Owner(s) | Richard Jackson (1985–1989) Leo Jackson (1985–1996) Andy Petree (1996–2004) |
---|---|
Base | North Carolina |
Series | Winston Cup, Busch Series, Craftsman Truck Series |
Race drivers | Harry Gant Benny Parsons Ken Schrader Greg Biffle Christian Fittipaldi Bobby Hamilton Joe Nemechek |
Sponsors | Skoal, Oakwood Homes, Copenhagen, Square D |
Manufacturer | Oldsmobile, Chevrolet |
Opened | 1985 |
Closed | 2004 |
Career | |
Drivers' Championships | 0 |
Race victories | 12 |
Andy Petree Racing (APR) was a NASCAR team that won 12 races. Originally formed in 1985 as Jackson Bros. Motorsports, its ownership changed hands several times over the years, with three different owners from its beginning to its closure in 2004. The team was based out of North Carolina, and was always a steady competitor for the win despite never winning a championship.
The team was formed in 1985 by brothers Leo and Richard Jackson. At the Daytona 500 that year, the team entered the No. 55 and No. 66 cars, sponsored by U.S. Smokeless Tobacco through its Copenhagen and Skoal brands and driven by another pair of brothers, Benny Parsons and his brother Phil. Benny finished 31st and Phil finished 29th, both suffering engine failure. Phil ran fourteen races with the team that year and posted three top 10s while splitting time with another ride, and Benny ran fourteen races as well and had six top 10 finishes running a limited schedule. The two returned for 1986, when BP had four top tens and won the team's first pole position. Phil ran a limited schedule himself and had five top-tens. After Benny left at the end of the year, his brother moved from the No. 66 to the No. 55. In his first year with the No. 55, Phil Parsons finished a then career-high fourth at Martinsville and finished 14th in points. The No. 66 ran only one race that year, with IndyCar driver Tom Sneva running at Daytona before dropping out with engine failure. In 1988, Parsons improved to a ninth-place finish in points, with the highlight of his year coming with his victory at the Winston 500 despite running out of fuel earlier in the race. In 1989 the team returned to a two-car operation, signing Harry Gant away from Mach 1 Racing with the Skoal sponsorship coming with him. The Jacksons also traded numbers with Mach 1 owner Hal Needham and ran the No. 33 alongside the No. 55. Gant won early in the season at Darlington Speedway and finished seventh in points, while Parsons, despite additional sponsorship from Crown Petroleum, only had three top-tens and dropped to 21st in points. At the end of the year, Parsons left for Morgan-McClure Motorsports.
In 1990, Richard Jackson splintered from the team to form his own operation, taking the equipment for the No. 55 with him. The newly renamed Leo Jackson Motorsports still held onto the No. 33 and Gant who won at Pocono Raceway but finished 17th in points that year. Phil Parsons also returned to the team briefly following his release from Morgan-McClure, pulling substitute duty for Gant at Bristol Motor Speedway. 1991 was much better for Gant, as he finished 3rd in points and won four consecutive races late in the season, which began a "Life Begins at 51" campaign because Gant was the oldest winner in the history of the sport. He followed that up with his final two career wins in 1992 and a fourth-place finish in points. In 1993 & 1994, he didn't win but had a pole each year as well as an eleventh-place finish in points in 1993. During his retirement year in 1994, LJM began grooming his replacement, Robert Pressley, who ran three races for the team in the No. 54 sponsored by Manheim Auctions. His best finish was 31st. He moved to the No. 33 full-time in 1995, where he posted a tenth-place at Bristol, and finished runner-up to Ricky Craven for Rookie of the Year. 1996 was a struggle for Pressley and the team, when Pressley was running decently before having to miss the first race at Dover Downs (he was replaced by Greg Sacks). Around this time, Jackson was contemplating retirement and began looking to sell the team. His buyer was his crew chief at the time, Andy Petree. [1] After one race as an owner, he released Pressley and had Todd Bodine finish out the year for him.
For 1997, Petree selected Ken Schrader to be his driver. Having won four Cup races, Schrader was solid all season long, as he won the pole for both Loudon races and finished tenth in the points standings. 1998 saw about the same result, with eight finishes of ninth or better, and two more pole positions. APR also expanded to a multi-car operation briefly, fielding the No. 55 Oakwood Homes-sponsored Chevy driven by Hut Stricklin in the Pepsi 400. The team became a multi-car full-time in 1999, with Kenny Wallace signing to drive the No. 55 car with a sponsorship from Square D. The year was "up and down" for Wallace, as he posted a career-best second-place finish at Loudon, but could only muster a 22nd-place points finish. Meanwhile, in the No. 33 team, NASCAR's community was shocked when long-time sponsor Skoal announced it would no longer continue its association with the No. 33. After the team signed Oakwood Homes to be a full-time sponsor for the car, Schrader announced he would leave to pursue other opportunities. After a long search, APR decided to hire Joe Nemechek to pilot the car. [1] While he didn't visit victory lane at all in 2000, he did have three top fives and the first top 25 points finish of his career. After nailing just one top 10 that year, Wallace announced he would leave for Eel River Racing. Wallace finished second at the Winston 500 at Talladega, pushing Dale Earnhardt to the win. It was Earnhardt's last victory before his death the following February in the Daytona 500. It wasn't long before Bobby Hamilton was named to handle the driving chores. [1] When the 2000 season came to an end, APR fielded an unprecedented third team, the No. 35 for Geoffrey Bodine at Atlanta Motor Speedway. 2001 was a banner year for APR, as Hamilton won at Talladega Superspeedway in the same car that Wallace finished 2nd in with last fall, and finished eighteenth in points, while Nemechek had ups and downs, breaking a shoulder at Dover and being replaced by Scott Pruett; Wally Dallenbach Jr.; and Bobby Hamilton Jr. (Hamilton's son). When he returned from his injuries, Nemechek was able to rebound with a victory at Rockingham Speedway and had a respectable 28th-place finish in points. Unfortunately, Oakwood Homes had financial trouble and backed out as sponsor, and Nemechek left to join Haas-Carter Motorsports as a replacement driver for Jimmy Spencer in the No. 26 Kmart-sponsored Ford (a ride that Nemechek, again, would lose due to Kmart filing for bankruptcy in 2002 and pulling their sponsorship from NASCAR).
Oakwood Homes' financial troubles left the No. 33 without a sponsor for 2002. Mike and Kenny Wallace ran limited schedules in the car, with Mike racing the No. 33 in The Winston, but no full-time sponsor could be located. [2] In addition, several attempts to get Jerry Jones to buy into the team failed. [3] The team's fortunes continued to decline as Hamilton, who was struggling intensely, suffered a broken shoulder in a crash. Ron Hornaday Jr. and Greg Biffle were able to fill in, but despite a tenth-place finish in the season finale, Hamilton was not happy, and he departed to the Craftsman Truck Series to race for his own team taking the Square D sponsorship with him. Christian Fittipaldi signed to drive the No. 33 at the Daytona 500, finishing 35th. The team only started one other race that year, with Paul Menard at Watkins Glen International Raceway, where he finished 29th. In 2004, Menard and Petree ran in the Busch Series in the hopes of attracting major sponsorship for the team's planned return to the Cup series, but Menard signed a contract with Dale Earnhardt, Inc., and took the sponsorship from his father's company with him. [4] Despite running a couple of truck series races, Petree auctioned off all of his equipment, with most of it, including the number, going to the Kevin Harvick Incorporated racing stable which raced as the No. 33 in the Busch Series. He then went on to race once again, and also became a broadcaster and an executive at Richard Childress Racing. [5]
NASCAR Cup Series results | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts | |||
1985 | Phil Parsons | 66 | Olds | DAY 29 | RCH | CAR | ATL 41 | BRI | DAR 8 | NWS | MAR | TAL 34 | DOV | CLT 33 | RSD | POC 11 | MCH 19 | DAY 27 | POC 8 | TAL 31 | MCH 6 | BRI | DAR 39 | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT 27 | CAR | ATL 14 | RSD | 21st | 2740 | |||||||||||
1986 | DAY 24 | RCH | CAR | ATL 18 | BRI | DAR 31 | NWS | MAR | TAL 5 | DOV | CLT 24 | RSD | POC 31 | MCH 33 | DAY 9 | POC 37 | TAL 13 | GLN 14 | MCH 9 | BRI | DAR 22 | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT 10 | CAR | ATL 10 | RSD | 27th | 1742 | |||||||||||||
1987 | Tom Sneva | DAY 29 | CAR | RCH | ATL | DAR | NWS | BRI | MAR | TAL | CLT | DOV | POC | RSD | MCH | DAY | POC | TAL | GLN | MCH | BRI | DAR | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT | CAR | RSD | ATL | 90th | 76 | ||||||||||||
1989 | Harry Gant | 33 | DAY 12 | CAR 31 | ATL 29 | RCH 14 | DAR 1* | BRI 10 | NWS 23 | MAR 12 | TAL 7 | CLT 40 | DOV 23 | SON 12 | POC 2 | MCH 32 | DAY 32 | POC 5 | TAL 8 | GLN 19 | MCH 3 | BRI 4 | DAR 6 | RCH 5 | DOV 38 | MAR 2 | CLT 2 | NWS 4 | CAR 29 | PHO 8 | ATL 17 | 7th | 3610 | |||||||||||
1990 | DAY 18 | RCH 36 | CAR 11 | ATL 9 | DAR 6 | NWS 13 | MAR 26 | TAL 36 | CLT 25 | DOV 34 | SON 19 | POC 1 | MCH 5 | DAY 7 | POC 14 | TAL 15 | GLN 21 | MCH 13 | BRI 26 | DAR 5 | RCH 36 | DOV 4 | MAR 5 | NWS 28 | CLT 26 | CAR 3 | PHO 37 | ATL 19 | 17th | 3182 | ||||||||||||||
Phil Parsons | BRI 25 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1991 | Harry Gant | DAY 25 | RCH 3 | CAR 3 | ATL 19 | DAR 27 | BRI 11 | NWS 23 | MAR 5 | TAL 1 | CLT 4 | DOV 3 | SON 27 | POC 4 | MCH 10 | DAY 23 | POC 26 | TAL 39 | GLN 28 | MCH 6 | BRI 19 | DAR 1* | RCH 1 | DOV 1* | MAR 1* | NWS 2* | CLT 4 | CAR 2* | PHO 23 | ATL 4 | 4th | 3985 | ||||||||||||
1992 | DAY 12 | CAR 3 | RCH 3 | ATL 2 | DAR 2 | BRI 29 | NWS 5 | MAR 5 | TAL 24 | CLT 5 | DOV 1 | SON 17 | POC 23 | MCH 7 | DAY 23 | POC 2 | TAL 17 | GLN 18 | MCH 1 | BRI 26 | DAR 16* | RCH 8 | DOV 6 | MAR 19 | NWS 13 | CLT 8 | CAR 6 | PHO 14 | ATL 13 | 4th | 3955 | |||||||||||||
1993 | Chevy | DAY 21 | CAR 31 | RCH 9 | ATL 21 | DAR 37 | BRI 28 | NWS 13 | MAR 31 | TAL 23 | SON 19 | CLT 18 | DOV 7 | POC 3 | MCH 10 | DAY 21 | NHA 17 | POC 9 | TAL 8 | GLN 10 | MCH 30 | BRI 4 | DAR 7 | RCH 11 | DOV 5 | MAR 33 | NWS 6 | CLT 12 | CAR 4 | PHO 12 | ATL 28 | 11th | 3524 | |||||||||||
1994 | DAY 34 | CAR 37 | RCH 34 | ATL 30 | DAR 8 | BRI 37 | NWS 8 | MAR DNQ | TAL 23 | SON 10 | CLT 7 | DOV 42 | POC 16 | MCH 35 | DAY 31 | NHA 17 | POC 38 | TAL 21 | IND 37 | GLN 10 | MCH 25 | BRI 9 | DAR 41 | RCH 22 | DOV 13 | MAR 8 | NWS 32 | CLT 22 | CAR 31 | PHO 23 | ATL 33 | 25th | 2720 | |||||||||||
1995 | Robert Pressley | DAY 26 | CAR 42 | RCH 35 | ATL 31 | DAR 30 | BRI 10 | NWS 18 | MAR 17 | TAL 18 | SON 30 | CLT 24 | DOV 19 | POC 37 | MCH 17 | DAY 11 | NHA 13 | POC 34 | TAL 27 | IND 28 | GLN 34 | MCH 18 | BRI 24 | DAR 17 | RCH 30 | DOV 14 | MAR 34 | NWS 33 | CLT 42 | CAR 29 | PHO 19 | ATL 41 | 29th | 2663 | ||||||||||
1996 | DAY 30 | CAR 26 | RCH 16 | ATL 27 | DAR 36 | BRI 17 | NWS 4 | MAR 34 | TAL 7 | SON 34 | CLT 33 | POC 33 | MCH 23 | DAY 17 | NHA 5 | POC 25 | TAL 31 | IND 30 | GLN 30 | MCH 41 | BRI 33 | DAR 27 | RCH 26 | DOV 32 | MAR 32 | NWS 33 | CLT 32 | 32nd | 2485 | |||||||||||||||
Greg Sacks | DOV 27 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Todd Bodine | CAR 20 | PHO 11 | ATL 32 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1997 | Ken Schrader | DAY 33 | CAR 18 | RCH 35 | ATL 25 | DAR 8 | TEX 18 | BRI 12 | MAR 10 | SON 31 | TAL 12 | CLT 38 | DOV 6 | POC 23 | MCH 27 | CAL 34 | DAY 15 | NHA 11 | POC 14 | IND 11 | GLN 14 | MCH 14 | BRI 6 | DAR 10 | RCH 14 | NHA 37 | DOV 12 | MAR 9 | CLT 15 | TAL 4 | CAR 30 | PHO 4 | ATL 20 | 10th | 3576 | |||||||||
1998 | DAY 4 | CAR 23 | LVS 21 | ATL 17 | DAR 18 | BRI 6 | TEX 21 | MAR 10 | TAL 29 | CAL 15 | CLT 10 | DOV 15 | RCH 4 | MCH 28 | POC 43 | SON 20 | NHA 9 | POC 8 | IND 10 | GLN 24 | MCH 14 | BRI 14 | NHA 42 | DAR 13 | RCH 4 | DOV 39 | MAR 13 | CLT 40 | TAL 24 | DAY 9 | PHO 22 | CAR 14 | ATL 7 | 12th | 3675 | |||||||||
1999 | DAY 6 | CAR 11 | LVS 18 | ATL 26 | DAR 43 | TEX 17 | BRI 20 | MAR 9 | TAL 6 | CAL 14 | RCH 14 | CLT 7 | DOV 41 | MCH 13 | POC 27 | SON 39 | DAY 20 | NHA 35 | POC 34 | IND 18 | GLN 17 | MCH 25 | BRI 10 | DAR 9 | RCH 21 | NHA 12 | DOV 26 | MAR 21 | CLT 23 | TAL 25 | CAR 30 | PHO 14 | HOM 29 | ATL 19 | 15th | 3479 | ||||||||
2000 | Joe Nemechek | DAY 42 | CAR 30 | LVS 9 | ATL 5 | DAR 41 | BRI 25 | TEX 37 | MAR 17 | TAL 22 | CAL 20 | RCH 23 | CLT 23 | DOV 7 | MCH 18 | POC 42 | SON 11 | DAY 11 | NHA 2 | POC 34 | IND 18 | GLN 8 | MCH 23 | BRI 27 | DAR 31 | RCH 40 | NHA 9 | DOV 7 | MAR 14 | CLT 14 | TAL 3 | CAR 10 | PHO 24 | HOM 18 | ATL 25 | 15th | 3534 | |||||||
2001 | DAY 11 | CAR 17 | LVS 35 | ATL 17 | DAR 24 | BRI 43 | TEX 41 | MAR 16 | TAL 6 | CAL 20 | RCH 19 | DAY 27 | CHI 16 | NHA 41 | POC 23 | IND 20 | GLN 32 | MCH 22 | BRI 24 | DAR 33 | RCH 16 | DOV 7 | KAN 20 | CLT 20 | MAR 23 | TAL 8 | PHO 35 | CAR 1* | HOM 31 | ATL 39 | NHA 20 | 28th | 2994 | |||||||||||
Bobby Hamilton Jr. | CLT 39 | DOV 42 | MCH 24 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wally Dallenbach Jr. | POC 26 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Scott Pruett | SON 12 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2002 | Mike Wallace | DAY 21 | CAR 38 | LVS | ATL | DAR | BRI | TEX | MAR | TAL 42 | CAL | RCH | CLT | DOV | POC | MCH | SON | DAY 41 | CHI | NHA | POC | IND | GLN | MCH | BRI | DAR | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN | 41st | 1551 | ||||||||||||
Kenny Wallace | TAL 33 | CLT | MAR | ATL | CAR | PHO | HOM | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2003 | Christian Fittipaldi | DAY 35 | CAR | LVS | ATL | DAR | BRI | TEX | TAL | MAR | CAL | RCH | CLT | DOV | POC | MCH | 44th | 857 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Paul Menard | SON DNQ | DAY | CHI | NHA | POC | IND | GLN 29 | MCH | BRI | DAR | RCH | NHA | DOV | TAL | KAN | CLT | MAR | ATL | PHO | CAR | HOM |
NASCAR Cup Series results | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts | |||
1985 | Benny Parsons | 55 | Chevy | DAY 31 | RCH | CAR | ATL 8 | BRI | DAR 32 | NWS | MAR | TAL 29 | DOV | CLT 42 | RSD | POC 6 | MCH 10 | DAY 11 | POC 6 | TAL 36 | MCH 5 | BRI | DAR 8 | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT 41 | CAR | ATL 33 | RSD | 29th | 1427 | |||||||||||
1986 | Olds | DAY 5 | RCH | CAR | ATL 6 | BRI | DAR 28 | NWS | MAR | TAL 20 | DOV | CLT 34 | RSD | POC 33 | MCH 41 | DAY 36 | POC 29 | TAL 5 | GLN 8 | MCH 26 | BRI | DAR 31 | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT 30 | CAR | ATL 11 | RSD 27 | 30th | 1555 | ||||||||||||
1987 | Phil Parsons | DAY 11 | CAR 11 | RCH 15 | ATL 27 | DAR 9 | NWS 7 | BRI 20 | MAR 4 | TAL 31 | CLT 8 | DOV 22 | POC 11 | RSD 11 | MCH 21 | DAY 15 | POC 39 | TAL 29 | GLN 7 | MCH 14 | BRI 19 | DAR 12 | RCH 20 | DOV 29 | MAR 16 | NWS 14 | CLT 27 | CAR 9 | RSD 13 | ATL 8 | 14th | 3327 | ||||||||||||
1988 | DAY 3 | RCH 30 | CAR 15 | ATL 37 | DAR 8 | BRI 22 | NWS 7 | MAR 9 | TAL 1 | CLT 8 | DOV 39 | RSD 5 | POC 8 | MCH 7 | DAY 3 | POC 31 | TAL 11 | GLN 4 | MCH 20 | BRI 19 | DAR 6 | RCH 24 | DOV 14 | MAR 21 | CLT 27 | NWS 2 | CAR 8 | PHO 9 | ATL 16 | 9th | 3630 | |||||||||||||
1989 | DAY 5 | CAR 39 | ATL 14 | RCH 27 | DAR 41 | BRI 23 | NWS DNQ | MAR 13 | TAL 17 | CLT 13 | DOV 10 | SON 18 | POC 12 | MCH 15 | DAY 3 | POC 12 | TAL 41 | GLN 17 | MCH 33 | BRI 11 | DAR 21 | RCH 36 | DOV 13 | MAR 14 | CLT 20 | NWS 28 | CAR 24 | PHO 37 | ATL 42 | 21st | 2933 | |||||||||||||
1994 | Robert Pressley | 54 | Chevy | DAY 40 | CAR | RCH | ATL | DAR | BRI | NWS | MAR | TAL | SON | CLT | DOV | POC | MCH | DAY | NHA DNQ | POC | TAL | IND DNQ | GLN | MCH DNQ | BRI | DAR | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT 31 | CAR | PHO | ATL 35 | 57th | 171 | ||||||||
1998 | Hut Stricklin | 55 | DAY | CAR | LVS | ATL | DAR | BRI | TEX | MAR | TAL | CAL | CLT | DOV | RCH | MCH | POC | SON | NHA | POC | IND | GLN | MCH | BRI | NHA | DAR | RCH | DOV | MAR | CLT | TAL | DAY 42 | PHO | CAR | ATL | 65th | 37 | |||||||
1999 | Kenny Wallace | DAY 42 | CAR 13 | LVS 40 | ATL 29 | DAR 23 | TEX 39 | BRI 16 | MAR 6 | TAL 7 | CAL 27 | RCH 41 | CLT 12 | DOV 39 | MCH 21 | POC 25 | SON 14 | DAY 15 | NHA 2 | POC 37 | IND 39 | GLN 19 | MCH 27 | BRI 11 | DAR 35 | RCH 12 | NHA 34 | DOV 43 | MAR 5 | CLT 30 | TAL 5 | CAR 16 | PHO 18 | HOM 15 | ATL 34 | 22nd | 3210 | |||||||
2000 | DAY 29 | CAR 24 | LVS 39 | ATL 37 | DAR 35 | BRI 20 | TEX 21 | MAR 42 | TAL 40 | CAL 36 | RCH 20 | CLT 27 | DOV 18 | MCH 31 | POC 23 | SON 13 | DAY 19 | NHA 26 | POC 21 | IND 29 | GLN 14 | MCH 30 | BRI 26 | DAR 35 | RCH 14 | NHA 43 | DOV 15 | MAR 22 | CLT 37 | TAL 2 | CAR 43 | PHO 19 | HOM 24 | ATL 23 | 26th | 2874 | ||||||||
2001 | Bobby Hamilton | DAY 8 | CAR 13 | LVS 30 | ATL 22 | DAR 9 | BRI 8 | TEX 18 | MAR 4* | TAL 1 | CAL 36 | RCH 28 | CLT 24 | DOV 20 | MCH 22 | POC 33 | SON 15 | DAY 38 | CHI 30 | NHA 29 | POC 29 | IND 27 | GLN 36 | MCH 28 | BRI 23 | DAR 15 | RCH 13 | DOV 10 | KAN 15 | CLT 31 | MAR 13 | TAL 5 | PHO 36 | CAR 22 | HOM 39 | ATL 27 | NHA 29 | 18th | 3575 | |||||
2002 | DAY 32 | CAR 9 | LVS 43 | ATL 29 | DAR 13 | BRI 28 | TEX 31 | MAR 27 | TAL 22 | CAL 30 | RCH 17 | CLT 23 | DOV 9 | POC 27 | MCH 37 | SON 31 | DAY 16 | CHI 15 | NHA 26 | POC 19 | IND 23 | GLN 19 | MCH 23 | BRI 11 | DAR 23 | CLT 27 | MAR 25 | ATL 35 | CAR 38 | PHO 29 | HOM 10 | 32nd | 2832 | |||||||||||
Greg Biffle | RCH 33 | NHA 27 | DOV 33 | KAN 36 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ron Hornaday Jr. | TAL 32 |
Joseph Frank Nemechek III is an American professional stock car racing driver who last competed part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 24 Toyota Supra for Sam Hunt Racing. Nemechek has made the second most national series starts in NASCAR history. He claimed the record in 2019 after he passed seven-time Cup Series champion Richard Petty, but was surpassed by Kevin Harvick in 2021. Nemechek won the 1992 NASCAR Busch Series championship.
Michael Samuel Wallace is an American professional stock car racing driver. He last competed part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 0 Chevrolet Camaro for JD Motorsports. Born in Fenton, Missouri, he is the younger brother of Rusty Wallace, older brother of Kenny Wallace, and uncle of Steve Wallace. His daughter, Chrissy Wallace, and son, Matt Wallace, are also active in racing competition.
Robert William Pressley is an American former NASCAR driver who previously served as the promoter at Kingsport Speedway in Kingsport, Tennessee. Pressley currently owns the restaurant Celebrity's Hotdogs in Asheville, North Carolina. Pressley was also a County Commissioner in Buncombe County, North Carolina.
MB2 Motorsports was a NASCAR Cup Series team based in Mooresville, North Carolina, near the sport's hub in Charlotte. The team was founded by Read Morton, Tom Beard, and Nelson Bowers, from which the original team name derived. Bowers was the longest tenured of the original owners, and the listed owner of the teams' entries when resort and real-estate developer Bobby Ginn bought out the team in 2007, renaming it to Ginn Racing for that season only. The Valvoline corporation co-owned the No. 10 car with the principal owners from 2001 to 2005 as MBV Motorsports, while the No. 36 entry was co-owned by Centrix Financial, LLC owner Robert Sutton as MB Sutton Motorsports in 2005.
Kevin Harvick, Inc., colloquially referred to as KHI, is a racing team owned by former NASCAR Cup Series driver Kevin Harvick and his wife DeLana, who is the daughter of former Busch Series driver John Linville. The team owned cars in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Truck Series, and the ARCA Re/Max Series.
Bill Davis Racing was a racing team that participated in all three of NASCAR's top divisions until 2009.
Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) is an American professional stock car racing organization founded by Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Joe Gibbs. His son, J. D. Gibbs, ran the team with him until his death in 2019. Founded in Huntersville, North Carolina, in 1992, JGR has won five Cup Series championships, four Xfinity Series championships and one ARCA Series championship.
Donlavey Racing was a stock car racing team that competed from 1950 until 2004 in the NASCAR Winston Cup Series. It was owned by Junie Donlavey and ran a total of 863 races in NASCAR. Donlavey Racing used a number of makes and numbers, but for years was best known for the No. 90 Ford. Though the team only had one points win and two pole positions in its long history, three of Donlavey's drivers won Rookie of the Year honors and a number of former and future NASCAR race winners drove for the team. Sixty-seven different drivers ran at least one race for Donlavey.
Phillip Gregory Parsons is an American former professional stock car racing driver, team owner, and analyst for FOX NASCAR since 2003. After years racing in NASCAR Winston Cup, he returned to the Busch Series where he enjoyed modest success.
Michael Waltrip Racing Holdings LLC, doing business as Michael Waltrip Racing ("MWR"), was an American professional stock car racing team that last competed full-time in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. The company was as a 50–50 partnership between Robert Kauffman, the founder and managing partner of Fortress Investment Group, and two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip, who first established the team in 1996 in the Busch Series. The team was the first full-time three-car team to field Toyota Camrys when Toyota entered the Sprint Cup racing fold in 2007, before being joined by Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008. MWR was also the last original Toyota team in the Sprint Cup Series to still be in operation, as Bill Davis Racing and Red Bull Racing Team had both ceased operations in the preceding years.
Premium Motorsports was an American professional stock car racing team that competed in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team last fielded the No. 15 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 LE full-time for Brennan Poole, and the No. 27 Camaro part-time for Reed Sorenson.
Mach 1 Racing was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series team. It was owned by Hollywood stuntman Hal Needham and actor Burt Reynolds.
Larry Hedrick Motorsports (LHM) was a NASCAR team. It was owned by businessman Larry Hedrick and always fielded the No. 41 Chevrolet in both the Winston Cup and the Busch Series. The team ran from 1990 until its closure in 2001.
Jasper Motorsports was a NASCAR Nextel Cup team. It was owned by a variety of owners including D.K. Ulrich and Doug Bawel.
Melling Racing was a Championship-winning NASCAR Winston Cup Series race team owned by Harry Melling and his son Mark Melling. Harry Melling ran the team from its inception in 1982, to mid-1999. When Harry died after a heart attack in mid-1999, his son Mark then took over Melling Racing until the team closed in 2003. The team was most notable for fielding cars for Bill Elliott in the 1980s, where he won the 1985 Southern 500 at Darlington to claim the first ever Winston Million bonus, claiming the fastest qualifying lap in NASCAR history at Talladega Superspeedway with a lap of 212.809 mph in 1987, and winning the 1988 Winston Cup championship. Melling won 34 career NASCAR Winston Cup races, all of them with Bill Elliott.
NEMCO Motorsports is an American professional stock car racing team that currently competes part-time in the ARCA Menards Series. The team is owned by driver Joe Nemechek and his family. NEMCO Motorsports has had success, winning the 1992 Busch Series Championship. The team previously competed in Cup, Xfinity, and Craftsman Truck Series competition.
FILMAR Racing is a former NASCAR Winston Cup and Busch Series team. It was owned by Fil Martocci and crew chief Gil Martin. The team was sold in 1999 to the Pinnacle Motorsports Group and then to Davis & Weight Motorsports.
JD Motorsports was an American professional stock car racing team that competed in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. It was owned and operated by Johnny Davis. It last fielded the No. 4 part-time for multiple drivers. The team utilized engines from Clements Racing Engines and was one of the oldest teams in the sport, having competed in the very first official NASCAR Xfinity Series race, the 1983 Goody's 300.
JTG Daugherty Racing, currently rebranding to Hyak Motorsports, is an American stock car racing team that competes in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team fields the No. 47 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 full-time for Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and has a technical alliance with Hendrick Motorsports.
Identity Ventures Racing was an American professional stock car racing team that last competed in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. The team was founded by Identity Ventures Owners James Hamilton and Mark Bailey, Atlanta-based investor Nat Hardwick and Jay Robinson, longtime owner of a Nationwide Series team. IVR formed before the 2014 NASCAR season, and was run out of Robinson's Nationwide Series shop. The team operated as a satellite team of Michael Waltrip Racing to handling that organization's research-and-development operations, using the equipment of Joe Nemechek, one of the team's drivers. Following lawsuits against Hardwick in August and September 2014, his ownership stake in the team passed back to Hamilton, Bailey and Robinson. The team folded after one season, and Robinson moved the equipment and owner's points to his own team, now known as Premium Motorsports.