHR.

XFINITY: Chase Briscoe won the first of two big NASCAR races on the new “roval” at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Briscoe grabbed his first career Xfinity Series victory Saturday on the hybrid track of speedway and road course.

Briscoe beat Justin Marks, a part-time NASCAR racer who said this week this race is his last one dabbling in these cars.

Saturday was also a playoff race for NASCAR’s second-tier Xfinity Series but these drivers were really the testers for the big show, today’s Cup race. Four drivers will be eliminated from the playoffs today and it will be in part of the difficulty of the roval, an odd layout causing headaches for the Cup drivers.

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