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There was the 46-point penalty that cost
him the championship in 1990, and the 89-point penalty that effectively
took him out of the title hunt 12 years later. But all the heartache
of Mark's star-crossed career was crystallized Sunday, when the Daytona
500 he never should have been in somehow got away.
It was the ultimate twist of the knife, a swallowed yellow flag as cars
crashed and tumbled and burned on the final lap at Daytona International
Speedway, a delay that allowed Kevin Harvick to slip by on the high
side and win the sport's biggest race.
Forget all those warnings against racing back to the flag. Forget
freezing the field. Instead, 185,000 people witnessed a judgment call
that will be debated among race fans for years.
And the odd man out, as usual, was Mark, who was supposed to have raced
at Daytona for the final time last year and slipped into semi-retirement
with an 0-for-43 record at NASCAR's most famous track. But then he
signed a part-time deal with new team owner Bobby Ginn, and then he
returned to a speedway he seemed so relieved to walk away from, and
then he found himself in the lead with one lap to go.
It was only a setup to a cruel finish.
Mark swerved his No. 01 car left and right to block the advances of
Kyle Busch. But he couldn't stop Harvick, flying by in the outside lane,
and pulling almost nose-to-nose as cars behind them began to wiggle
and slide. Everyone braced for a caution flag that never came, and
Harvick had the few feet he needed to glide by and win by inches.
Officially, the race ended under green. A series spokesman said the
caution flag didn't come out until the No. 07 car of Clint Bowyer began
rolling up the racetrack, a burning husk of a Chevrolet that eventually
came to rest in the infield grass. By that time, Harvick was on his way
to Victory Lane. And NASCAR's nebulous system of justice had denied
Mark once again.
"That's at NASCAR's discretion, to decide when they want to end the
race. They kept it going for certainly longer than they could have for
the best result for Mark," said Jack Roush, Mark's former car owner.
"But they wanted to see it go as long as it could, and I think throwing
the caution wouldn't have affected the number of cars that would have
been wrecked or what happened in the end. So I can see NASCAR's position.
But there was a dynamic in regard to what took place, and Mark was the
loser again."
He had every right to complain. He had every right to climb out of his
U.S. Army car, slam the roof, and scream about how NASCAR had done it
to him again. Instead he showed the same class and humility he's shown
in the face of so many similar situations over the course of his
otherwise illustrious career.
Like the NASCAR penalty assessed to his No. 6 Roush car for an illegal
but non-performance-enhancing carburetor spacer in 1990, which cost him
46 points in a championship race he would lose by 26 to Dale Earnhardt.
Or the penalty for a too-wide spring coil that cost him 25 points in
his pursuit of eventual champion Tony Stewart in 2002. Sunday, he blamed
the fact that he didn't have anyone pushing him. He blamed himself for
not getting the job done.
But he didn't blame NASCAR officials. Over the semi-privacy of team
radio, immediately after crossing the finish line, he sounded astonished
that a caution had not frozen the field. "I can't believe they waited,"
he told his team. But later, despite given every opportunity, he
steadfastly refused to point a finger at race control.
"Nobody wants to hear a grown man cry," Mark said, a steely edge in his
voice. "That's what it is, and I'm not going to cry about it. This is
what it is, and that's it. That's the end. They made the decision, and
that's what we're going to live with."
It's yet another chapter in the story of NASCAR's tragic hero, a driver
unfortunately defined more by what he hasn't won that what he has.
Somehow, that makes him more endearing than if he had 10 Nextel Cups
in his trophy case. Somehow, near misses like Sunday and the way he
reacts to them make Mark seem more human.
"That's what I love about this sport. It's hard," he said. "It's driven
me for almost 30 years. That's why I was here today. I had the choice
whether or not to race the Daytona 500. I wanted a shot at it, and these
guys gave me a shot."
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