Owner(s) | Nelson Bowers Tom Beard Read Morton James Rocco (MBV) Bob Sutton (MB Sutton) Jay Frye (CEO and Team Director) Bobby Ginn Thomas Ginn (Ginn Racing) |
---|---|
Base | Mooresville, North Carolina |
Series | NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series |
Race drivers | Sterling Marlin, Mark Martin, Ken Schrader, Ernie Irvan, Scott Riggs, Boris Said, Regan Smith, Jerry Nadeau, Joe Nemechek, Johnny Benson Jr., Kraig Kinser, Bill Elliott |
Sponsors | United States Army, Waste Management, Inc., Mars Candy, Valvoline, Centrix Financial, Ginn Resorts, Panasonic, CertainTeed, USG Sheetrock |
Manufacturer | Chevrolet, Pontiac |
Opened | 1997 (as MB2 Motorsports) 2007 (as Ginn Racing) |
Closed | 2007 (as Ginn Racing; merged with DEI) |
Career | |
Drivers' Championships | 0 |
Race victories | 2 |
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 (with his family having 80% ownership; longtime team director Jay Frye owned the remaining 20% of the rebranded team) [1] [2] in 2007, renaming it to Ginn Racing for that season only. [1] [2] The Valvoline corporation co-owned the No. 10 (later the No. 14) car with the principal owners from 2001 to 2005 as MBV Motorsports, while the No. 36 entry (later the No. 13) was co-owned by Centrix Financial, LLC owner Robert Sutton as MB Sutton Motorsports in 2005.
Throughout the existence of the team in both MB2 Motorsports and Ginn Racing iterations, the organization ran General Motors brands.
The No. 01 car started out as the No. 36 Pontiac in 1997 with sponsorship from M&M-Mars through its Skittles candy brand, and driver Derrike Cope. [3] Cope finished 27th in the final point standings.
Veteran driver Ernie Irvan took over from Cope in 1998. The season was highlighted by Irvan's pole win at the Brickyard 400. M&M's replaced Skittles as the team's sponsor in 1999. Irvan retired from racing in September following a crash at Michigan International Speedway. Dick Trickle temporarily replaced Irvan before the driving chores were permanently turned over to journeyman Jerry Nadeau.
Nadeau left MB2 due to a prior commitment to drive for Hendrick Motorsports, and MB2 signed four-time winner Ken Schrader to fill the seat. Schrader drove the No. 36 for three seasons before leaving for BAM Racing.
In 2003, the United States Army replaced M&M's as the team's sponsor. The car number was switched from 36 to 01 to support the Army's slogan, "An Army of One." Nadeau returned to MB2 as the driver of the No. 01 car, and in his first 10 races with the team he had only two top-20 finishes, with a fourth-place finish at Texas.
On May 2, 2003, during practice at Richmond International Raceway, Nadeau lost control of the No. 01 while trying to avoid another car in turn one, spun and slammed driver-side first into the concrete wall. He suffered fractures to his skull and several ribs along with a collapsed lung and temporary paralysis on his left side, and the cumulative effects forced him into retirement at age 33. [4] Busch Series veteran Jason Keller replaced Nadeau at the Richmond race and finished 32nd. The team went through several substitutes for the rest of the year. Mike Wallace ran the next four races, then four more races afterwards (skipping Sonoma) with a best finish of 19th at Dover. Mike Skinner, released from Morgan McClure Motorsports, made eleven starts in the #01, earning a pole at Richmond. Boris Said ran both road course races, with both a pole and sixth-place finish at Sonoma.
Said and Skinner earned spots in the 2004 Budweiser Shootout for their respective pole runs, with Said in the #01 finishing 10th, and Skinner finishing 15th in the #10 Valvoline car.
Joe Nemechek, who had been released from Hendrick Motorsports' No. 25 car (where he had replaced Nadeau), was signed by MB2 as the new permanent driver of the No. 01 car starting with the last four races of 2003, and earned a Top 10 finish at Atlanta. Nemechek finished 19th in points in 2004, but won two consecutive poles with the second leading to victory at the 2004 Banquet 400, in which he led the final 37 laps to win his fourth and final career Nextel Cup race and giving him a weekend sweep at Kansas Speedway, after having won the Mr. Goodcents 300 Busch Series race the day before. [2] [5] Nemechek finished with three Top 5 finishes and nine Top 10s, and signed a contract extension that kept him with MB2 through 2005. [6]
Nemechek started off 2005 with a strong run at the second race of the season at Auto Club Speedway. Coming off a solid 13th-place finish at Daytona, Joe started 4th and led leading a race-high 63 laps before his Hendrick Motorsports-built engine expired on lap 178. This was one of six Hendrick engine failures, which included that of teammate Scott Riggs. [7] By race 26 at Richmond, the No. 01 team found itself as a longshot of making the Chase, sitting 16th in the standings 135 points out of 10th place [8] as the last mathematical contender for a spot in the 10-race playoff. [9] The team's chase hunt was ultimately foiled when Travis Kvapil collided with Nemechek under caution right after he had gotten back on the lead lap, relegating them to a 26th-place finish. [10] Overall, Nemechek improved on the previous years points performance, ranking 16th with one pole and nine Top 10s but no wins and only two Top 5s.
2006 was a struggle for Nemechek and the No. 01 team, with the team not scoring a Top 10 until finishing 9th at Charlotte in October, the 31st race of the season. Nemechek went winless again, with no pole starts, only two Top 10s, and a dismal 27th-place points finish. [11]
Veteran Mark Martin, coming off his final year with Roush Racing, was signed drive the car for 23 races (21 points races plus the Budweiser Shootout and Nextel All-Star Challenge) in 2007, with Joe Nemechek moving over to the team's new No. 13 team. Regan Smith was pinned to fill the remaining 16 races of the season, while driving in the Busch Series for the team as well. The team also changed its name to Ginn Racing to reflect Bobby Ginn's new majority interest in the team. [12] Martin was leading in the final turn of the season-opening Daytona 500, after lining up on the final restart with former Roush teammates Greg Biffle and Matt Kenseth behind him. Coming down the front stretch, and with the field wrecking behind him, Martin looked to have finally come through at Daytona. But the caution was not called, and Kevin Harvick caught Martin on his outside, beating him to the line by two-hundredths of a second. [13] Martin put together more strong finishes, and after the fourth race at Atlanta was leading the points standings in what was supposed to be his first season of semi-retirement. Resisting the chance to capture his first championship, Martin did step out of the car as scheduled, breaking a streak of 621 consecutive starts. [14] In 24 starts for the team, Martin scored five Top 5s and 11 Top 10s, and finished 27th in points despite missing 12 races.
Rookie Regan Smith meanwhile made his debut at Bristol Motor Speedway in March, finishing 25th. Smith would run six more races in the car, with a best finish of 24th at Talladega Superspeedway. On July 17, it was announced that Smith would move to the No. 14 car on a full-time basis, replacing veteran Sterling Marlin. Meanwhile, 23-year-old Aric Almirola, who was granted his release from Joe Gibbs Racing after being pulled out of a car he qualified on the pole during a Busch Series race in favor of Denny Hamlin, signed on to be the new co-driver of the No. 01. [15] With the merger of Ginn and Dale Earnhardt, Inc. not long afterwards, Smith was left on the sidelines while Almirola ran five races. Aric's results were not much better than Regan's, with a best finish of 26th at Phoenix. Both drivers would continue with DEI in 2008 running for ROTY, and both would become winners later in their Cup careers.
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | Derrike Cope | 36 | Pontiac | DAY 36 | CAR 31 | RCH 30 | ATL DNQ | DAR 20 | TEX 41 | BRI 16 | MAR 34 | SON 18 | TAL 13 | CLT 12 | DOV 20 | POC 11 | MCH 8 | CAL 29 | DAY 28 | NHA 20 | POC 16 | IND 41 | GLN 38 | MCH 16 | BRI 32 | DAR 14 | RCH 16 | NHA 26 | DOV 30 | MAR 36 | CLT 33 | TAL 18 | CAR 20 | PHO 16 | ATL 5 | 27th | 2901 | ||||
1998 | Ernie Irvan | DAY 6 | CAR 19 | LVS 30 | ATL 15 | DAR 36 | BRI 20 | TEX 43 | MAR 9 | TAL 6 | CAL 13 | CLT 11 | DOV 9 | RCH 29 | MCH 14 | POC 34 | SON 36 | NHA 20 | POC 9 | IND 6 | GLN 33 | MCH 6* | BRI 22 | NHA 28 | DAR 6 | RCH 14 | DOV 8 | MAR 8 | CLT 31 | TAL 37 | DAY 8 | 16th | 3457 | ||||||||
Ricky Craven | PHO 30 | CAR 37 | ATL 25 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1999 | Ernie Irvan | DAY 14 | CAR 29 | LVS 6 | ATL 7 | DAR 24 | TEX 37 | BRI 43 | MAR 22 | TAL 40 | CAL 35 | RCH 33 | CLT 36 | DOV 35 | MCH 7 | POC 8 | SON 30 | DAY 9 | NHA 21 | POC 11 | IND 24 | GLN 41 | 35th | 2831 | |||||||||||||||||
Dick Trickle | MCH 40 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jerry Nadeau | BRI 20 | DAR 43 | RCH 18 | NHA 32 | DOV 16 | MAR 26 | CLT 34 | TAL 40 | CAR 37 | PHO 37 | HOM 38 | ATL 20 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2000 | Ken Schrader | DAY 9 | CAR 13 | LVS 16 | ATL 23 | DAR 22 | BRI 26 | TEX 18 | MAR 13 | TAL 36 | CAL 24 | RCH 12 | CLT 37 | DOV 23 | MCH 16 | POC 18 | SON 15 | DAY 23 | NHA 23 | POC 19 | IND 22 | GLN 18 | MCH 19 | BRI 12 | DAR 16 | RCH 17 | NHA 10 | DOV 30 | MAR 16 | CLT 25 | TAL 37 | CAR 18 | PHO 40 | HOM 32 | ATL 26 | 18th | 3398 | ||||
2001 | DAY 13 | CAR 22 | LVS 25 | ATL 8 | DAR 13 | BRI 35 | TEX 10 | MAR 25 | TAL 40 | CAL 33 | RCH 9 | CLT 21 | DOV 36 | MCH 14 | POC 9 | SON 37 | DAY 15 | CHI 29 | NHA 22 | POC 17 | IND 28 | GLN 19 | MCH 20 | BRI 22 | DAR 10 | RCH 23 | DOV 18 | KAN 26 | CLT 14 | MAR 11 | TAL 31 | PHO 18 | CAR 19 | HOM 42 | ATL 31 | NHA 39 | 19th | 3480 | |||
2002 | DAY 26 | CAR 35 | LVS 26 | ATL 24 | DAR 35 | BRI 22 | TEX 34 | MAR 36 | TAL 24 | CAL 43 | RCH 15 | CLT 18 | DOV 36 | POC 16 | MCH 25 | SON 38 | DAY 25 | CHI 40 | NHA 24 | POC 20 | IND 14 | GLN 28 | MCH 14 | BRI 14 | DAR 26 | RCH 26 | NHA 13 | DOV 22 | KAN 28 | TAL 41 | CLT 31 | MAR 26 | ATL 42 | CAR 22 | PHO 37 | HOM 27 | 30th | 2954 | |||
2003 | Jerry Nadeau | 01 | DAY 28 | CAR 26 | LVS 22 | ATL 31 | DAR 35 | BRI 28 | TEX 4 | TAL 36 | MAR 41 | CAL 14 | 31st | 3032 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jason Keller | RCH 32 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mike Wallace | CLT 31 | DOV 19 | POC 31 | MCH 23 | DAY 42 | CHI 37 | NHA 42 | POC 23 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Boris Said | SON 6 | GLN 39 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mike Skinner | IND 35 | MCH 22 | BRI 18 | DAR 29 | RCH 18 | NHA 22 | DOV 41 | TAL 27 | KAN 29 | CLT 39 | MAR 21 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joe Nemechek | ATL 10 | PHO 31 | CAR 25 | HOM 17 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2004 | Chevy | DAY 6 | CAR 24 | LVS 19 | ATL 15 | DAR 20 | BRI 27 | TEX 14 | MAR 27 | TAL 32 | CAL 28 | RCH 36 | CLT 14 | DOV 38 | POC 18 | MCH 35 | SON 29 | DAY 10 | CHI 8 | NHA 20 | POC 16 | IND 17 | GLN 22 | MCH 13 | BRI 42 | CAL 12 | RCH 22 | NHA 6 | DOV 35 | TAL 7 | KAN 1 | CLT 5 | MAR 30 | ATL 4 | PHO 12 | DAR 8 | HOM 27 | 19th | 3878 | ||
2005 | DAY 13 | CAL 39* | LVS 19 | ATL 35 | BRI 33 | MAR 10 | TEX 17 | PHO 10 | TAL 31 | DAR 11 | RCH 18 | CLT 18 | DOV 27 | POC 3 | MCH 6 | SON 23 | DAY 15 | CHI 15 | NHA 18 | POC 22 | IND 28 | GLN 9 | MCH 8 | BRI 12 | CAL 10 | RCH 26 | NHA 25 | DOV 17 | TAL 9 | KAN 20 | CLT 4 | MAR 23 | ATL 18 | TEX 37 | PHO 17 | HOM 24 | 16th | 3953 | |||
2006 | DAY 33 | CAL 27 | LVS 13 | ATL 17 | BRI 28 | MAR 23 | TEX 23 | PHO 35 | TAL 27 | RCH 28 | DAR 16 | CLT 18 | DOV 35 | POC 29 | MCH 26 | SON 25 | DAY 19 | CHI 33 | NHA 41 | POC 17 | IND 24 | GLN 42 | MCH 26 | BRI 26 | CAL 25 | RCH 32 | NHA 32 | DOV 26 | KAN 27 | TAL 18 | CLT 9 | MAR 20 | ATL 9 | TEX 18 | PHO 19 | HOM 13 | 27th | 3255 | |||
2007 | Mark Martin | DAY 2 | CAL 5 | LVS 5 | ATL 10 | TEX 3 | PHO 12 | RCH 17 | DAR 14 | CLT 11 | DOV 7 | POC 7 | MCH 29 | DAY 17 | CHI 14 | IND | POC | GLN | MCH | BRI | CAL | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN | TAL | CLT | MAR | ATL | TEX | PHO | HOM | 27th | 2960 | |||||||
Regan Smith | BRI 25 | MAR 26 | TAL 24 | SON 30 | NHA 32 |
On April 30, 2004, MB2 Motorsports announced a partnership with CENTRIX Financial, LLC, coming on as an associate sponsor for the No. 01 car and No. 10 car. In addition, the team's original number 36 would be resurrected to field a third team part-time for Road course ringer Boris Said, who had driven the No. 01 for two races in 2003 which included a pole at Sonoma. Centrix was scheduled to sponsor two races, debuting with a 6th-place finish at Sonoma. [16] Centrix sponsored Said again at the oval track Auto Club Speedway, where he finished one lap down in 30th. USG Sheetrock (an associate on the No. 01) came on to sponsor two more races for Said, DNQing at Watkins Glen and finishing 28th in the season finale at Homestead after a transmission failure late in the race.
The No. 36 team returned for 2005, expanding Said's schedule to a minimum of 10 races beginning with the Daytona 500. Like the 10 team which was co-owned by Valvoline executive James Rocco, sponsor Centrix's owner and racing enthusiast Bob Sutton came on as an equity partner for the No.36 car, changing the team name to MB Sutton Motorsports. Said had stated that he would have liked to drive the car on a full-time basis if sponsorship was found. [17] [18] Veteran crew chief Frankie Stoddard would lead the No. 36 team. [19] Said ultimately attempted 12 races, struggling on oval tracks, with a best finish of 27th at Daytona and Texas and three DNQs. He did run well at Talladega in May, qualifying 12th and running in the Top 15 before a 25-car pileup ended his day with 35 laps remaining. [20] Boris was, however, strong as always in his road course element. At Sonoma in June, Said was running well when he entered the pits while they were closed after a caution was thrown with 40 laps to go. Sent back to 32nd place, he made it up to 13th place with 10 laps to go, but was relegated to a 17th-place finish after a caution with seven laps to go. [21] Said shined later in the year at Watkins Glen, starting 41st after qualifying was rained out, and racing with NASCAR Road Course aces Tony Stewart and Robby Gordon for the win. Said would score a career-best 3rd-place finish. [22] Said left the team to drive for No Fear Racing in the No. 60 Ford in 2006.
Early in 2006, 1988 Cup Champion and two-time Daytona 500 winner Bill Elliott announced that he would pilot the No. 36 Chevrolet in the 2006 Daytona 500, with Ginn Resorts coming on to sponsor the effort. [23] Elliott qualified 33rd, but avoided several wrecks to finish 19th in the Great American Race. [24] The team would not run again in 2006.
The team went full-time in 2007, switching to No. 13 with Joe Nemechek moving over from the No. 01 and Peter Sospenzo taking on crew chief duties. [1] CertainTeed was announced as the primary sponsor of the car for 18 races, with associate sponsor status for the other half of the season. [25] Bobby Ginn's Ginn Resorts filled out the remaining races. Nemechek opened the year with a 9th-place finish at the Daytona 500, but missed the fifth race of the season at Bristol and did not have another Top 10 with the team for the rest of the year. After sitting 33rd in points following the race at Chicagoland, Nemechek was released from the No. 13 car as well as teammate Sterling Marlin from his No. 14 ride, with the team's status "being evaluated because of lack of sponsorship." [26] Ultimately, the No. 13 team was shut down after the merger with DEI, and Nemechek would move to Furniture Row Racing for the remainder of the season beginning at Fontana. [11]
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Boris Said | 36 | Chevy | DAY | CAR | LVS | ATL | DAR | BRI | TEX | MAR | TAL | CAL | RCH | CLT | DOV | POC | MCH | SON 6 | DAY | CHI | NHA | POC | IND | GLN DNQ | MCH | BRI | CAL 30 | RCH | NHA | DOV | TAL | KAN | CLT | MAR | ATL | PHO | DAR | HOM 28 | 55th | 302 |
2005 | DAY 27 | CAL | LVS | ATL | BRI | MAR | TEX 27 | PHO | TAL 35 | DAR | RCH | CLT DNQ | DOV | POC | MCH | SON 17 | DAY 28 | CHI | NHA | POC | IND 31 | GLN 3 | MCH | BRI | CAL 30 | RCH | NHA | DOV | TAL | KAN 31 | CLT DNQ | MAR | ATL DNQ | TEX | PHO | HOM | 42nd | 791 | |||
2006 | Bill Elliott | DAY 19 | CAL | LVS | ATL | BRI | MAR | TEX | PHO | TAL | RCH | DAR | CLT | DOV | POC | MCH | SON | DAY | CHI | NHA | POC | IND | GLN | MCH | BRI | CAL | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN | TAL | CLT | MAR | ATL | TEX | PHO | HOM | 61st | 111 | ||
2007 | Joe Nemechek | 13 | DAY 9 | CAL 14 | LVS 38 | ATL 17 | BRI DNQ | MAR 27 | TEX 18 | PHO 16 | TAL 38 | RCH 33 | DAR 28 | CLT 26 | DOV 25 | POC 15 | MCH 30 | SON 38 | NHA 41 | DAY 30 | CHI 29 | IND | POC | GLN | MCH | BRI | CAL | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN | TAL | CLT | MAR | ATL | TEX | PHO | HOM | 45th | 1547 |
What became the No. 14 team originally ran several different numbers part of Darrell Waltrip Motorsports and the Tyler Jet Motorsports. At the second Pocono race weekend in 2000, MB2 Motorsports purchased Tyler Jet's unsponsored No. 10 team, driven by Johnny Benson. When MB2 bought the team, Benson remained the driver, with an announcement that Aaron's and RCA would sponsor the No. 10 for the remainder of 2000 and Valvoline would begin sponsoring the car in 2001. Benson finished the season driving full-time for MB2 with Aaron's and RCA on the car.
In 2001, Valvoline became the team's new sponsor, with Benson remaining the driver. Additionally, Valvoline purchased an ownership stake in the No. 10 team, becoming the first corporation to own a NASCAR team. The No. 10 team's name was changed to MBV Motorsports to reflect Valvoline's presence (though the overall team remained MB2). Benson and Valvoline returned for the full season in 2002. He eventually drove to his first career win at the 2002 Pop Secret 400 at Rockingham. [2]
Both Benson and Valvoline remained with the car in 2003. Midway through the season, the team announced it was parting ways with Benson at the conclusion of the season.
32-year-old Busch Series driver Scott Riggs was signed to a multi-year contract, and would to replace Benson for the 2004 season. [27] Riggs was set to compete against a strong rookie class that included his former Busch Series competitors Brian Vickers, Kasey Kahne, Scott Wimmer, and Johnny Sauter as well as Truck Series driver Brendan Gaughan. With Pontiac leaving the sport, the team was forced to switch to Chevrolet. Mike Skinner ran the exhibition Budweiser Shootout in the No. 10 after winning a pole at Richmond driving the No. 01 in 2003 subbing for Jerry Nadeau. Riggs missed the fall race at Atlanta, and scored only two Top 10 finishes and had eight DNFs en route to a 29th-place finish in the points standings in his rookie season.
In 2005, Riggs won the pole at Martinsville and finished 4th in the Daytona 500. Riggs had a career best performance at Michigan, using a fuel mileage gamble to drive from 29th to 2nd place in the final 51 laps. [28] Riggs statistics improved slightly (four Top 10 finishes), but he had seven DNFs and finished 34th in the season standings. Valvoline announced that it was to sell its ownership stake back to MB2's principal owners and ended sponsorship of the car, [29] taking Riggs and the No. 10 to Evernham Motorsports.
In November 2005, it was announced that veteran driver Sterling Marlin would come over from Chip Ganassi Racing to drive for MB2 in 2006. The team would be sponsored by Waste Management in 12 races, with Centrix Financial returning and Ginn Resorts coming on to fill the remainder of the schedule. In tribute to Marlin's father Coo Coo who had passed away the previous year, the team took on the No. 14. [2] [30] Midway through the season, the team replaced crew chief Doug Randolph with Scott Eggleston, who worked with Marlin at Team SABCO. [31] The team had only one Top 10 finish and ranked 34th in points at the end of the year.
For 2007, Marlin returned as did Waste Management for 12 races, while new sponsor Panasonic signed on for 12 races as well, and veteran crew chief Slugger Labbe handled the team. [32] After a 2007 season filled with struggles and a best finish of 13th, in July Marlin was to be replaced by Regan Smith, who had previously been co-piloting the No. 01, for the remainder of the year. [33] However, upon the merger of Ginn Racing and DEI at Indy, and before Smith even got the chance to drive the No. 14, the No. 14 team was merged with the No. 15 team, and its owner points were carried to the Paul Menard-piloted Menards car. Smith would pilot the No. 01 full-time in 2008 with DEI.
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Johnny Benson | 10 | Pontiac | DAY 12 | CAR 14 | LVS 6 | ATL DNQ | DAR 24 | BRI 2 | TEX 42 | MAR 16 | TAL 13 | CAL 23 | RCH 25 | CLT 16 | DOV 15 | MCH 24 | POC 34 | SON 18 | DAY 13 | NHA 14 | POC 12 | IND 25 | GLN 27 | MCH 5 | BRI 13 | DAR 38 | RCH 7 | NHA 11 | DOV 2 | MAR 19 | CLT 8 | TAL 33 | CAR 11 | PHO 16 | HOM 30 | ATL 10 | 13th | 3716 | ||
2001 | DAY 28 | CAR 6 | LVS 4 | ATL 7 | DAR 7 | BRI 26 | TEX 3 | MAR 20 | TAL 7 | CAL 11 | RCH 6 | CLT 20 | DOV 41 | MCH 12 | POC 24 | SON 29 | DAY 13 | CHI 27 | NHA 36 | POC 5 | IND 3 | GLN 16 | MCH 5 | BRI 36 | DAR 14 | RCH 10 | DOV 31 | KAN 37 | CLT 36 | MAR 6 | TAL 23 | PHO 10 | CAR 3 | HOM 20 | ATL 23 | NHA 12 | 11th | 4152 | |||
2002 | DAY 10 | CAR 23 | LVS 32 | ATL 27 | DAR 33 | BRI 39 | TEX 13 | MAR 19 | TAL 39 | CAL 15 | POC 20 | MCH 6 | SON 16 | DAY 43 | POC 30 | IND 37 | GLN 25 | MCH 8 | BRI 12 | DAR 34 | RCH 35 | NHA 4 | DOV 10 | KAN 23 | TAL 40 | CLT 18 | MAR 2 | ATL 23 | CAR 1 | PHO 16 | HOM 13 | 21st | 3583 | ||||||||
Joe Nemechek | RCH 12 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jerry Nadeau | CLT 28 | DOV 27 | NHA 18 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mike Wallace | CHI 38 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2003 | Johnny Benson | DAY 19 | CAR 13 | LVS 12 | ATL 11 | DAR 25 | BRI 19 | TEX 32 | TAL 41 | MAR 32 | CAL 36 | RCH 15 | CLT 24 | DOV 5 | POC 24 | MCH 26 | SON 30 | DAY 27 | CHI 18 | NHA 26 | POC 20 | IND 13 | GLN 27 | MCH 10 | BRI 14 | DAR 40 | RCH 9 | NHA 25 | DOV 21 | TAL 41 | KAN 35 | CLT 16 | MAR 34 | ATL 24 | PHO 21 | CAR 29 | HOM 4 | 24th | 3448 | ||
2004 | Scott Riggs | Chevy | DAY 34 | CAR 31 | LVS 29 | ATL 25 | DAR 30 | BRI 34 | TEX 15 | MAR 28 | TAL 34 | CAL 25 | RCH 35 | CLT 25 | DOV 5 | POC 17 | MCH 20 | SON 42 | DAY 21 | CHI 29 | NHA 28 | POC 22 | IND 37 | GLN 23 | MCH 19 | BRI 17 | CAL 7 | RCH 39 | NHA 26 | DOV 31 | TAL 11 | KAN 26 | CLT 38 | MAR 26 | ATL DNQ | PHO 14 | DAR 25 | HOM 15 | 29th | 3090 | |
2005 | DAY 4 | CAL 33 | LVS 31 | ATL 9 | BRI 10 | MAR 21 | TEX 32 | PHO 18 | TAL 27 | DAR 36 | RCH 26 | CLT 19 | DOV 11 | POC 37 | MCH 23 | SON 24 | DAY 41 | CHI 23 | NHA 32 | POC 33 | IND 35 | GLN 31 | MCH 2 | BRI 40 | CAL 36 | RCH 29 | NHA 28 | DOV 24 | TAL 36 | KAN 30 | CLT 33 | MAR 24 | ATL 33 | TEX 34 | PHO 38 | HOM 38 | 34th | 2965 | |||
2006 | Sterling Marlin | 14 | DAY 34 | CAL 32 | LVS 36 | ATL 34 | BRI 17 | MAR 14 | TEX 30 | PHO 12 | TAL 37 | RCH 9 | DAR 28 | CLT 28 | DOV 31 | POC 42 | MCH 24 | SON 42 | DAY 24 | CHI 26 | NHA 16 | POC 30 | IND 31 | GLN 39 | MCH 29 | BRI 32 | CAL 29 | RCH 30 | NHA 25 | DOV 31 | KAN 20 | TAL 40 | CLT 11 | MAR 21 | ATL 20 | TEX 40 | PHO 36 | HOM 37 | 34th | 2854 | |
2007 | DAY 17 | CAL 35 | LVS 34 | ATL 24 | BRI 30 | MAR 21 | TEX 34 | PHO 27 | TAL 16 | RCH 23 | DAR 13 | CLT 33 | DOV 16 | POC 31 | MCH 20 | SON 43 | NHA 24 | DAY 40 | CHI 23 | IND | POC | GLN | MCH | BRI | CAL | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN | TAL | CLT | MAR | ATL | TEX | PHO | HOM | 48th | 1209 |
^ Johnny Benson raced races 1-18 of the 2000 season with Tyler Jet Motorsports before the team (and its Owners Points) were purchased by MB2.
In addition to his 16-race schedule in the No. 01 shared with Mark Martin, Regan Smith was set to make his Nextel Cup debut at the 2007 Daytona 500 in a fourth Ginn Racing car, with Ginn Resorts sponsoring. [34] The car was numbered 39 due to the No. 36 being taken by Bill Davis Racing and Jeremy Mayfield. In his debut, Smith qualified 26th, which earned him a 12th starting position in the 2nd Gatorade 150 duel race. He finished 19th of 30 cars, and 7th out of the 13 drivers who needed to race their way into the 500, which was not enough to get him into the race. [35] The No. 39 was on the Fontana entry list the next week, but was withdrawn. Smith would make his Cup debut in the No. 01 at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Beginning in 2006, MB2 Motorsports established a partnership with Morgan-Dollar Motorsports in the Craftsman Truck Series, fielding a full-time truck with MB2/Ginn development driver Kraig Kinser (son of Steve Kinser). Kinser struggled in his rookie season and was pulled from the ride late in the season.
For 2007, Ginn expanded its development program, signing motocross racer Ricky Carmichael and Drive for Diversity member Jesus Hernandez to development contracts. [1] Kinser returned to the Truck Series, scheduled to share the ride with Hernandez, with Ginn Resorts sponsoring. [1] The team also started a Busch Series team for Cup rookie Regan Smith and Kinser, also funded by Ginn Resorts. [1] This was originally numbered No. 04, but NASCAR reassigned No. 4 to Ginn after Biagi-DenBeste Racing shut down in January 2007. The No. 4 Busch Series team was shut down after the Kentucky race in June, with Smith 12th in the championship standings at the time. Following the DEI/Ginn merger, Smith was placed in the 47 Morgan-Dollar truck for the balance of the season. Aric Almirola ran a single truck race at Nashville, finishing 23rd.
On July 25, 2007, Ginn Racing announced it had merged with Dale Earnhardt, Inc. The No. 01 team joined the No. 1, No. 8 and No. 15 teams. [36] The merger did not affect the DEI team name.
The acquisition had the following effects:
Dale Earnhardt, Inc., would eventually merge with Chip Ganassi Racing in 2009 after DEI's star driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. left for Hendrick Motorsports the year prior; the resulting team was known as Earnhardt Ganassi Racing until 2013, after which it reverted to Chip Ganassi Racing name before being purchased by Trackhouse Racing Team in 2021.
Jerry Anthony Nadeau is an American former stock car racer. He competed in the NASCAR Winston Cup Series. He started racing go-karts before moving up to car racing, driving in the 12 Hours of Sebring, the European Formula Ford Festival, and the Barber Dodge Pro Series. Nadeau arrived in NASCAR, the highest and most expensive level of stock car racing in the United States, with a limited budget. He started racing part-time in NASCAR and finished sixth in the 1996 Formula Opel Euro Series.
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.
Jonathan Thomas Benson Jr. is an American retired stock car racing driver and the son of former Michigan modified driver John Benson Sr. Benson has raced across NASCAR's three national series, and his career highlights include the 1993 American Speed Association AC-Delco Challenge series championship, the 1995 NASCAR Busch Series championship, the 1996 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Rookie of the Year Award, and the 2008 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series championship.
Travis Wade Kvapil is an American professional stock car driver. He last competed part-time in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series, driving the No. 1 Chevrolet Silverado for Beaver Motorsports.
Morgan–McClure Motorsports was an American auto racing team that competed in the NASCAR Cup Series full-time until 2007. It operated for 28 years, starting in 1983 and ending in 2012. The team was most notable for running the No. 4 from 1983 to 2010. The team notably won the Daytona 500 three times during the 1990s. They won with Ernie Irvan in 1991, then won back-to-back in 1994–1995 with Sterling Marlin. Irvan (1992) and Marlin (1996) also each won the Pepsi 400 for a total of five points-paying wins at Daytona for the team over a six-year period.
Evernham Motorsports was an American professional stock car racing organization that competed in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team was founded in 2000 by former Hendrick Motorsports crew chief Ray Evernham, entering full-time competition as a two-car operation in 2001 and fielding additional full-time entries in alliances with Ultra Motorsports and the Valvoline corporation. The organization was renamed Gillett Evernham Motorsports in 2007 after former Montreal Canadiens and Liverpool F.C. owner George Gillett bought a controlling interest from founder Evernham, and merged with Petty Enterprises in 2009 to become Richard Petty Motorsports.
Trail Motorsports was a NASCAR team based in Mooresville, North Carolina, near Charlotte. The team was owned by Armando Fitz and Art Shelton, and was previously co-owned by Fitz's former wife Mimi. The team was known as the HighLine Performance Group until the end of the 2001 season, when they teamed up with Terry Bradshaw and formally created FitzBradshaw Racing. At the end of the 2004 season FBR announced that it was partnering with Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, which gave them access to more technical and engineering support. In addition to that partnership they also switched manufacturers from Chevrolet to Dodge. The team also formed a partnership with Michael Waltrip Racing for the 2006 season. Bradshaw left the organization at the end of the 2006 season. The team changed its name to Trail Motorsports in early 2009 after Shelton came on board. The team fielded the No. 22 Dodge Charger for Johnny Borneman III in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, the No. 32 Chevrolet Silverado for Chase Austin in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, and the No. 58 Chevrolet Impala driven by Jarit Johnson, younger brother of seven-time Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, in the Camping World East Series.
Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is an American professional stock car racing team that currently competes in the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. The team began running part-time in 2004 as Means-Jenkins Motorsports under a partnership with Jimmy Means and restaurant entrepreneur Bob Jenkins, with Jenkins becoming the full team owner in 2005. In the Cup Series, FRM currently fields two Ford Mustang Dark Horse teams full-time: The No. 34 for Michael McDowell and the No. 38 for Todd Gilliland as well as the No. 36 part-time for Kaz Grala. In the Truck Series, they field the No. 38 Ford F-Series for Layne Riggs.
The 1998 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 50th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 27th modern-era cup series. The season included 33 races and three exhibition races, beginning with the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway and ending with the NAPA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the Driver's Championship, the third of his career, and his third in the last four seasons.
The 2000 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 52nd season of professional stock car racing in the United States, and was the 29th modern-era Cup series. The season began on February 13 and ended on November 20. Joe Gibbs Racing driver Bobby Labonte was crowned champion at season's end. The NASCAR Manufacturers' Championship was won by Ford as they captured 14 wins and 234 points to better Pontiac's 11 wins and 213 points. Chevrolet finished third with nine wins and 199 points.
The 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 49th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 26th modern-era NASCAR Cup series. It began on February 9 and ended on November 16. Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports won his second Cup championship at the end of the season.
Kevin Conway is an American professional stock car racing driver who currently races in the Blancpain Super Trofeo Championship. He is the 2010 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Rookie of the Year (ROTY), 2014 Super Trofeo World Champion, and two-time North American Super Trofeo Series Champion. Conway has raced in motocross, legends, the World Karting Association, United States Automobile Club (USAC), American Speed Association (ASA), NASCAR's regional K&N Pro Series West, and all three of NASCAR's national touring series.
Tyler Jet Motorsports was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series team.
Braun Motorsports, formerly known as Braun Racing, was an American professional stock car racing team that last competed in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. The team is based in Mooresville, North Carolina. Best known as one of the top independent Xfinity Series teams from 2003 to 2010, the team also made several starts in the Sprint Cup Series. The team was owned by Todd Braun, son of Braun Corporation founder Ralph Braun. The team formerly had alliances with Chip Ganassi Racing and Dale Earnhardt, Inc., and the team's operations also included former entries from ppc Racing and Akins Motorsports.
Tommy Baldwin Racing is an American professional stock car racing team that currently competes in the modified ranks. The team is based in Mooresville, North Carolina, and is owned by former crew chief Tommy Baldwin Jr., son of the late modified driver Tom Baldwin.
Turner Scott Motorsports (TSM), formerly Turner Motorsports was an American professional stock car racing team that last competed in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, the Nationwide Series, the Camping World Truck Series, the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East and the ARCA Racing Series. The team was based in Mooresville, North Carolina co-owned by Texas businessman Steve Turner and North Carolina businessman Harry Scott Jr. The team fielded cars utilizing Hendrick Motorsports engines. Co-owner Scott also owned the unaffiliated Sprint Cup Series team HScott Motorsports.
Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI) is a museum in Mooresville, North Carolina. Formerly a race team founded by Dale Earnhardt and his wife, Teresa Earnhardt, it competed in the NASCAR Cup Series, the highest level of competition for professional stock car racing in the United States, from 1998 to 2009. Earnhardt was a seven-time Winston Cup champion who died in a crash on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. Despite his ownership of the DEI racing team, Earnhardt never drove for his team in the Winston Cup; instead, he raced for his long-time mentor and backer Richard Childress at RCR. In the late-2000s, DEI suffered critical financial difficulties after drivers Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Michael Waltrip, and sponsors Anheuser-Busch, National Automotive Parts Association and United States Army left the team; DEI consequently merged with Chip Ganassi Racing in 2009, moving their equipment into the latter's shop, while the former's closed down. Chip Ganassi Racing's NASCAR operations was subsequently purchased by Trackhouse Racing Team in 2021.
The NASCAR operation of Chip Ganassi Racing was established in 1989 by Cuban-American businessman Felix Sabates. The team was known as SABCO Racing, formed after Sabates purchased an R&D team from Hendrick Motorsports. The team was renamed Team SABCO in 1996. In 2001, Ganassi bought 80% of the ownership interest in the then-two-car team to form Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates; the same year the team switched from Chevrolet to full-works Dodge and received a same partnership treatment as Penske Racing, Evernham Motorsports, Bill Davis Racing, Melling Racing and Petty Enterprises teams. In 2009, Ganassi partnered with Dale Earnhardt, Inc. owner Teresa Earnhardt to merge their NASCAR operations into Ganassi's shop and entered under the Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates banner, while returning to Chevrolet equipment. The NASCAR team dropped the Earnhardt name in 2014, and Ganassi revealed that Teresa was never truly involved with the team. Rob Kauffman, chairman of the Race Team Alliance, purchased a stake in the team in 2015. The NASCAR program has fielded full-time entries for notable drivers including Kyle Petty, Joe Nemechek, Sterling Marlin, Jimmy Spencer, Juan Pablo Montoya, Jamie McMurray, Kyle Larson, Kurt Busch, and Ross Chastain. After already having his name removed from the team previously, at the end of the 2019 season, Sabates announced his retirement as a co-owner from the team, taking effect after the 2020 season.
Hendrick Motorsports (HMS) is an American professional auto racing organization that competes in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team was founded in 1984 as All Star Racing by Rick Hendrick. Hendrick Motorsports has won a NASCAR-record 311 Cup Series races and 14 Cup Series owners and drivers championships to go with three Truck Series owners and drivers titles and one Xfinity Series drivers crown. Additionally, the team has 28 Xfinity Series race wins, 26 Truck Series race wins, and 7 ARCA Menards Series wins. This page documents the statistical results of Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Cup Series beginning with the team's debut in 1984.
Jay Frye is an American motorsports executive. He currently serves as the President of IndyCar. Frye previously was Team Director for two NASCAR teams, MB2 Motorsports and Red Bull Racing Team.
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