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The Gen 4 car was used full time until 2007, and it was retired in the Cup Series after the 2007 season (in which Toyota, who had already competed in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, made their debut in the Cup and the then-Busch Series with the Camry), while the other sixteen races were run by the fifth-generation Car of Tomorrow. The Car of ...
Driver Race Name Track Date References 1: Jim Roper: 1949-01: No name: Charlotte Speedway: 19 June 1949 [20] Red Byron: 1949-02: No name: Daytona Beach Road Course: 10 July 1949 [21] Bob Flock: 1949-03: No name: Occoneechee Speedway: 7 August 1949 [22] Curtis Turner: 1949-04: No name: Langhorne Speedway: 11 September 1949 [23] Jack White: 1949 ...
NASCAR teams compete in all three national NASCAR series: the Cup Series, Xfinity Series, and Craftsman Truck Series, as well as in all the regional touring series. A team is limited to four cars in each of the NASCAR series. The team often shares a single manufacturer for all of the team's cars, but each car has an independent car number ...
A look at the top 100 all-time NASCAR Cup Series winners list in order by number of wins updated through Aug. 19, 2024. Richard Petty 200. David Pearson 105
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Series Former name(s) Status Division Seasons managed Car style Nation Ref. ISCARS Dash Touring Series: Baby Grand Defunct National 1973–2003 Sedan: United States [16] Goody's Dash IPOWER Dash Elite Division Midwest Series: RE/MAX Challenge Series Merged: Regional 1998–2006 Late model: United States [17] Elite Division Northwest Series
#19 Martin Truex Jr NASCAR Show Car. 1995 NASCAR Xfinity Series Car, once driven by Kenny Irwin Jr. 2002 Chevrolet Corvette NASA STU Racecar. 1998 BMW M3 FINA Racecar.
The Wood Brothers Racing Team was founded in 1950 by brothers from the Blue Ridge Mountains of Southwest Virginia. Walter and Ada Wood, who owned a farm near Woolwine and Stuart, Virginia, had five sons—Glen, Leonard, Delano, Clay, and Ray Lee—and one daughter, Crystal. [1]