Racer Remarks about Shirley's
Retirement
by Darr Hawthorne
SHIRLEY MULDOWNEY
DRO: You seem
kind of relieved that this year is coming to
an end, is that a correct reading?
SM: Well, I don't
know if I'd say relieved, I guess just a little
overwhelmed with this autograph thing is out
of control, but I'll be, not happy - not that
I don't appreciate the crowds, I do, I appreciate
it more than you realize but I can't spread
myself that thin - there's always someone disappointed,
there's always someone that thinks that since
they didn't get what they wanted, I'm the bad
guy. I'm tired, I'll be - I'm looking forward
to coming out to the track when I want to, not
having to get up at six in the morning, not
getting back at one in the morning, I want to
just sit back with my guests and just, you know,
be cool. I haven't been able to do that for
35 years. It's been along time.
DRO: You'll still have those autographs -
SM: No I'm not,
because I'm not going to go and take over someone
else's pit, you understand what I'm saying?
I don't mind one or two but these marathons,
they just run me dry.
DRO: Did you have any special feeling when you beat Kenny Bernstein here at Las Vegas last year?
SM: Just another
good racer. I was happy for Dixon because it
took the heat off and I saw a lot of relaxation
over there, finally. You know you're always
happy to help someone out. I think it did definitely
help them. I think Prudhomme was very relieved.
You know it's a good car over there, and it's
nice to be the money team. Absolutely.
DRO: I'm sure you would accept that you're a legend in this sport.
SM: Well it kind
of looks that way, doesn't it.
DRO: Everybody keeps calling you that?
SM: Oh yeah, and
the fans response and the support and it just
amazes me, you know that? It just amazes me.
DRO: You've touched a lot of people.
SM: I get emails
that would astound you, some of the things that
these people would say and refer back to a number
of years ago, just the connection I guess, just
amazes me every day. I run into me everywhere
I go. It's just amazing, I know I'm over using
that word, but people just like what I do and
I think there's a lot of people out there that
would like to do what I do, I mean it's mind
boggling how this sport has grabbed so many
people of all ages.
DRO: Especially you - it's interesting you mention that connection, because I think there is a lot of connection that fans have the way you did it and the odds you bucked for so many years.
SM: That might
have something to do with it-
DRO: You're a champion to a lot of these people.
SM: Well we never
really knew this was going to turn into what
it turned into. I must admit that I never said
in the early days, "oh I'm going to be a world
champion," - absolutely not, never set that
kind of a goal. I think I may have been there
at the right time - the women's thing, whatever
it was back then, and I wasn't part of it, did
help me, but then it hurt me in ways. You know
I've never been able to measure that from one
side to the other, other than the funding thing
has evaded me and I'm not really sure what that
was all about. But the fact that I did it for
as long as I did it and I was here that long
without the big kick - that is what I'm most
proud of - they couldn't get rid of me as hard
as they tried.
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