|
The speaker phone sat on
the table in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel conference room.
Above it hung a banner with the face of the Winston
Cup's third-place finisher in points and his 1999
accomplishments. During a 90-minute news conference
with the top 10 drivers of the season, reporters stopped
by to chat with the missing driver. On the other end of
the phone line was the familiar voice of Mark.
One night later, Mark was
again absent, this time for the Winston Cup Series
awards banquet. Instead, Mark relayed his thoughts on
the 1999 season via a videotaped acceptance speech.
For a driver who finished in the top 10 every season in
the 1990s, it was odd not to see Mark sitting at one
of the tables, to say the least. But Mark had a good
excuse, and a note from his doctor. Mark was recovering
from back surgery performed just a day after the end of
the season. And while he may have been a "no show" for
the festivities in New York City, he never failed to
show up on race day.
|
| In a season full of pain, Mark could be excused for not making the trip north to pick up his third-place check and congratulations from his peers. And at least his back woes, brought on by years of trading paint, was something he'd grown accustomed to blocking out in the driver's seat over the years. |
What made 1999 so
miserable were the debilitating injuries suffered in a
July practice crash at Daytona. During "Happy Hour" for
the Pepsi 400, Mark cut a tire and hit the wall --
fracturing his tibial plateau (knee), wrist and ribs.
Despite having to be lifted in and out of his Ford Taurus and
surgery on his knee, Mark never missed a lap over the final
4½ months. Looking back, Mark won't
say the injuries kept him from seriously challenging
for that elusive Winston Cup. But it's impossible to
discount the pain Mark endured each week. For a driver
who won twice, claimed 19 top-5s and 26 top-10 finishes,
"what if" has to come into the equation. Right?
|
| Wrong, says Mark. "I'm happy that I was a contender. I'm happy that I was able to recover from the problems that I had to still compete for the Winston Cup championship," said Mark. "I felt like our performance throughout those injuries were on par. I don't feel like they cost us anything other than a lot of pain." |
Mark's recovery will keep
him out of his car through the winter. But, while he
won't be ready for winter testing, (Greg Biffle will
test his new 2000 Ford Taurus during his recovery) Mark
expects to be in his No. 6 for the Daytona 500. By the
way, Mark is approaching Dale Earnhardt and Darrell
Waltrip numbers at Daytona. He enters the 21st Century
with an oh-for-18 skid in the season opener.
"I don't have any idea how
we are going to run at Daytona, until we get to testing
for Daytona," Mark said. "Daytona is just one race.
We'll either go down there and run superior, or junk, or
somewhere in between. We'll do everything we can to be
superior, but all we can do is all we can do. "I expect
to drive 100 percent (by Daytona). I don't know about
the rest."
Driving without discomfort
will be a pleasant change for Mark. But if anything, the
team performed despite his injuries encouraged Mark. And
as the 2000 season approaches, Mark has a renewed faith
in his team and vice versa. After the crash, Mark knows
it would have been easy for members to slack off and
write the season off to bad luck. But Mark says,
"Nobody quit on me."
|
| "The exciting part of the race team is that when I was seriously injured, to the point where it was questionable if I could drive 100 percent, there wasn't anybody on that race team that ever doubted for a second that I could not get the job done for them. They supported me 100 percent," Mark said. "This is a race team that is behind me 100 percent and I don't have to ever worry about ever turning my back, walking away, and any of them having anything negative to say. And that's very hard to find in this business. |
|
What About 2000? "I'd like to win the Cup, but my career is not going to be a failure if I don't -- and it won't be a success if I do. It's going to be what it is. "So I have, in my opinion, one of the greatest race teams of all times." |
Mark also has some
unfinished business. While he won't say it, 1999 was
something of a wasted season. Sure, he finished third in
points, but he was coming off a '98 season (eight wins,
22 top-5s, 26 top-10s) that should have propelled him to
that elusive first championship. He can only hope that
his health holds up and allows him to regain his '98 form.
Mark has long been considered the "Best Driver without a
Winston Cup." His fans long for the day he joins Dale Jarrett
as a driver who deserved a title and finally got one.
But like any great athlete who has yet tasted a championship,
Mark doesn't allow his career to be defined by a trophy.
|
| "I don't feel like winning that (Winston Cup) will change the fact whether or not I had a successful career in auto racing," Mark said. "I'd like to win the Cup, but my career is not going to be a failure if I don't -- and it won't be a success if I do. It's going to be what it is. "I'm real proud of what I've done -- if I don't ever win another race. And if I win a championship, all that's going to do is put a trophy on the wall and give me a title. It won't change the person that I am, or make me any more fierce a competitor. It'll just give me a title. "It's a title that I would like to have and one that I race for, but in the end it won't change who or what I am." |
|
1999 - What Went Right? It ended? Seriously, a day after the end of the season Mark was on the opperating table having surgery on his back. Mark, however, didn't let a painful back, or broken bones suffered in a July crash at Daytona, derail a challenge for the championship. He won early and then late in the season and even earned a chance to defend his '99 Bud Pole Shootout win at Daytona by grabbing the pole at Rockingham in October. |
|
1999 - What Went Wrong? The crash at Daytona during "Happy Hour" for the Pepsi 400 broke bones in his knee and wrist, along with a couple of ribs. It was painful just to watch Mark walk from the garage to his car, which he needed to be lifted into over the second half of the season. |
| BACK |