Co-writer Merle Haggard recorded the song first on his 1981 hit LP
Big City but did not release it as a single. According to the Stephen L. Betts
Rolling Stone article "George Jones Gets 'Lucky' with Merle Haggard Song" published online on February 13, 2015, Haggard's manager, Tex Whitson, first pitched it to Jones' producer
Billy Sherrill because Jones and Haggard were on the outs at the time. "I'd get mad at him over the years because of his self-damage, but everything I said to him was out of love," Haggard wrote in an article for
Rolling Stone after his friend died. "Imagine you're George Jones, and every night you're expected to sing as good as you did on a song like '
She Thinks I Still Care.' He was a shy country boy from
East Texas walking around with that on his shoulders. He knew people expected him to be the greatest country singer that ever lived. He was the
Babe Ruth of country music, and people expected a home run every time." Sherrill, who had produced Jones and Haggard on their first duet album together ''
A Taste of Yesterday's Wine the year before, persuaded Jones to cut it. In the 1994 video retrospective Golden Hits'', Jones recalled that he "sung it around
Nashville at some of the clubs to try and get used to it before I went into the studio and it came off great. It's a great song. Merle Haggard wrote a good one there." Jones, who was about to hit rock bottom after spending most of the previous decade in a booze and drug-crazed wasteland, delivered a sterling performance, which became the last chart topper of his career, ironically bumping off "
Pancho and Lefty," Haggard's hit duet with
Willie Nelson. Haggard would record the song again in 2006 as part of the second Jones/Haggard release ''
Kickin' Out the Footlights...Again. A duet version featuring Jones and Shelby Lynne was made available on the 2009 Jones LP Burn Your Playhouse Down''. == Charts ==