Waterloo Region Record

Truex has come a long, long way in four years

- Jenna Fryer

CONCORD, N.C. — As Martin Truex Jr. leads lap after lap, week after week, in this season of rare dominance, it is easy to forget that he was once a journeyman driver in fear of losing his job in NASCAR. That was just four years ago. Truex was an unwitting participan­t in one of the biggest cheating scandals in NASCAR history. His Michael Waltrip Racing team deliberate­ly caused a caution that set in motion Truex winning a race that would have put him in the playoffs. As the deception unraveled, Truex was kicked out of the playoffs and MWR received crippling sanctions. Truex’s team was shut down by the end of the year, one-third of the MWR organizati­on was laid off and the team was out of business two years later.

“When all that first happened, I didn’t know if I’d ever be able to race in the series again competitiv­ely,” Truex said.

Look at him now, fresh off a series-best sixth win of the season and the unquestion­ed favourite to win the Cup title next month. His victory Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway was the second out of four playoff races, and it automatica­lly earned him a slot in the next round.

Truex leads the series in victories, topfive finishes, top-10s, laps led, stages won and playoff points. Not a race goes by in which Truex can’t figure out a way to get his No. 78 Toyota to the front of the field.

By his estimation, had cautions not fallen the way they did or had luck been on his side, Truex believes he should have at least 10 victories this season.

That’s hardly what anyone envisioned for him as MWR fell apart and Truex, who had nothing to do with the scandal, found himself out of a job.

He was lucky that Furniture Row Racing had an opening. The one-car team based in Denver had made significan­t progress with driver Kurt Busch, and team owner Barney Visser wanted to continue that upward trajectory after Busch moved on.

Truex, a two-time Xfinity Series champion who had never found the same success at the Cup level, was the best of the available drivers. Furniture Row, what little anyone knew about the organizati­on, was the best of the open seats.

“I felt like it was a good opportunit­y at the time,” Truex said. “It was not a consistent winner at the time, but it was a good opportunit­y and I didn’t feel like I was taking a step backwards, so that was good. That felt OK to me.”

He led just one lap all of 2014, he had just one top-five finish and was 24th in the points. At the end of the year, crew chief Todd Berrier said he wanted to go back home to North Carolina, where nearly every other top NASCAR team is based.

Visser remained committed, though, backing the car out of his own pocket and rubber stamping anything that could help his team grow.

“It was a struggle for a while, for sure, but I think the commitment from Barney and the family feel and the drive to want to be better and be a player in this sport is really what caught my attention in 2014 when we were struggling,” Truex said.

Moving Cole Pearn to crew chief and switching to Toyota in an alliance with Joe Gibbs Racing has made all the difference. Truex made the championsh­ip race the next year and was a favourite for the title last year but was eliminated from the playoffs in the second round.

 ?? DAVID T. FOSTER III, TNS ?? Martin Truex Jr. gets out of he is car at the finish line to claim the checkered flag after winning the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., Sunday.
DAVID T. FOSTER III, TNS Martin Truex Jr. gets out of he is car at the finish line to claim the checkered flag after winning the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., Sunday.

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