Carl Edwards’ retirement from NASCAR competition in January 2017 sent shockwaves through the racing world.

Edwards, now 46 and a NASCAR Hall of Famer, had lost the 2016 NASCAR Cup Series championship in heartbreaking fashion. But with a year left on his contract with one of the sport’s best teams in Joe Gibbs Racing, he walked away. 

In an interview with the “Faith Driven Investor” podcast, Edwards revealed the conversation he had that led to his retirement announcement on January 11, 2017. 

Carl Edwards’ life-changing conversation

“I was having a conversation with someone very close to me,” Edwards said. “An older man, very close to me, he was struggling with alcoholism. It was a very tough conversation. I was 36, he was 66.” 

During that conversation, Edwards thought that if he continued to race, his life would take a wrong turn, leading to a similarly difficult conversation with his children in the future.

“Thirty years from now, I’ll be on the other side of this phone,” Edwards said. “My son will be sitting on the stairs. I don’t know my kids; they’ll resent me for everything I did, and I’ll have given my life away.” 

Edwards “couldn’t unsee” that future, and despite his racing career being in the best position it had ever been in, he made the decision to walk away. 

“Once that was clear to me — it took me about a week of wrestling with it — I went to Joe Gibbs’ office and said, ‘We need to talk,'” Edwards said. “I was fully prepared to have to race. I thought he’d force me to. I knew what I needed to do. I had to get away from [racing].” 

But Gibbs was understanding of Edwards’ situation. 

“I walked away, I felt like I was leaping off of something with no net,” Edwards said. “It was the best thing. It was really the most important turning point in my life.” 

While the decision was the right one, it wasn’t automatically an easy transition into retirement for Edwards. 

“I felt so insecure,” Edwards said. “Like extremely insecure for years. That process, now I see, was really necessary for me. But it was very painful at times. I really didn’t know what to do.” 

Edwards was recognized as one of NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers in 2023. He was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2025. But it wasn’t until the summer of 2025 that the Columbia, Missouri, native truly re-entered the NASCAR spotlight as a member of Prime Video’s NASCAR coverage. 

The Prime Video team trekked to Columbia to convince Edwards to come along for the ride. 

“I thought, ‘This will be an adventure. My family’s coming with me. Why not? Let’s go do it,” Edwards told Yardbarker in May 2025. “The timing just feels right.”

Edwards was back in the sport, at least in some capacity. And while he didn’t have a NASCAR championship trophy, he had something much more valuable: the knowledge that he made the right decision for himself and his family.