CONCORD, N.C. -- Casey Mears was hired
to drive for Hendrick Motorsports on Wednesday, earning a seat with one
of NASCAR's super-teams.
The move was widely expected since last week, when Mears informed car
owner Chip Ganassi he would not be coming back in 2007 on the same day Brian Vickers asked to be released from his Hendrick contract.
Mears and Vickers will finish this season with their current teams.
Before that, Mears had insisted he wanted to renew his deal with
Ganassi. But when the No. 25 Chevrolet opened up, he quickly changed his
mind. His new job will team him with four-time series champion Jeff
Gordon, points leader Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch.
Mears is very close friends with Gordon and Johnson -- he served in
Johnson's wedding party two years ago -- but has a season-long feud
running with Busch. That didn't deter owner Rick Hendrick from snapping
him up to a multiyear deal.
Casey Mears is the son of four-time Indy 500 winner Rick Mears.
(AP)
"Casey is a talented driver and a high-character person who is going to
be a great fit with our organization," Hendrick said. "He has the
ability to win races and ultimately contend for championships, so we're
thrilled to welcome him to Hendrick Motorsports."
Hendrick did not disclose terms of the deal, but said Mears would be
with the team at least through 2009.
The 28-year old Mears is the nephew of four-time Indianapolis 500
champion Rick Mears and followed that path into open-wheel. But he
eventually changed course and moved to NASCAR, where he spent one season
in the minor Busch Series before Ganassi hired him to drive a Nextel Cup
car for the 2003 season.
He's shown steady improvement over the past three-plus seasons, although
he is winless at all of NASCAR's levels. He's won two poles -- including
one at the Brickyard 400 in Indy -- and has 21 top 10 finishes.
Mears finished second to Johnson in the season-opening Daytona 500 this
year, and has been hovering right around the top 10 in points most of
the season.
He also became the first full-time NASCAR driver to be part of a winning
Grand American Rolex 24 team when the Ganassi team won that race in
February.
"I'm committed to winning races and going after championships with the
No. 25 team," said Mears. "This is an opportunity for me to work with
close friends and start fresh with one of the top organizations in all
of sports. It's an exciting situation for me, both personally and
professionally."
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