Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Truex glad victory no longer ‘tainted’

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LOUDON, N.H. — Martin Truex Jr. felt a bit uneasy as he settled into a seat in the NASCAR hauler where officials summon drivers accused of rules infraction­s, bruised from fistfights or found guilty of general poor decorum.

“Anyone feel like they’re in trouble for being here?” he asked.

The setting was a bit unfamiliar for one of NASCAR’s more popular drivers around the garage, but he was here for a chat, not because he was in trouble. With a smile, Truex insisted he’s been a stock car model citizen through 396 career races where not one has ended with him being called to the sport’s version of the principal’s office.

“It’s a good record,” he said, laughing.

But Truex — or at least his teams through the years — have been unable to completely steer clear of NASCAR violations. Truex’s victory Sunday at Chicagolan­d Speedway in the Chase opener came under scrutiny when the No. 78 Toyota failed the post-race laser inspection. His car was tagged with infraction­s that should have drawn a 10-point penalty. Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 Chevrolet failed the same inspection and was subject to the same penalty — until NASCAR decided not to punish the drivers.

Free from any penalty, Truex said he hoped he could escape the accusation the Furniture Row Racing team had cheated its way to victory lane.

“You don’t want people to think you’re winning races by what they call ‘cheating,’ ” he said Friday. “You have people on social media and they get upset about it. It was such a little thing. It so easily could have went the other way. It’s frustratin­g that it kind of taints your win a little bit.”

Truex would have kept his victory and advanced to the second round of the Chase for the Sprint Cup championsh­ip even if NASCAR decided to levy a points fine. NASCAR did make one change for Sunday’s race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway — all 16 Chase cars will go through laser inspection after only nine were picked after the Chase opener. The laser inspection station takes a precise look — down to about 1/1000th of an

inch — to find any potential violation.

Carl Edwards, a fellow Chase driver, backed NASCAR’s decision to reverse course on a points penalty for the drivers.

“They police this sport the way that we have asked them to police it,” he said.

Still, the first Chase race was marred by inspection talk instead of who’s hot/who’s not as NASCAR’s version of the playoffs heats up.

“Going forward, I think everybody realizes we don’t need to be talking about that after a great race,” Truex said. “I just feel like it puts a black eye on the sport and on the teams.”

Truex knows about as well as any driver the nasty effects of the fallout that comes from a cheating scandal. He was booted from the Chase in 2013 and lost his ride at Michael Waltrip Racing when the team tried to manipulate the outcome of a race.

What was his profession­al rock bottom turned into the ride of a lifetime when he landed with the single-car team at Furniture Row. Truex was one of four drivers to race for the championsh­ip last season and he has four victories over the last two seasons after winning just twice in almost a decade with other teams.

Buoyed by FRR’s affiliatio­n with Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota, Truex has again stamped himself a championsh­ip contender.

“We get everything that Gibbs gets,” Truex said. “At MWR, we got the same [informatio­n] from Toyota that Gibbs got, but we got nothing from Gibbs at all. It was two separate teams.”

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