USA TODAY US Edition

No title, but Gordon exits on top

- Brant James bjames@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports HOMESTEAD, FLA.

There were smiles and there were tears, but there was no storybook ending for Jeff Gordon.

The 44-year-old will retire after 797 races, 93 wins and four championsh­ips. An incredible first-ballot Hall of Fame career. But there will be no fifth championsh­ip as a send-off into the next phase of his career as a broadcaste­r and more frequent attendee of kids’ birthday parties and soccer games.

That last page proved too fantastic to come true even in what was a storybook finish to his career Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

In finishing sixth, Gordon did not leave a champion. But he left with grace.

“I’m a little disappoint­ed; I’ll be honest,” Gordon said when the race ended. “When the sun went down, we were missing a little something ... just didn’t have something. ... It’s a happy, happy, good day. I wanted to win, but we’re still going to celebrate.”

He knew when it was time to go, knew even a few years ago but continued to race and thrived under the urging of friends and relatives and team owner Rick Hendrick.

In displaying a self-awareness rare in ultra-successful athletes, he left on his own terms and awash in respect and praise from fans and peers who surrounded his No. 24 Chevrolet before the race.

This was no John Elway ending, winning a championsh­ip and an MVP award in his final game, as the Denver Broncos quarterbac­k did in winning Super Bowl XXXIII. But this was no Derek Jeter slow fade, not in any way.

Gordon qualified for the Chase for the Sprint Cup on points after not earning a win in the 26-race regular season but advanced through two rounds to force him and Hendrick to dare believe this sort of ending was possible. For those who have been close to Gordon as he rose from California-via-Indiana sprint car dervish to template for modern drivers — NASCAR, IndyCar, the lot — this dash for a final title might have been no surprise. But for the cynical outside world, where fairytale endings are quashed, this should not have happened.

It seemed more destined to happen when Gordon won for the ninth time at Martinsvil­le Speedway in the first race of the third round of this Chase, benefiting from Matt Kenseth’s punt of race-leading Joey Logano to earn an automatic berth in the one-off final here.

But Sunday, reality. And in this case, not a bad reality, despite the initial disappoint­ment.

Jeff Gordon didn’t give his fans one more championsh­ip. But he gave them one more memory and an exit worthy of his career.

 ?? JERRY LAI, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jeff Gordon, left, hugs team owner Rick Hendrick on Sunday after the race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
JERRY LAI, USA TODAY SPORTS Jeff Gordon, left, hugs team owner Rick Hendrick on Sunday after the race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States