Carl Edwards is a NASCAR legend, a Hall of Fame inductee, and a driver who left an unforgettable mark on the sport with 38 Xfinity Series wins, 28 Cup Series victories, and two near-championships.
But before he became a household name, before the backflips, the trophies, and the iconic No. 99 Ford, Edwards was just another young driver desperately trying to break into NASCAR.
His hustle was real—and, as it turns out, a little misguided.
In a recent media conference, Edwards reflected on an eye-opening piece of advice he received from NASCAR legend Benny Parsons—advice that changed his approach to the sport forever.
The Business Card Blunder: Benny Parsons’ Brutal but Hilarious Advice
Before making it big, Edwards juggled substitute teaching with his racing dreams, trying to catch the attention of team owners by any means necessary.
His strategy? Business cards.
“I handed out business cards at racetracks, trying to impress owners and anyone who would give me a chance,” Edwards admitted.
It wasn’t exactly a conventional path—and while some laughed at his efforts, one man gave him career-defining advice.
Enter Benny Parsons.
Edwards mustered the courage to hand Parsons one of his business cards, hoping to make an impression. Parsons took one look at the card, glanced back at Edwards, and delivered a brutally honest but hilarious reality check.
“Benny Parsons… I worked up the grit, gave him the card. He looked at it, looked it over, and said, ‘Hey, you want some advice?’ I said, ‘Sure?’ He said, ‘If your whole resume fits on the back of a business card, you might just wanna leave it off.’”
Edwards recalled his reaction:
“I was like, ‘That’s genius!’ Because that’s going to save me like two cents a card.”
From Business Cards to NASCAR Stardom
At the time, Edwards’ racing resume was thin—so much so that he had to stretch the truth just to make it look decent.
“So I had this card… On the back, there were two things—experiences: Four-cylinder cars; said Midgets, which I hadn’t driven a Midget, still I put it down there. It said some other stuff… it said references, like Timmy Kahuth… I don’t know who else.”
Compare that to the actual career Edwards built:
✅ 2007 NASCAR Xfinity Series Champion
✅ 38 Xfinity wins, 28 Cup Series wins
✅ Two-time Cup Series runner-up (2008, 2011)
✅ One of the most respected drivers in NASCAR history
That scrappy young kid with a business card full of half-truths became one of the most beloved names in the sport—a testament to hard work, resilience, and seizing every opportunity.
Edwards’ Humility Remains—Even in Retirement
Despite his tremendous success, Edwards never lost his humility.
Even in retirement, he remains one of the most down-to-earth figures in NASCAR, carrying the same self-awareness that Parsons instilled in him all those years ago.
His story is a reminder to every aspiring racer that sometimes, the hardest lessons come before the first big break—and that even the smallest pieces of advice can change a career.
Carl Edwards may have traded business cards for trophies, but his hustler’s mentality never faded. And Benny Parsons’ words? They live on as one of the greatest NASCAR lessons ever given.