|
|
Presented with an opportunity to make one last run at a
title with storied Hendrick Motorsports - a full-time 36-race commitment - Mark told his wife
he couldn't risk passing it up and regretting it the rest of his life.
"It just was an opportunity that I absolutely could not, I just couldn't let it go by,"
Mark said. "I told Arlene when we talked about this that I'm pretty sure the last breath I
took on my death bed would be, 'I should have drove Rick's car when I had the chance.'
"I didn't want to do that. I didn't want to regret that until the last breath I took."
Mark announced a two-year deal Friday to replace Casey Mears in Hendrick's No. 5 Chevrolet.
Next season will be a full schedule, and he'll scale back down to a split ride in 2010. Rick
Hendrick said the team could use either Brad Keselowski or Landon Cassill, who both currently
drive in the Nationwide Series.
But in stepping into Hendrick's elite program - the program has won 11 championships in
NASCAR's top three divisions since 1984 - Mark gets a bona fide chance to win the title that
has escaped him the past 26 years. Mark will join two-time defending Cup champion Jimmie
Johnson, four-time series champion Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the most stout
lineup in the series.
"It's a legitimate shot at a championships. He's finished second four times and I'd love to
see him have an opportunity to get one," Hendrick said. "That's what Junior wants to do,
Jimmy wants to do, Jeff wants to do. If you've got four legitimate shots at it, hopefully
one of them can get it."
Mark's shot has famously eluded him during his remarkable career. One of the most respected
drivers in the garage, he was a perennial title contender until he scaled back his schedule
after the 2006 season.
Mark has won 32 times in 710 career races starting in 1981 and finished second in the
standings an agonizing four times, including his runner-up finish to Tony Stewart in 2002.
Stewart, a two-time series champion, thinks the 49-year-old Mark can be a factor in the title
race at any age.
"I think eight or 10 years from now he will still be able to win championships. He's just that
competitive," Stewart said. "You look at how good of shape he's in and how good of a job he
does at taking care of himself. He's a guy that could go as long as he really has the
desire to go.
"You're never going to lose that talent and that ability, and as long as he stays healthy like
he's been doing, he realistically could do this for another eight or 10 years if he really
wanted to."
A fitness freak, Mark said he's in the best shape of his career, and his health played a part in
his decision.
"I feel five years younger than I did when I stepped out in 2006 after being so tired and
frustrated," Mark said. "There's no chance I would have (raced full-time) in 2006. The two
years I spent on this limited schedule ... gave me a chance to catch my breath and spend quality
time with my family and sort of reflect on what's important and what I want to do."
He considered retiring at the end of the 2005 season, but was coaxed back for one final season
with Roush Fenway Racing. He finished ninth in the standings that year.
Mark then devised a partial schedule plan with now-defunct Ginn Racing, and nearly won the Daytona
500 in their first race together - he was nipped at the finish line by Kevin Harvick. But it set
the stage for a strong start to the season that had Mark leading the points and the entire
industry wondering if he'd really step out of the car.
He did, sticking to his decision to run just 24 races last season and forfeiting the chance to win
the championship. His contract was sold to Dale Earnhardt Inc. when Ginn walked away from NASCAR
midway through last season, and Mark is splitting his seat there with Aric Almirola this year.
He knows this return has drawn comparisons to NFL quarterback Brett Favre, who is reportedly
reconsidering his offseason decision to retire. Although he knows very little about football,
former teammate and Green Bay Packers fan Matt Kenseth has told him about Favre, and Mark
understands the inability to walk away from something you love when the performance level
is still strong.
"I make no apologies for not knowing exactly what my whole life holds for me," Mark said.
"When you're pretty good at something and it's been the focus of your life and the driving
force of your life for 35 years and you're still pretty good at it, you probably don't want
to quit it until, for me, I'm not pretty good at it.
"Beyond my love for family, I don't really have anything else with that kind of passion I have
for racing. I thought at the end of 2006 that I was fine with couch time the rest of my
life. But that was because I was in a frustrated fog of emotion of being worn out.
"So if I can drive something that gives me a chance to win and I can still do it, then I
probably still want to do it. And I have told you guys that if it was all or nothing, I
would choose nothing. And I have said that. Well, I may have changed my mind - again. I was
given a chance of nothing or all in the 5 car, I chose the 5 car."
|