NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin, who competed for Jack Roush's Cup team for the majority of his career, has shared his regrets on the anniversary of the passing of one of NASCAR's most respected team owners and war heroes. Over the decades, Bud Moore worked with many great drivers, including Dale Earnhardt, Bobby Allison, and Darrell Waltrip.However, Martin started stock car racing in the early 1980s and was outpaced by other successful drivers at the time. He looked back at the legendary team owner's death anniversary and felt sorry that he never got a chance to drive for Moore, in a post on X."I really wish I could have driven his race car when I was getting started in [NASCAR] but I wasn't proven enough to get the ride. He had his choice of many of the heroes at that time," Mark Martin wrote.Moore died at the age of 92 on November 27, 2017. The Spartanburg, South Carolina native joined the US Army in 1943 as a machine gunner. Moore turned to racing after World War II and began as a crew chief. By 1961, he had founded his own team, Bud Moore Engineering, which achieved 63 wins and two championships in the top NASCAR series with veteran driver Joe Weatherly winning back-to-back titles in 1962 and 1963.He was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2011 and also honored by the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2009.Mark Martin revealed 'the only support whatsoever' for full-season points return came from Joe Gibbs Racing driverMark Martin has never shied away from calling out NASCAR and pointing out the sport's flaws. The 66-year-old has campaigned for a return to the old full-season race points system online and also spoke out against the current championship format after being invited to serve on the committee about the playoff.And during a recent appearance on The Scene Vault podcast, Martin revealed that the only person who backed him up in the meeting and showed even a little support was Christopher Bell."After the meeting was over, yeah, nobody said no. None of them Dale Jr., nobody stepped in. The one guy, Christopher Bale, said, 'Well, I think it would be, you know, I'd like to see a full season points, but I know that's not realistic.' That was the only support whatsoever," Mark Martin said (24:59)Martin also supported Richard Childress and put his personal issues with the team owner aside after recently surfaced past texts between NASCAR executives. He said the insults from Steve Phelps crossed a line and that he became "totally furious" when he saw the comments.