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Bowyer: 2020 not ideal year to retire, but he’s ready to join the booth

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — If Clint Bowyer could have scripted his sendoff, it most certainly would have been a proper blowout f or NASCAR’s best partier.

Bowyer would have had fans and friends and celebrated every week all along the NASCAR circuit if he’d had his way. He certainly would not have chosen this year as his last, this season of often no spectators in the stands, no raucous revelers roaming the infield.

Bowyer is one of many people caught in the circumstan­ces of the pandemic and pushed to make career-deciding decisions. Hang around for another season driving race cars, or make a jump to the television booth.

He didn’t want 2020 to be his last season, but the offer to join Fox Sports made for an easy split for Bowyer and Stewart-Haas Racing.

“I think you always, everybody in life, wants to just get by with one more year. One more year, one more lap,” Bowyer said. “It’s 2020, right? Is it the perfect

time to do all of this? I don’t think 2020 is the perfect time for anything.

“This opportunit­y came up. It was an opportunit­y of a lifetime, an opportunit­y to stay a part of this sport for many years to come.”

Bowyer could have pushed for a return to the No. 14 Ford next season if enough sponsors agreed to support another year. But SHR really needed Bowyer to free his seat so the team could give Chase Briscoe a much-earned promotion from the Xfinity Series.

The offer from Fox Sports, where Bowyer had been moonlighti­ng as a guest analyst, ended any other scenarios.

“Were we working on what’s next as far as being in a race car? Absolutely,” Bowyer said. “Once that (Fox) opportunit­y came to the table, it was pretty clear that that’s what I needed.”

After 15 full seasons at NASCAR’s top level, Bow

yer will get out of the car in four weeks. Bowyer will leave the sport a winner for Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota, a former Xfinity Series champion — a kid from Kansas who made it to the big leagues.

He announced his plans last week with enough time to prepare for a sendoff Sunday at Kansas Speedway. He grew up in Emporia, just over an hour away from the speedway, and he was a fan drinking beer atop an infield motorhome when Jeff Gordon won the first Cup race at Kansas in 2001.

Bowyer spent two months working with Gordon during the pandemic as an analyst/participan­t in the iRacing broadcast coverage. Next year they will be full-time teammates in the television booth.

“I was getting ready. I was getting close to being ready,“Bowyer said of retirement. “Was I ready after this pandemic and this COVID year of no fans and a weird way to go out? No.

“But was I looking for that ‘what’s next’ moment or opportunit­y? That answer is absolutely yes. This

pandemic led to that opportunit­y to get in the studio.”

Fox Sports used just Mike Joy and Gordon in a two-person booth this year following Darrell Waltrip’s retirement. The list of probable talent was deep and ranged from retiring crew chief Chad Knaus to current title contender Kevin Harvick, who has proved to be an outstandin­g guest analyst.

The pandemic gave Bowyer weekly studio time, and his large and loud personalit­y was full-throttle during the virtual racing telecasts. He’s good-natured and gregarious, a version of Waltrip with the huckster, fan-appreciate­d style.

Like Waltrip did for nearly two decades, Bowyer can look to a long future in NASCAR’s spotlight.

“I love being a part of this sport,” he said. “If this opportunit­y with Fox didn’t come to the table, I was going to be in a car somewhere somehow. I wasn’t going to just quit and run off into the sunset because I like this sport and I wanted to find my way and a future within it.”

 ?? JARED C. TILTON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Clint Bowyer, who drives the No. 14 Ford, recently was eliminated from NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip contention. Sunday will mark his final race at his home track, Kansas Speedway, and a broadcasti­ng career isn’t far behind.
JARED C. TILTON/GETTY IMAGES Clint Bowyer, who drives the No. 14 Ford, recently was eliminated from NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip contention. Sunday will mark his final race at his home track, Kansas Speedway, and a broadcasti­ng career isn’t far behind.
 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Back on July 23, the last previous race in Kansas City, Kansas, the Cup Series was in the regular season. Sunday, only eight drivers are left to contend for the season title.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Back on July 23, the last previous race in Kansas City, Kansas, the Cup Series was in the regular season. Sunday, only eight drivers are left to contend for the season title.

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