NASCAR’s most popular driver announced in April that he’ll retire at the end of this season. Before the Mooresville native parks for the last time, here are three excerpts from recent stories by writers with Charlotte connections.
I’LL LEAVE IT TO OTHERS to analyze his career, but I know this: The manner in which he is retiring says a lot more about him, all of it good, than any list of his wins.
He walks away from the sport with 26 checkered flags, more than $100 million in race winnings, 14 Most Popular Driver Awards and inevitable questions about unfulfilled promise. But to analyze him only through what happened on the track is to miss the point. Through his willingness to talk openly about his struggles with head injuries, and his ultimate decision to quit driving, he showed a snarling hot-take sports culture obsessed with accomplishment that there are things more important than trophies, checks, and championships.
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