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Australia
Interview

Truex would like to stay with Furniture Row "for a long time"

A car as dominant as Martin Truex Jr.’s Kansas Speedway Camry does not come along every weekend — particularly if you are Martin Truex Jr.

Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota pole winner

Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota pole winner

NASCAR Media

Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota
Start: Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota leads
Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota
Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota
Martin Truex Jr., Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota
Race winner Martin Truex Jr., Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota celebrates
Martin Truex Jr., Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota crashes
Winner: Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Chevrolet
Martin Truex Jr., Earnhardt Ganassi Racing Chevrolet
Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota
NASCAR Busch Series 2004 champion Martin Truex Jr. celebrates with team owners Teresa Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota

On Saturday, Truex’s pole-winning car led 172 of the first 211 laps in the Go Bowling 400.

For just the eighth time in his Sprint Cup career, Truex led more than 100 laps. For the seventh-consecutive time in his Sprint Cup career, Truex’s hopes of capitalizing his dominance collapsed before the finish line.

“I don’t know what the racing gods have against me,” Truex told the team over the radio. “But boy, that sucks.”

At the time, Truex was smarting from the sort of calamity that had derailed his efforts in the past. He had pitted on Lap 212, then realized something was wrong. He felt a loose wheel. Later he learned a bolt sheared off behind the wheel, preventing the tire from mounting properly.

"2014 changed me as a person"

A few years ago, a gut punch such as the one Truex endured on Saturday would have lingered well beyond the weekend. But since joining Furniture Row Racing in 2014 — and witnessing his long-time partner Sherry Pollex begin her battle ovarian cancer just eight months later — Truex approaches life differently.

“I tell people all the time, that 2014 changed me as a person,” Truex told motorsport.com. “Not just as a driver, but as a person, not just at the racetrack, but as a person and the way I look at things. The way I look at life. The way I deal with situations.

“Everything you go through in life has to do with changing how you are and making who you are and certainly going through what we did changed me a lot.”

As Pollex rebounded, so did Truex. FRR owner Barney Visser assured Truex in 2014 that the team was behind him. Last year Truex responded with his career-best Cup season, which culminated in a fourth-place finish in the standings — also a career-high for Furniture Row Racing.

While Truex has yet to win in 2016, this weekend NASCAR returns to Dover International Speedway the site of Truex’s first career Cup win in 2007. And yes, that was the only race Truex led more than 100 laps (216) and went on to win at his home track.

Since joining FRR, Truex has enjoyed competitive cars in most races than not. He continues to build on the consistency under the direction of crew chief Cole Pearn, who started his second season overseeing the No. 78 team. This year alone, he’s already led 370 laps in the first 11 races. Despite the tremendous success the team had last year, Truex total laps led were 567 in 36 events.

Truex has no plans to leave FRR

Not surprisingly, Truex would like to remain in the No. 78 FRR car “for a long time.” Last year, Truex extended his contract through 2016 but he hopes to continue building a successful relationship with the Denver-based team beyond this season. When would he like renegotiate? 

“Right now,” Truex said with a chuckle. “The problem I’ve had with my career is it’s been up and down. And that’s because of change. That’s because you get in situations where they don’t go the way you thought they were going to go.

“DEI (Dale Earnhardt Inc.) fell apart. I stayed there too long. It was a tough situation. You look at Jimmie Johnson. You look at Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch. They get with a team and they just keep building on that foundation. Year in, year out, they’re the guys to beat because they have that around them. They have that solid — just rock. They can build on things and look at past history . All they have is the car and the rule changes and those kind of things. They don’t have to figure out everything else that goes along with it.”

Truex won two Xfinity Series titles with DEI and dabbled with their Cup program prior to graduating to NASCAR’s top tour full-time in 2006. When DEI merged with Chip Ganassi’s program in 2009, he stayed the course before joining Michael Waltrip Racing in 2010. Although he left MWR at the end of 2013 — and before the organization’s ultimate demise last year — Truex, 36, understands FRR has the potential to blossom into a perennial contender.

“With Cole and those guys, it’s something special and it’s something I’d like to keep going for a long, long time,” Truex said. “To get where I want to get in the sport, that’s what you have to have. Hopefully, we can make it work.”

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