Mutual respect, communication vital to Gordon championship pedigree
Nov. 4, 2015
By Ray Evernham
NASCAR Wire Service
I
don’t think you ever really know when you’re going to grow into a
relationship and end up really close to a person. I think that just
happens. I think, in some ways, Jeff’s
and my friendship is strengthening as we go through time.
But
I knew from the first time I met him that I liked him and I was going
to get along with him. We thought about things the same way, and he had
that kind of personality,
and he had that talent, that ability—all those things. He’s just an
easy person to like and communicate with. He gave me good information,
he was respectful, and you’ve got to remember ... when I met him he was
only 18 years old.
It
was easy to grow into a relationship like that when you meet someone
who’s open, and they’re good at what they do. When you admire someone
and respect someone right off
the bat, it’s easy to grow into a relationship.
It
was our goal to be the best, but also—honestly and unselfishly—we knew
what our jobs were. I had the part that he needed, mechanically and
strategically and working on the
car and that experience. And he had something that I’d always wanted to
have, that amazing talent to drive that race car, that ability to do
that. I think we always respected that neither one of us could do each
other’s jobs.
I
knew there was no way in the world I could ever drive as good as he
could, and I think he understood that there was no way he could ever be
as mechanically inclined with
the race car as I was. It worked perfectly, because we both had some
goals, and we knew that the true form of a partnership is when both
partners make each other better.
That
happened with us the first time we really ever got together to run the
Outback Steakhouse car in 1990 (in what was then the NASCAR Busch
Series, and now known as the NASCAR
XFINITY Series). We just clicked, and we had speed right away. I didn’t
tell him how to drive—I suggested things that I saw. He didn’t tell me
how to work on the car—he told me what it was doing. I think if we
worked together tomorrow, we’d still have that
same kind of communication.
When
you look at our sport—any sport, really—there are people that have made
a huge difference in that sport in a certain time. When a sport
evolves, either someone has helped
it evolve or carried it through that evolution. You can look all the
way back to when our sport started. As it was growing, you’ve got to see
the Petty name. I’m talking from a driver’s standpoint, not the France
family or anything like that.
Then
you move on into the '80s, and it’s Earnhardt, without a doubt, for
what he carried and did with the sport. And then when you move on to the
'90s and into the 2000s, it
was Jeff Gordon. His record is obvious, but the impact that he had
transitioning the sport from a regional sport to a national sport,
bringing in companies and really changing the face of what a NASCAR race
car driver was—he forever changed the sport, and
I think the sport will always be better and stepped up a notch because
of it.
He
was from California. He wasn’t the jeans, cowboy boots guy. He hosted
Saturday Night Live. He was GQ, and all at the same time, he got the job
done. He was young, good-looking,
and he worked hard and kept himself in shape. I think that he forever
changed what a NASCAR race car driver was looked at as.
The
thing I’m most proud of is the person that Jeff Gordon has become
throughout the years, the man that he’s become. When I first met him, he
was a teenager, he was a boy.
Now he’s become a man, and I’m proud of that, and I’m proud to still be
able to call him a friend after all these years and everything we’ve
been through.
As told to the NASCAR Wire Service's Reid Spencer.
No comments:
Post a Comment