NASCAR Hall of Fame gets its coach:
Joe Gibbs
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[January 24, 2020]
Last November, on the eve of his
team fielding an unprecedented three of the four cars eligible for
the 2019 NASCAR Cup Series championship trophy, Joe Gibbs sat
alongside his team's former driver -- now championship rival team
owner -- Tony Stewart and reminisced about their time together.
Stewart won two of his three Cup titles driving for Joe Gibbs Racing
and the two men smiled and patted one another on the back as they
shared their fondest memories of working together with an audience
of rapt media members.
They laughed. They told tales. They spoke about the many triumphs
and happy times and teased about overcoming the inevitable
challenges of their large personalities.
And of course, each of these two great competitors wanted to beat
the other.
The next day, Gibbs raised his fifth NASCAR Cup Series championship
trophy after Kyle Busch drove to his second Cup title with his JGR
teammates Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin finishing runner-up and
fourth.
Next week all of NASCAR will be celebrating Gibbs again, this time
as a new member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame during the Jan. 31 formal
induction ceremony in Charlotte, N.C. As it turns out, Gibbs will --
perhaps fittingly -- have the three-time Cup champ Stewart and Bobby
Labonte, who won the 2000 Cup title driving for Gibbs, as Hall of
Fame classmates. Waddell Wilson and the late Buddy Baker round out
the Hall's 2020 class of five.
"Well obviously, it's a thrill for me and what you think about when
something like this happens is, I get pushed out front, but I think
about all the people that built the race team and are a part of it,"
Gibbs said upon receiving his selection news last May - deferring as
usual to those who work on his team.
"I think about the people and I am thankful."
This year has been particularly challenging for Gibbs and his
family. He lost his son JD, 49, who served as the team president,
last January after a lengthy illness. But Gibbs and the team have
already been lifted by JD Gibbs' legacy.
Busch's championship is the organization's fifth and it was a
fitting conclusion to a season that featured a third Daytona 500
trophy to open the year and ultimately the most wins (19) earned by
a single team in a single season in the Modern Era (1972-Present).
Gibbs now has 341 national series wins - the most by any team in
NASCAR history. And all four JGR Cup Series drivers - Busch, Truex,
Hamlin and Erik Jones - hoisted trophies last year.
The 2019 season was certainly the exclamation point to a humble
beginning in the sport. Dale Jarrett, a 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame
inductee, was the first driver Gibbs hired in 1992 when the former
Super Bowl-winning coach decided to launch a NASCAR career too.
Jarrett earned the JGR team the first of its 176 Cup wins in the
1993 Daytona 500 -- one of the most iconic moments in NASCAR.
It was a momentous afternoon providing the former Washington
Redskins head coach the assurance that his racing venture was the
right call.
"He might be the first person to come into the sport as a car owner
and had a sponsor lined up before he had anything done," Jarrett
recalled. "Not many do that.
"That tells you just how good he is and how motivated he is once he
gets to that point he wants to make something happen.
"You talk about humble beginnings. He sat (Jarrett's crew chief)
Jimmy Makar and I down and said, 'Look, I've borrowed $800,000 and
that's all I'm borrowing. If we can't make this thing get up and
going ... I'll shut this down and chalk it up to a bad investment.
But hopefully we make it happen.'
"And he has built this 500-plus employee business up from literally
18 people that first year and an $800,000 loan. It's just
incredible."
Added Jarrett, "Once you get to know Joe Gibbs you realize he's
going to be successful at whatever he does but this was a venture he
had no idea really how to go about things. So, he was relying on
people - just as he did when he was coaching -- he had good people
around him to get the best players and put his plan in place.
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"It was kind of the same thing with this when he got into racing."
The approach -- Gibbs' philosophy and his great faith -- soon
transitioned from new venture to championship caliber
standard-setter. After Jarrett, who competed for the team's first
three seasons (1992-94), Gibbs hired the 1991 Busch Grand National
(now Xfinity Series) champion Bobby Labonte in 1995.
Labonte spent 11 years with Gibbs winning the 2000 NASCAR Cup Series
championship and their fellow 2020 NASCAR Hall of Fame classmate
Stewart contributed another two titles to the Gibbs organization in
2002 and 2005.
With Labonte and Stewart, Gibbs' team during those seasons from the
mid-1990s to late 2000s were perennial championship favorites -
claiming race trophy after race trophy. It was high octane
performance in some of the sport's most celebrated days. And it
remains so today.
It was also good preparation - a test for the coach who was enjoying
great results but managing a team of big personalities.
"I used to try and get to the hauler as fast as I could if he
(Stewart) had a bad night because he was going to tear up the inside
of the hauler," Gibbs joked with Stewart in that championship
pre-race news conference at Homestead.
The two exchanged stories, long looks, laughter and pats on the back
while sharing tales of their pairing. And then Stewart got serious.
"I learned a lot from this guy in the years I was there," Stewart
said, turning in his seat to speak directly to Gibbs. "I've said it
a million times, if I didn't work for him, I wouldn't be where I'm
at now.
"I wouldn't be doing the things that I'm doing now. I wouldn't be in
debt like I am now," he said allowing a smile. "And I blame it all
on you Joe.
"But it's great to have worked with somebody like him because he has
worked with so many great people. It's not something you always see
at the race track.
"A lot of it pertains to everyday life, too and when you get a
chance to sit with him long enough and when you shut your mouth and
listen, spend more time listening than talking you can learn a lot
from this guy and I promise you, it helps."
Certainly with Gibbs' upcoming NASCAR Hall of Fame induction and his
1996 Pro Football Hall of Fame induction, this 79-year-old natural
born leader from tiny Mocksville, N.C. - where Daniel Boone's father
Squire once served as Justice of the Peace - has proven the kind of
leader that great drive, abundant faith can produce.
With Jarrett already in the great Hall, Labonte and Stewart joining
Gibbs, next week's honor will likely feel as comfortable as it is so
deserved.
"You couldn't write a book and have this happen," Labonte said of
this Hall of Fame class. "I just sit back and reflect on the times
with Joe and it's awesome we're all three going in at the same time.
"You just couldn't ask for anything better than that."
For all the record number of trophies, major races won and
championship celebrations, Gibbs' most endearing legacy to the sport
may well be his philosophy and leadership. His heart and mind - his
ability to motivate and to embrace the joy in a job well done.
"He helped me as a driver and I'm pretty sure that Bobby (Labonte),
Tony (Stewart), Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin would tell you he just
makes you a better person," Jarrett said. "He gives you the tools to
be a better driver but just conversations with him - if you listen,
pay attention and just watch his reactions - then you become a
better person."
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media
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