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Mike Skinner started racing at Susanville Speedway in the 1970s, running a Plymouth Road Runner at various California dirt tracks and winning three championships. In 1983, Mike moved to North Carolina to pursue a career in NASCAR—and the rest is history. That includes winning the first championship in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in 1995, among many other impressive records. Find out more about Mike. |
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Palmdale, California, native Ron Hornaday has had the type of career most drivers dream about, and he has no intention of slowing down. The 50-year-old veteran is a three-time NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion. And while he has competed in all of NASCAR’s three elite divisions, he’s found a home in the NCWTS. Find out more about Ron. |
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Max is one of the most versatile race drivers, a consummate professional who through his career combined natural talent, lots of hard work, focus and sheer determination to win as he climbed over each step and built an impressive resume in the process. In 1996, fresh out of Formula 1, a young Papis made an immediate impact at the end of a tough Daytona 24 Hours—which earned him the nickname “Mad Max.” Find out more about Max. |
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Before racing, Sterling Marlin was a standout football and basketball player at Columbia High in Tennessee. But as a boy, he was always in the shop “working with the guys” on his dad’s cars, so there was little doubt about Marlin’s career path. Today, he’s perhaps best known as only the third driver in Cup history to win back-to-back Daytona 500s, joining legends Richard Petty and Cale Yarborough. Find out more about Sterling. |
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Spencer Pumpelly was introduced to racing at a young age in the late 1980s, while watching his father contest the IMSA GTP Championship in a Ford Prototype. In 1995 he enrolled in the Skip Barber Racing School and has since raced successfully in several car classes. Last season marked Spencer’s thirteenth in professional racing—as well as a growing number of Twitter fans following his career. |
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In addition to three Championships and three Daytona 24 Hour wins, Andy Lally currently holds the record for most top 3 and top 5 finishes in Grand American Rolex Series history—as well as the record for most podium finishes in a single season. He is second on the all-time-win list, and is the first three-time Rolex Series Champion. But that’s only a sample—find out more about Andy’s stats. |
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Johnny Benson began his racing career on Michigan’s dirt tracks in 1982, and nearly three decades later, he’s a respected competitor in the NASCAR Winston Cup Series. In five starts last year, Benson recorded two top five and five top ten finishes, and also drove Danny Gill’s No. 95 Plane Guts Ford to eighth place in the NextEra Energy Resources 250 at Daytona. Find out more about Johnny. |
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Since 1983, Curtis Markham has raced intermittently in the NASCAR Busch Series, including two years with the Hensley Racing team in ‘95 and ‘96. In that time, Curtis made 84 career starts with 17 top 10 finishes and 3 top five finishes. He now works as a crewman for Jeff Purvis’ Busch Series team at Joe Gibbs Racing, but still makes an occasional start—and we’re honored to have him. Take a look at Curtis Markham’s career stats. |
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More drivers, athletes and celebrities are scheduled to appear, so drop by for potential updates. |