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Did You Notice?: Martin Truex Jr. Latest NASCAR Retirement Party Pooper

Did You Notice? … 44-year-old Martin Truex, Jr. has now gone 44 races without a NASCAR Cup Series win?

Truex, retiring from full-time competition at the end of 2024, also sits on the outside looking in for the Round of 12. He’s 14 points behind the cut line with one race left to go, needing a Hail-Mary-type race at Bristol Motor Speedway to salvage his season.

It’s part of a summer slump that’s been one of his worst since moving over to Joe Gibbs Racing in 2019. Truex has three DNFs in his last six races and sits without a top-five finish since Kansas Speedway in May. It nearly cost him a playoff spot altogether after leading the standings as recently as Richmond Raceway in March.

See also
Stat Sheet: Average Finish Has Plummeted Among Elite Drivers

That was the race where Truex saw a victory slip through his fingers, leading late until inexplicable contact between Kyle Larson and Bubba Wallace forced NASCAR overtime. Truex lost the lead on the ensuing pit stop then got burned by an A+ Denny Hamlin restart as he slid all the way to fourth at the finish.

The relationship between Truex and crew chief James Small hasn’t been the same this year. The confidence between them has eroded over a series of these close calls that didn’t work out. Add in a few tough breaks, getting caught up in other people’s messes and it’s clear Truex is ready to wave the white flag on his career.

That became especially clear after his top-five car finished 20th at Watkins Glen International following the carnage during the final laps.

“Just crazy that all these races always come down to this,” Truex told NBC Sports. “I just don’t really understand how guys can call themselves the best in the world when they just drive through everyone on restarts at the end of these races. It’s very frustrating, but it is what it is these days.

“I’m out of here.”

It’s not the way Truex wanted his final season to play out. But he’s also not alone. Retirement rarely happens when someone’s in position to go out on top.

In the past decade of Cup competition, Carl Edwards‘ retirement after making the Championship 4 in 2016 comes as the exception to the rule. Most future or current NASCAR Hall of Famers couldn’t wait to turn the page after a series of frustrating finishes that left them wondering, “Did I hang on too long?”

Even Jeff Gordon’s Championship 4 appearance in 2015 masked a final year that often fell short of expectations. The win at Martinsville Speedway that launched him into the final round was the only one he earned all season. In fact, Gordon posted just five top-five finishes, the fewest of his full-time Cup career.

Here’s a closer look at notable NASCAR drivers and how they’ve fared in their final full-time seasons under this current championship format.

DriverLast Full-Time SeasonAgeWinsTop 5sPoints
Finish
Martin Truex, Jr.2024440415th
(Active)
Kevin Harvick2023470613th
Ryan Newman2021430228th
Clint Bowyer2020410212th
Jimmie Johnson2020450518th
Matt Kenseth2020480128th
Jamie McMurray2018420220th
Kasey Kahne2018380130th
Dale Earnhardt, Jr.2017430121st
Carl Edwards201637394th
Tony Stewart2016451515th
Greg Biffle2016460123rd
Jeff Gordon201544153rd
* – Kurt Busch excluded (career cut short by injury in 2022; no telling how much longer he could have raced otherwise)

As you can see, Edwards was the only driver considered at or near the top of his game in his final season. And there’s a clear difference he has over everyone else: Edwards is the only Hall of Famer in the past decade to retire at age 37 or younger.

What we’re seeing instead is a gradual decline in performance for most drivers in their early 40s. Truex, Hamlin and Harvick have been able to push a little bit further than most, but gone are the days where Mark Martin found himself a title contender at age 50. It’s hard to believe at this point someone that age was runner-up in the championship in 2009.

See also
Up to Speed: Will Veteran Experience Pay Off at Bristol?

Why are drivers like Truex finding it hard to leave the sport on top? I think there are a couple of reasons.

First off, a lot of these retirements have happened within the bigger tent of multi-car programs. As the year goes on, and especially when struggles begin, it’s easy for the group who is not retiring to get distracted, turning their focus onto 2025 and a new chapter. It’s also easy for those big organizations to push toward their other teams and drivers, often in better position to contend. Their goal is to win a championship, after all, and not pull resources to a transitioning team just so a driver can have one last hurrah in victory lane.

It’s why, when the end comes, NASCAR can be a cruel business. It’s hard to keep everyone on the same page, and when you can, it’s often due to the fact everyone is leaving. Just look at Chase Briscoe’s recent rise into contention at the soon-to-be-defunct Stewart-Haas Racing No. 14.

I also think there’s a wrinkle in things that drivers didn’t have 25 years ago: the demands of the current Cup schedule. Next season, there will only be one week off for NASCAR in a nine-month period, from early February through early November. The Cup Series races every weekend from April 27 through Nov. 2.

That’s a big difference from a 29-race schedule, last used in Cup during the magical 1992 season. Those extra weeks off keep aging athletes fresh and also help balance the demands of life as you get older: family, friends and kids.

Add in the way the sport has grown financially, and the commitments drivers make go far beyond the racetrack. Multiple sponsors are now needed to patch together money for the year, and all of them have expectations that squeeze free time, from autograph sessions to personal meet ‘n’ greets with executives.

“I’ve never missed an appearance. You live your life by a schedule that somebody makes for you,” Truex said back in June. “I want to go do the things I want to do, and I don’t want anyone to tell me when I can and when I can’t do those things.”

It leaves most of our drivers running on empty when they’re ready to do something else. It’s not unlike when people change jobs in the real world; you just feel like it’s time.

But the memory of how good you’ve been doesn’t win you these NASCAR races. It’s the reality of how good you are.

And as much as we all like happy endings, what we get instead at this point are glimpses — moments from careers long past their peak.

Maybe Truex will end the season with a miracle. Just don’t count on it.

Did You Notice? … Quick hits before taking off …

  • If there’s any hope for the 40-something crowd, maybe Bristol will be it. The top-three finishers this spring, who all managed their tires the best, are all 40 or older now: Hamlin, Truex and Brad Keselowski.
  • It’s hard to understate how impressive Juan Pablo Montoya’s run was on Sunday (Sept. 15). The finish didn’t show it, but Montoya, after a decade outside of NASCAR, drove his way inside the top 10 with a part-time team. Someone needs to give him a limited schedule of road courses and the sport’s crown jewel events in 2025.
  • Back in 2021, John Hunter Nemechek left the Cup Series for a fresh start after struggling as a rookie with Front Row Motorsports. He spent years winning in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck and Xfinity series to get his second shot at primetime. And what happens during his first full-time season with Legacy Motor Club? Just three top-10 finishes in 28 races, he sits 34th in the standings — the lowest of any full-time driver. It’s also the same number of top 10s and seven positions worse in points than his 2020 season with FRM.

Follow Tom Bowles on X at @NASCARBowles

Tom Bowles
Majority Owner and Editor in Chief at Frontstretch

The author of Did You Notice? (Wednesdays) Tom spends his time overseeing Frontstretch’s 40+ staff members as its majority owner and Editor-in-Chief. Based outside Philadelphia, Bowles is a two-time Emmy winner in NASCAR television and has worked in racing production with FOX, TNT, and ESPN while appearing on-air for SIRIUS XM Radio and FOX Sports 1's former show, the Crowd Goes Wild. He most recently consulted with SRX Racing, helping manage cutting-edge technology and graphics that appeared on their CBS broadcasts during 2021 and 2022.

You can find Tom’s writing here, at CBSSports.com and Athlonsports.com, where he’s been an editorial consultant for the annual racing magazine for 15 years.