Falling short in 2011 gives Carl Edwards motivation for title run
November 17, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. – Five years have passed since Carl Edwards got his last shot at a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship.
And earlier this week, he got a painful-if-instructive reminder.
In
2011, Edwards came to Homestead-Miami Speedway with a three-point lead
over Tony Stewart in what had evolved into a two-man battle for the
series title.
Stewart
won the race, and Edwards ran second, leaving the drivers tied for the
points lead at the end of the Chase. But Stewart claimed the
championship via tiebreaker, having
won an unprecedented five of the Chase races.
Stewart
is retiring from Sprint Cup racing at the end of the year, and his
sendoff included a broadcast of the stirring 2011 season finale.
“I
got to my hotel the other night in New York, flipping through the
channels, I was like, ‘What the hell is that on the TV?’ and it was that
race, and I thought ... I sat and
watched it,” Edwards said on Thursday during Championship 4 Media Day
at the Loews Miami Beach Hotel. “And I thought, ‘Man, this is really
motivating.’
“I
really, really want to win this one. So yeah, I guess it's a motivator,
and I thought the experience was great. I was just thinking that while
we were sitting here (that)
last time I had this opportunity, it was just against two guys. This is
much more dynamic and probably in a lot of ways going to be tougher.
It's different, but I feel like that experience was very good. I
wouldn't trade it for anything. It was a lot of fun.”
It
was painful, too. Edwards had an eight-point lead with three races left
in the 2011 Chase, finished second three times and lost the
championship.
So
you can forgive the driver of the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for
turning off the race replay before it reached conclusion.
“I
had to go back and think about my mind-set during the race,” Edwards
said. “Those last few laps, I was driving my guts out. That was
everything I had. But at first I thought,
‘Man, I don't want to watch this, and then I watched it, and I thought,
this is good for me.
“I
need to get to remember what that was like and remember and get a
glimpse and a view of how important this is, and it really was. It was
motivating. When I shut it off, I
was really ready to race right then.”
With
Jimmie Johnson trying to win a record-tying seventh championship, with
JGR teammate Kyle Busch seeking back-to-back titles, and with Joey
Logano coming off an opportunistic
victory at Phoenix, Edwards may be the forgotten man in this year’s
Championship 4.
After
all, Edwards recovered from a blown tire at Martinsville to resurrect
his championship with a win at Texas a week later. So does he feel he’s
playing with house money in
Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET on
NBC)?
“A
little bit,” Edwards acknowledged, “but it wasn't like we ran poorly at
Martinsville. We had a problem, and I felt like ... I really believed
once we made it to that round,
I felt like we were going to make it to Homestead. I just felt really
confident, and then the tire problem kind of threw us for a loop.
“I
thought, ‘Man, now we have to win,’ and (crew chief) Dave Rogers put it
best. He said, ‘Well, you knew we were going to have to win at
Homestead anyway. You might as well
get to it now. So it was kind of a little kick in the pants there that
got us going, and having to do that is hopefully that helped us.
“I
mean, I know it did for me, for my confidence, and to know that our
team could perform under the pressure, win when we had to. It feels
really good.”
If Edwards can find his way to Victory Lane on Sunday evening, it will feel even better.
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