Saturday, August 6, 2011

Loyalty, Part Deux

I just recently posted my perspective of the re-signing of Carl Edwards with Roush-Fenway Racing, devoting the post to the concept of loyalty. In a recent post by Mark Aumann on NASCAR.com, he opines that the continued association between Edwards and Roush wasn't about money, loyalty or leverage; it was about winning.

Well, yes... and no. There is no doubt in my mind that, had Edwards jumped ship for Joe Gibbs Racing, his association with a championship-winning team at JGR and championship-winning crew chief in Greg Zipadelli, he would have added plenty wins to his resume. And I'm sure most fans could easily see the possibility of Edwards driving towards a Sprint Cup Championship behind the wheel of the Home Depot Toyota.


But Edwards chose to stay with Roush. You can't tell me that there wasn't a huge dose of loyalty taken into consideration when Edwards remarked, "I talked to Jack on the phone and he said, 'Look, Carl. You do whatever you think is best for you'... That meant the world to me. It meant that I didn't have that pressure to do something for any reason than for what I thought was best..."

Loyalty has played a significant role with some of the most successful and popular NASCAR racers.


Dale Earnhardt has to be one of the greatest examples of loyalty. Even as he founded his own race team, he was still driving for Richard Childress, and there was no intention to jump ship, citing loyalty to Childress as a significant factor.

And it wasn't just the 6 Winston Cup Championship they had earned together. Earnhardt's last Cup championship with Childress and the #3 was in 1994. They remained together, dedicated to each other, right up until Earnhardt's tragic death at Daytona in 2001.


Likewise Jeff Gordon. How many NASCAR drivers do you know of who have signed a lifetime contractual agreement? Is it based in winning? Yes. Is it based in championship chases, past, present and future? You bet. Is it based in loyalty to his team owner? Unquestionably.


There are a couple other drivers that ditched loyalty to a championship-caliber team in hopes of doing something they'd been working towards, anyway (insert Tony Stewart here).

And then there's the sport's Most Popular Driver, whose loyalty was to his father, then to himself when the race team his father founded was wrenched away from him. Now he chooses to stay with Rick Hendrick, the man who gave him his second chance.



One of my all-time favorite movies is The Princess Bride, a wonderful tale of love, honor, and loyalty. Between the film and many of NASCAR's biggest stars, I remain optimistic that loyalty is not dead.

That's my two cents, your mileage may vary.

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