The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Truex honored as NASCAR champion

Overcame plenty of obstacles to be crowned as king of NASCAR

- By Jenna Fryer

It was fitting for Martin Truex Jr. to be introduced as NASCAR’s newest champion by his buddy Dale Earnhardt Jr.

It was Earnhardt who helped Truex venture out of New Jersey to give it a go in NASCAR. Now, nearly 15 years later, Truex was on racing’s biggest stage.

As much as this final week of celebratio­n tilted toward Earnhardt, NASCAR’s retiring superstar, he made sure to turn the spotlight on his “good buddy” Truex during Thursday night’s Las Vegas celebratio­n.

It ensured Truex, a journeyman driver who has battled more than his share of adversity on and off the track, got his proper due.

“To me and many who know him, he’s a champion in so many ways,” Earnhardt said in his introducti­on. “Like when his profession­al career turned challengin­g, his options limited, he blamed no one. He kept his head high, he persevered because he’s a champion person. While the love of his life battles the most evil of diseases and he stands with her to make her fight his fight, he’s a champion partner. When he’s away from the track, perhaps enjoying his true passion for hunting or fishing, you realize this, he’s a champion friend. He’s the man. The champion in so many ways and no one more deserving of this night.”

Truex was wiping away tears before he reached Earnhardt and the Monster Energy Cup trophy.

His story has been welldocume­nted. Despite winning two second-tier titles while driving for Earnhardt, Truex’s Cup career hit bump after bump because of a changing economy and a cheating scandal in which he played no part butt nearly cost him his career.

When Michael Waltrip Racing manipulate­d the finish of a 2013 race at Richmond to try to get Truex into the playoffs, it set in motion a chain of decisions that first cost Truex his job and ultimately put MWR out of business. He had just one option: Denverbase­d Furniture Row Racing, an oddity in NASCAR. The Barney Visser-owned team was small, based in Colorado, and had only that season turned a small corner toward progress.

Truex took the job, the team struggled, everyone was frustrated. And in September of his first season with his new team, Truex’s partner, Sherry Pollex, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer.

The couple were public with the struggle during Pollex’s battle, and again this season as she has suffered a recurrence. Truex was honored this week by the NASCAR community, and the couple received the prestigiou­s Myers Brothers Award for their charitable efforts. On Monday, Pollex has chemothera­py scheduled.

“The 78 race team has carried the same motto throughout the race season, ‘Never Give Up,”’ Truex said in his speech. “No one has lived that out more than my life partner Sherry. She’s still fighting her disease with a tenacity and a ‘Never Give Up’ attitude that has inspired millions of people to do the same. She is the true champion.”

It created a feel-good moment that captured the essence of Furniture Row’s victory. The accomplish­ment was popular throughout the garage because no one believed a Colorado outlier could build a championsh­ip-winning team, and because Truex and Pollex are such a well-respected couple in the NASCAR community.

Visser couldn’t attend his crowning moments. He’s been recuperati­ng in Colorado since early November after a heart attack and surgery. He missed the final two races of the season, including Truex’s series-best and championsh­ip-clinching victory in the finale, and this week’s Las Vegas celebratio­n.

 ?? ISAAC BREKKEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Martin Truex Jr., right, and Sherry Pollex arrive at the NASCAR Cup Series auto racing awards Thursday in Las Vegas.
ISAAC BREKKEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Martin Truex Jr., right, and Sherry Pollex arrive at the NASCAR Cup Series auto racing awards Thursday in Las Vegas.

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