Stellar year in 2014 solidified Jeff Gordon’s decision to retire
Jan. 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CHARLOTTE,
N.C.—For those who might think that Jeff Gordon’s splendid 2014 run in
the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series might have tempted him to reconsider his
decision to retire from
full-time competition, think again.
In
fact, Gordon’s top-notch performance on the track only reinforced his
decision to bow out of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.
“A
couple of years ago, when I wasn’t as competitive as I wanted to be, I
wanted to end it right then,” Gordon said on Thursday at the Charlotte
Convention Center during the
Hendrick Motorsports stop on the Charlotte Motor Speedway NASCAR Media
Tour. “I was like, ‘God, this is no fun.’
“I got
into racing because I loved it, and I was competitive and enjoying it.
Because of that, I just found myself being frustrated a lot (when he
wasn’t winning). But this
is what I think is so interesting: a lot of people say, ‘Well, I can’t
believe he did it, because of the year that he had last year.’
“Last
year actually solidified it for me, because it told me and showed me
I’ve still got it. When you’re part of a great team, you’ve got a great
crew chief like Alan Gustafson,
and they work hard and you work hard at it, it means you can be late in
your career and still go out there and get it done and be competitive.
“So, if anything, it only motivated me to be that much better this year and really truly go out on top.”
Gordon
and team owner Rick Hendrick may have a slightly different idea of what
going out on top might be. Hendrick suggested that Gordon needed to win
14 races and a championship.
Why 14?
Because that would top by one victory Gordon’s high-water mark of 13
wins set during his 1998 championship season. With 14 victories, Gordon
also would move past David
Pearson to second on the all-time list. Pearson currently has 105
Sprint Cup wins, second only to Richard Petty’s 200. Gordon has 92.
Even if
Pearson’s number is out of reach, one record Gordon is likely to set is
a new iron-man mark for the Cup series. The 43-year-old driver raced
for the first time in the
1992 season finale at Atlanta and hasn’t missed an event since.
Gordon’s
consecutive race streak reached 761 last year, and if it continues, he
will match Ricky Rudd’s record 788 consecutive starts Sept. 20 at
Chicagoland Speedway and break
it the following week in the Chase race at New Hampshire.
Gordon,
however, craves nothing more than a fifth title. He revealed Thursday
that, having made his decision to retire during the summer, the
late-race incident with Brad Keselowski
at Texas Motor Speedway that cost him a chance to win was particularly
galling.
A week later at Phoenix, Gordon failed to advance to the final round of the Chase by a single point.
“The
ultimate would be the championship,” Gordon said. “There was definitely
some urgency, knowing this decision was coming, that made what happened
at Texas, that much more…
and, yeah, what happened at Texas was Texas, but then knowing after
Phoenix that we didn’t make it in was very disappointing because I knew
this could possibly be my last opportunity.
“But I think we’re going to have another one. I think this year is an opportunity for us.”
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