Kenseth returning to Roush, will split time with Bayne
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[April 27, 2018]
In a warm homecoming sort of
spirit, Roush Fenway Racing announced Wednesday that veteran driver
Matt Kenseth, who won a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup championship with
the team back in 2003, would return to the organization next month
and share driving time with Trevor Bayne in the No. 6 Ford.
Kenseth, 46, spent his first 13 full-time Monster Energy Series
seasons driving for Roush - winning a pair of Daytona 500 trophies
and the season title - before moving to Joe Gibbs Racing, where he
competed from 2013-2017.
While the Roush team said it hadn't formalized Kenseth's complete
2018 schedule yet, it did confirm that his first race back in the
car would be May 12 at Kansas Speedway, where Kenseth has a pair of
victories. He will also drive the car in the Monster Energy NASCAR
All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway a week later, May 19.
The organization's announcement Wednesday at the NASCAR Hall of Fame
also included news that the Wyndham Hotel Group has joined the team
as a new primary sponsor and will be on the No. 6 for Kenseth's
season debut at Kansas.
It was long-time Roush Fenway Racing driver and NASCAR Hall of Famer
Mark Martin who introduced Kenseth formally to the gathered crowd of
reporters and fans. And he referenced Kenseth as his "favorite
driver" several times during the hour-long announcement, speaking
about the good feeling he had from his first meeting with Kenseth
decades ago.
"I had a lot to do with bringing him here 20 years ago and I'm
really, really excited to introduce him here today,'' Martin said.
Kenseth took the stage and immediately joked with his close friend,
saying that if he had waited for Martin to retire before getting a
shot in Roush's No. 6 car, "I would have been 39 [years old] my
rookie year."
Throughout the formal portion of the announcement, Kenseth spoke
often of his desire to not only drive but to be a long-term resource
for the team - whatever that needed to be, in whatever role he
needed to serve.
"The timing, to you guys, it might seem weird, but the timing was
right,'' Kenseth said. "And it was the right deal. It's exciting
bringing a new sponsor into the sport at the same time and it all
just lined up and seemed like the right thing at the right time.''
And, he added, that he intended for this professional reunion to
last a while.
"I think that's what all our hopes are - is to continue this long
term and get back to turning the TV on and seeing the Roush cars up
front every week,'' Kenseth said, adding, "I would say this
opportunity is probably as much about the rest of it - the rest of
my role and possible future role than it is just the driving.
"It's more about coming here and trying to help and coming to see
what the farther out future looks like for me.''
Certainly Kenseth's past with the Roush team was among the
organization's most successful. The Wisconsin driver earned the
longtime NASCAR team owner his first Monster Energy Series
championship in 2003. And Kenseth scored 24 of his 39 wins with
Roush - including the organization's only two Daytona 500 victories
in 2009 and 2012.
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NASCAR Cup
Series driver Kurt Busch (41) and NASCAR Cup
Series driver Joey Logano (22) lead a restart during the Toyota
Owners 400 at Richmond International Raceway. Mandatory Credit:
Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports
Since Kenseth left Roush following the 2012 season, the team has
earned only seven more wins. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., who drives the No.
17, won twice last year and is the defending winner of this
weekend's race, the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.
"Matt is one of the guys who really put us on the map of the racing
landscape,'' Jack Roush said. "He's one of the most talented drivers
to ever sit inside a race car and his will to win, drive and
determination have always embodied what we strive for as an
organization.''
Roush also conceded, however, that the reason he hadn't approached
Kenseth earlier about a reunion was because he still wasn't
completely over Kenseth's move from Roush to Gibbs six years ago.
"His question to me was, ‘Why did it take so long' for me to call,''
Roush said, noting Kenseth's move to Joe Gibbs Racing was painful at
the time.
"We had another championship out there, I thought, that we could
have had in short order. I missed that, so it took me a little while
to get over it.''
The mood was noticeably optimistic about the changes and potential
of the new-look team, however. And Kenseth reiterated he was eager
to get racing again.
Kenseth said he's watched all the Monster Energy Series races this
season on television, although he allowed that he's "probably
watched more closely the last few weeks.''
He said he hasn't spoken to Bayne yet about the new situation
sharing the No. 6 Ford the remainder of the season, but he planned
to talk to him in the next week.
In the meantime, Roush Fenway Racing arrives at Talladega
Superspeedway (Sunday, April 29, 2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM
NASCAR Radio) later this week as defending champions of the race - a
position Kenseth hopes will happen more frequently going forward.
As Kenseth's longtime friend and mentor Martin reminded the crowd,
‘"Just because you walk away from the race car for a while doesn't
mean you're done forever."
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media
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