Driver Truex feels he’s capable of more
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[February 15, 2018]
As the start of a new NASCAR
season arrives, life is quite a bit better for Martin Truex Jr. --
not to mention noticeably different.
Now that he's returning to Daytona as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
series champion, Truex feels that difference.
"I do a little bit, honestly," said Wednesday at the Daytona 500
media day at Daytona International Speedway. "I feel like less
pressure, more relaxed, more confident than I've ever been. Excited
to start the season -- absolutely. It's been a crazy, busy
offseason. Been a lot going on. Haven't had much time off.
"I think now that the season starts, it's kind of set in even more
what we did last year, how incredible it was, how much it means to
us all. Just getting to talk about it in the questions, the
congrats, I mean, it's all just still coming. It's been pretty
amazing."
Indeed, Truex can be forgiven for wanting to relive a remarkable
year. He dominated NASCAR's new stage racing format, won a
series-best eight races, led a series-best 2,253 laps and capped off
the season by winning at Homestead-Miami Speedway to secure the
title.
The rest of the garage remembers clearly how dominant he was.
"I feel like the same person, but when I come to the track, I get a
little more respect," Truex said. "I definitely feel that. That's
always a good thing."
Barely a week ago, Truex's long-time girlfriend, Sherry Pollex,
completed her second round of chemotherapy for ovarian cancer.
"She's doing good," Truex said. "Feeling great. Happy for her she
can start getting back to normal life. She's starting to feel pretty
good again already. It was Tuesday, so usually by Friday or Saturday
she's feeling a little under the weather.
"Feeling pretty good yesterday and last night. Just nice to see her
get back to normal life, not having to think about in three weeks
she's going to have to take drugs again, feel like crap."
Pollex was diagnosed with cancer in 2014, Truex's first season with
Furniture Row Racing. Not until the end of the 2015 season, when he
was paired with crew chief Cole Pearn, did Truex begin to realize
the team's potential -- or his own.
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In 2016, Truex led more than 100 laps in eight different races,
including a record 392 of 400 laps in a dominating victory in the
Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, but hard luck kept him out of victory
lane more often than he would have liked. Yes, Truex won four times,
then a career-best, but he failed to duplicate his 2015 advancement
to the championship race at Homestead.
Still, Truex isn't sure he needed the disappointments of 2016 to
help prepare him for his title run a year later.
"I think any time you have to deal with disappointment -- things
don't go the way you expected them to or thought they would or
should -- it's a tough deal," Truex said. "I don't think it's a bad
thing to have to go through those things, figure out how to come out
on the other side of them stronger.
"I don't know. I felt like we were a great team in '16. Things
didn't go our way. I would say we were a better team in '17. That's
probably the reason why."
Though the 2017 championship is the pinnacle of Truex's career so
far, he feels his No. 78 Toyota team is capable of more-- even after
the stats he accumulated last year.
"It's pretty crazy to look at the numbers, honestly," Truex said.
"It's pretty ridiculous. It's going to be tough to beat. It's going
to be tough to match that, for sure. I think we can do it. We're up
for that challenge. Really feel like we could have won 10 or 12
races if things would have gone a little different.
"I think our focus is starting the season off here, figure out where
we're at, go from there. I've got a lot of confidence in my team
that we can still continue to do some great things. Certainly won't
be happy unless we do."
--Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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