The Columbus Dispatch

Truex quietly chases 2nd NASCAR Cup title

- Dan Gelston

PHOENIX – Martin Truex Jr. stood on pit road moments after his first victory at Phoenix over a Cup career stretching nearly 20 years and quickly put a target on a more meaningful race at the track.

“I wish it was November,” Truex said. “Hopefully, we can come back in November and have a shot at the championsh­ip.”

Eight months later, Truex is back in the desert and, just as the Joe Gibbs Racing driver hoped, does indeed have a shot at the NASCAR Cup Series championsh­ip.

Truex didn’t quite call his shot and guarantee his spot in the field, but the 2017 champion had good reason to feel like he’d back among the four drivers racing for the title Sunday at Phoenix Raceway. This is the fifth time since 2015 that Truex races with the championsh­ip at stake and, with two previous runner-up finishes, he has as good a shot as any of the other three drivers to win it all.

Always a threat on the track, Truex is the most unassuming championsh­ip contender in Cup.

Denny Hamlin is fueled by raw emotion from dust-ups with other drivers and, like his fellow 23XI owner Michael Jordan, finding any slight to use as motivation. Kyle Larson’s return from suspension for a racial slur into the driver to beat has been the story of the season. With a second straight title in sight, Chase Elliott attends World Series games and screamed himself hoarse rooting for the Atlanta Braves.

And Truex? About the only time a light shines on Truex outside of racing is when he walks the runway to raise money for charity.

“Luckily, I haven’t been in any confrontat­ions lately,” Truex said Thursday. “It’s always good to not have enemies when it comes to a race like this.”

A year after his worst season since he blossomed into a perennial contender, Truex quietly went about his business and won four races. The 41-year-old New Jersey native prefers fishing and hunting in his down time rather than creating off-track headlines. Hamlin and Larson had the bulk of the media attention

when the four drivers simultaneo­usly spoke ahead of this weekend’s finale. Spending time in the championsh­ip spotlight, though, sure beats the alternativ­e – not racing for the title at all. Truex’s four wins marked the fifth time since 2016 he’s reached that total, including in 2017 when he won a careerbest eight times. But last season, Truex stumbled in the first season he was paired with crew chief James Small. He had only one win driving the No. 19 Toyota and finished seventh in the points standings last season.

The first real sign he was on the rebound came in March when he blew past Joey Logano on the final restart and pulled away to win for the first time in 31 career races at the mile track.

“That the was best car I ever had here my whole career,” he said. “The car felt really good and did a lot of good things. If we can make that happen again, and hopefully have even more speed, we’re going to be tough to handle.”

Truex won the second playoff race at Richmond and drove a battered car last week at Martinsvil­le into the fourth and final slot in the playoff field. While his win in the spring gave his repeat bid a boost, Truex has traditiona­lly struggled at Phoenix and has only five top-fives with four DNFS in his career.

Truex, who signed a contract extension before the Daytona 500, had three career Cup Series wins in his first 10 full seasons before his career took off in 2016 at now-defunct Furniture Row Racing. He has 28 of his 31 career wins since 2016 and is a perennial championsh­ip contender. Truex raced with FRR for the title in three of the last four seasons – he won in 2017 and was runnerup to Logano in 2018. He finished second again in 2019 in his first season with JGR.

Truex held the lead in 2018 with 12 laps to go when the championsh­ip race was at Homestead-miami before Logano caught him down the stretch and his

2019 bid was marred by a tire mix-up in the pits that cost him his shot at catching Kyle Busch. The 312-mile race on Sunday means time is short to try and overcome late problems that may arise.

“The last two we’ve been in, we’ve finished second and probably had the best car,” Truex said.

JGR teammate Hamlin has two wins and time is running short for the veteran to win his first Cup championsh­ip. Larson has nine wins driving for Hendrick Motorsport­s and teammate Elliott has two.

“I feel like the best four teams are in the final four,” Larson said.

With a win, Truex would join Kyle Busch as the only active drivers with two championsh­ips.

“We know we have a great shot at it. But we don’t have the weight of the world on our shoulders,” Truex said. “We’ve done this before. We’ve been here before. We understand what it takes.”

 ?? NELL REDMOND/AP ?? NASCAR Cup Series driver Martin Truex Jr. walks to his car before a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., in May.
NELL REDMOND/AP NASCAR Cup Series driver Martin Truex Jr. walks to his car before a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., in May.

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