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 Tuesday, November 30
Jarrett, not Gordon, steps to podium
 
Associated Press

  NEW YORK -- Winston Cup champion Dale Jarrett stepped to the podium, looked around Manhattan's posh 21 Club and began his remarks.

"We're glad you get to know there's somebody else out there besides Jeff Gordon," he said.

Indeed.

Gordon has won the NASCAR series three of the last four years, but this year Jarrett the journeyman, driving his 15th season on the circuit, took it away with week-in, week-out consistency.

He won four races, finished in the top five in 24 of 34 events and in the top six of 14 straight races. His work delivered first championships to car owner Robert Yates and crew chief Todd Parrott.

Jarrett's series championship was a triumph of perseverance. He's been driving the NASCAR circuit since 1984 and has won at least one race in each of the last seven years. His 22 victories place him 23rd on NASCAR's career list.

Jarrett follows his father, Ned, as winner of NASCAR's top series. They are just the second father-son pair to take of the title, joining Lee and Richard Petty.

"My opportunity to win this championship should inspire others trying to make it," Jarrett said. "It took a lot of time, but it can be done with hard work and dedication. You just have to keep trying.

"It was 1987 before I really got a full-time ride. In those days, I never even thought of a championship. I was never with an organization I felt could win a championship. It took time and being in the right place at the right time."

Things began falling in place in after Ernie Irvan was nearly killed in an accident in Michigan in 1994. Yates needed a replacement the next season, and hired Jarrett, who had designs on starting his own team in 1996.

That didn't work out, and after Irvan returned, Jarrett stayed on to drive a second Yates Ford with rookie Todd Parrott as crew chief.

In their first race together, they won the 1996 Daytona 500 and it was then that Jarrett began thinking of the championship.

"The key was keeping people together, adding to them and making a good team," he said. "We were able to do that."

Of the 100 people Yates and Parrott assembled for Jarrett in 1996, just one has left.

In 1997, Jarrett finished second to Gordon. In 1998, when Gordon won for the third time in four years, Jarrett was third.

When Gordon won at Daytona in February -- Jarrett finished a disappointing 37th -- the chase was on again. This time, though, Jarrett caught up.

By piling up points, he was able to get in front and maintain his lead. He won in Richmond, Va., and Michigan, the second time around in Daytona Beach, Fla., and at the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis.

At fifth-place at Homestead, Fla. on Nov. 14 clinched the crown.

Jarrett says he's not the best driver on the circuit.

"I don't think I'm the most talented," he said Tuesday. "Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt are more talented. They have the ability to get themselves out of situations handling the car. I try not to get into those positions.

"There's different ways to succeed. It's using your talent to the best of your ability."

Jarrett thought his advantage this year was getting out in front of the others instead of having to always play catch-up.

"We always said we wanted to be out front and see what that's like," he said. "When you're behind, you're relying on somebody else having a problem."

So Jarrett clung to his lead tenaciously and let others do the chasing for a change.

And Gordon?

He finished sixth.
 


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