Cool-Down Lap
Allmendinger continues amazing journey with win at Watkins Glen
Aug. 11, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
WATKINS
GLEN, N.Y.—It’s always particularly gratifying when someone returns
from the abyss—gratifying because it’s so rare and unexpected.
Two
years ago, AJ Allmendinger made a horrific mistake. NASCAR pulled his
number for a random drug test before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race
at Kentucky Speedway, and during
the following week, the test came back positive.
The Kentucky race would be Allmendinger’s last in the No. 22 Team Penske car, one of the most coveted rides in the Cup garage.
That
would be the start of a long, difficult journey for the 32-year-old
driver who on Sunday at Watkins Glen International validated the effort
to revive his racing career
with a riveting, hotly contested victory in the Cheez-It 355 at the
Glen.
Allmendinger,
who completed NASCAR’s Road to Recovery program after the failed drug
test and subsequent suspension from competition, turned introspective
after the win, acknowledging
that, when he landed the ride with team owner Roger Penske for the 2012
season, he wasn’t prepared for the accompanying pressure.
“When I
got with Roger, I knew it was the best opportunity of my life, and I
tried to fake it inside and say this is the right time for it,”
Allmendinger said. “I kept telling
myself, ‘Yeah, this is the right time for it,’ but I knew it wasn't the
right time for it.
“Over
the course of what happened, it made me become a better person and just
really try to understand what life is all about because unfortunately
the sport will take over
your life. It will completely ... when it's good, it takes over, but
when it's bad, it really takes over, because that's all you can think
about.”
Allmendinger’s
suspension gave Penske no choice but to replace him in the No. 22.
Nevertheless, on the strength of his warm personality and genuine
likability, Allmendinger
had banked enough currency in the sport to earn a second chance—a slow,
gradual second chance.
After
completing the Road to Recovery, Allmendinger raced four times for team
owner James Finch in the final two months of the 2012 season.
In
2013, he competed in 18 of the 36 NASCAR Sprint Cup points races,
driving for Finch and for JTG/Daugherty, the latter after the team opted
to use Allmendinger in lieu of
Bobby Labonte for the mid-season Michigan and Kentucky race.
All
told, Allmendinger got behind the wheel of the No. 47 car nine times
that year. JTG/Daugherty subsequently signed Allmendinger to drive
full-time in 2014 and beyond.
That
same season, Penske put Allmendinger in his No. 22 Nationwide Series car
for the road-course races at Road America and Mid-Ohio. Allmendinger
won both.
Beyond
that, Penske fielded a car for Allmendinger in six IndyCar races,
including the Indianapolis 500. Allmendinger, who came to stock car
racing from an open-wheel background,
led 23 laps at Indy and finished seventh, even though problems with his
harness forced an unscheduled pit stop midway through the race.
And on
Sunday, after he and Marcos Ambrose took racing at the Glen to an almost
impossibly high level, Allmendinger repaid the faith of team owners
Brad Daugherty and Tad and
Jodi Geschickter by delivering the team’s first Sprint Cup victory.
With
the victory comes a virtually guaranteed berth in the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup, where JTG/Daugherty and Allmendinger will compete
against the giants of the sport.
It will be a huge step up in class for the single-car team.
But that step pales in comparison with the journey Allmendinger has already made.
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