- Kyle Petty
Kyle Eugene Petty (Born June 2, 1960 in Randleman, North Carolina) is an American NASCAR driver, the son and grandson of racing legends Richard Petty and Lee Petty, respectively. He drives the #45 Marathon Petroleum Company Dodge Charger for Petty Enterprises. The Marathon Petroleum Company announced the sponsorship on August 8, 2006. Marathon will remain the Sponsor through the 2008 season. Petty originally did not intend to become a race car driver. - Chad McCumbee
Chad McCumbee (born October 15, 1984) is an American stock car driver, whom has acted. He was born in Supply, North Carolina. He currently drives the #08 The GPS Store/Garmin International Chevrolet Silverado for Green Light Racing in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. He finished fourth in the RE/MAX Series point standings in 2005, his first full year of competition. He is also known for his portrayal of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in "3: The Dale Earnhardt Story". - Burney Lamar
Burney Lamar (born August 21, 1980, West Sacramento, California) is an unemployed NASCAR driver. He began racing go-carts at the age of 5, and won a total of twenty-five track championships and three International Karting Federation Regional titles. At the age of sixteen, Lamar started racing stock cars at Stockton 99 Speedway and finished eleventh in points. Over the next three years, he raced on many West Coast short tracks, and won the Shell Oil Tri-Track championship. - Adam Petty
Adam Kyler Petty (July 10, 1980 - May 12, 2000) was an auto racing car driver. He was the first fourth-generation driver in NASCAR history. - Brandon Whitt
Brandon Whitt (born October 15, 1982, in El Cajon, California) is third-genaration race car driver. He currently races the #72 Dutch Quality Stone Chevrolet Monte Carlo in the NEXTEL Cup Series. Whitt won the Rookie of the Year title in NASCAR's Southwest Touring division in 2002, and made his Craftsman Truck Series debut in 2003, driving the #38 Chevrolet Silverado for Clear Line Motorsports, a team his father owned. - Andy Belmont
Andy Belmont (born November 20, 1957 in Langhorne, Pennsylvania) is a stock car racer. Belmont began racing at an early age before moving south. In 1987, he was named the NASCAR Dash Series Rookie of the Year, then he won the championship the next year as a car owner. In 1989, Belmont made his Winston Cup debut at the Peak Performance 500, starting 35th and finishing 29th after his #04 Ford Thunderbird suffered braking failure. He would run that same race two years later, … - Danny O'Quinn
Danny O'Quinn, Jr. (born May 7, 1985) is a professional stock car racer from Coeburn, Virginia. He is currently a part-time driver in the NASCAR Busch Series for Roush Fenway Racing. - Bobby Gerhart
Bobby Gerhart (born July 21, 1958, in Lebanon, Pennsylvania), is a driver on the ARCA Re/Max Circuit. He has won four times on the circuit, three of those victories coming at the season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway. Presently, he drives the #5 Lucas Oil Chevrolet owned by his brother. He has also driven in NASCAR, with 24 career starts in the NEXTEL Cup series with a best finish of 19th. - Dave Despain
Dave Despain (born May 20, 1946) is an American motor sports journalist. He is the host of two Speed Channel programs: "WindTunnel with Dave Despain" and "NASCAR Inside Nextel Cup". A native of Fairfield, Iowa, Despain was a former motorcycle racer who joined the American Motorcycle Association in the public-relations department. - Allen Bestwick
Allen Bestwick (born on September 24, 1961 in Newport, Rhode Island) is a NASCAR pit reporter, serving as one of ESPN and ABC's pit reporters for their NASCAR Nextel Cup and Busch Series coverage. Prior to that, Bestwick worked for NBC and TNT on their NASCAR coverage, serving as play-by-play man until 2005 and spending the last two seasons as the lead pit reporter. - Wayne Edwards
Wayne Edwards (born June 23, 1967) in Shepherdsville, Kentucky) is a part time racer in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. He currently works for Green Light Racing as a driver and crew member. Edwards made his Truck Series debut in 2000, driving the #93 WorldBestBuy.com Chevy for Troxell Racing. His debut came at Homestead-Miami. There he started 30th and finished 27th, fiteen laps down.. In twelve other races, his best finish was a 19th at NHIS, … - Johnny Rutherford
John (Johnny) Sherman Rutherford, III (born March 12, 1938 in Coffeyville, Kansas) is a retired U.S. automobile racer. The Texas-raised "Lonestar J.R." is one of eight drivers to win the prestigious Indianapolis 500 mile race at least three times: in 1974, 1976, and 1980. The others are Louis Meyer, Wilbur Shaw, Mauri Rose (credited with only two by official speedway records), A. J. Foyt, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, and Rick Mears. Rutherford also won three poles at the 500, … - Peter Shepherd
Peter Shepherd (born August 13, 1986) is a NASCAR driver from Amherstburg, Ontario, Canada. Shepherd starred on dirt tracks in late model and sprint cars in Ontario. His prowess drew the attention of NASCAR owner Jack Roush, who invited him to "Roush Racing: Driver X", the audition that was held in 2005 and televised on the Discovery Channel. Shepherd turned heads with a surprising performance, ending up as one of six finalists in the competition. - Marshall Teague
Marshall Teague (February 22, 1922 - February 11, 1959) was an American race car driver. He was nicknamed by NASCAR fans as the "King of the Beach" for his performances at the Daytona Beach Road Course. He walked into fellow Daytona Beach resident Smokey Yunick's "Best Damned Garage in Town", and launched Yunick's legendary NASCAR mechanic career. Teague competed in 23 NASCAR Grand National (now Nextel Cup) races from 1949 to 1952, winning seven of them. - Sam McQuagg
Sam McQuagg (born November 11, 1935 in Columbus, Georgia) is a former NASCAR Rookie of the Year driver. He was named "NASCAR Rookie of the Year" in 1965 after have 5 Top 10 finishes in 16 races. McQuagg was a major players in an incident in one of the wildest NASCAR races ever. McQuagg was leading the 1965 Southern 500, when Cale Yarborough tried to muscle past McQuagg for the lead. Yarborough flew over the guardrail, rolled around six times, … - Lyndon Amick
Lyndon Amick (born June 30, 1977, in Saluda, South Carolina) is a former NASCAR driver. He spent most of his NASCAR career in the NASCAR Busch Series driving for his family-owned team. Amick has recently trained with the United States National Guard. Amick was the 1996 NASCAR Goody's Dash series champion. Amick made his NASCAR Busch Series debut in 1997, driving the #35 Pontiac Grand Prix owned by his father, Bill. - Matt McCall
Matt McCall (born July 3, 1981, in Denver, North Carolina) is a professional race car driver. Currently, he drives the #16 Ford F-150 for Xpress Motorsports. He also has a bachelor's degree in Mechanical engineering from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. McCall began racing at the age of nine, running go-karts. At the age of thirteen, he moved to the adult leagues, collecting over 150 wins, before moving to the World Karting Association Dirt Series. - Brian Rose
Brian Rose is a former NASCAR driver. Rose was born on October 19 1979. He resides in Bowling Green, Kentucky. Rose began his NASCAR career in 2001 in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. He ran 15 races for Rick Ware in the #51, scoring a best finish of 12th. In 2002, Rose went in a new direction, joining Bobby Hamilton Racing, driving the #4, and scored a career best finish of 3rd in the season opener at Daytona International Speedway. - George Amick
George Amick (24 October 1924 Vernonia, Oregon - 4 April 1959 Daytona Beach, Florida) was an American racecar driver, mainly competing in the American National Championship. He was killed in a crash in a USAC 100-mile race at Daytona International Speedway. Major open-wheel racing would not return to the track for many years. - Shorty Rollins
Lloyd George "Shorty" Rollins (April 3, 1929 - December 28, 1998) Lloyd George Rollins nicknamed "Shorty", born in Granbury, Texas was the first official NASCAR Rookie of the Year. He began stock car racing in Corpus Christi, Texas. The great success achieved there led him to Fayetteville, North Carolina and to NASCAR Grand National. His rookie year 1958, he had 1 win, 12 top five finishes and 22 top ten finishes in 29 starts with car owner Spook Crawford. - Phil Barkdoll
Phil Barkdoll (born September 7, 1937) was a NASCAR driver from Phoenix, Arizona who only ran at two tracks in his entire career: Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway. - Iggy Katona
Egnatius "Iggy" Katona (born 16 August 1916, Toledo, Ohio - died 4 December 2003, Daytona Beach, Florida) was an American stock car racer from Willis, Michigan. He is most famous for his performance in the ARCA series in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, where he won six championships and a series record 79 races. Other ARCA records held by Katona include most starts (630), oldest race winner (57 years old, Daytona International Speedway, … - John Mickel
John Mickel (born January 28, 1971, in Cambridge, England), is a stock car racer. He has raced in ASCAR and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with TorqueSpeed. Mickel, a second-generation driver, began racing at the age of ten in Mini Stocks and won his first championship two years later. He soon moved to Superstox where he was named both World and European champion. He joined the SCSA-Europe tour in its inaugural year in 2001, where he won the series' first championship. - Matt Hutter
Matt Hutter is a stock car driver. He has raced in the NASCAR Busch Series and Craftsman Truck Series. Hutter made his NASCAR debut in 1998, driving the #36 Stanley Tools Pontiac Grand Prix for Team 34. His best finish was a ninth at Talladega Superspeedway, but he was released following the Lycos.com 250. He made one start later that year at IRP, filling for Jeff Purvis in the #4 car. He finished 36th. He also ran two Truck races that year, … - Claude Ballot-Léna
Claude Ballot-Léna was a French race driver born in Paris. He won the 1969 Spa 24 Hours in a Porsche 911 and the 1983 24 Hours of Daytona in a Porsche 935 Turbo. He also entered the 24 Hours of Le Mans many times from 1966 until the 1980s. Ballot-Léna was also one of the earliest European NASCAR drivers when he made 6 Winston Cup starts in 1978 to 1979 at Talladega Superspeedway, Daytona International Speedway, and Atlanta Motor Speedway. - Bob Burdick
Bob Burdick (born October 20, 1936) is a former NASCAR driver from Omaha, Nebraska. He competed in fifteen Nextel Cup Series events in his career. Burdick made his debut in 1959, where he won the pole at Trenton Speedway in his first career NASCAR start. Although a fire took Burdick out of the event early, he earned his first career top-10 finish with a 9th place effort in the next race at Nashville Speedway USA. - Iroc Xix
The ninteenth year of IROC competition took place in 1995. IROC XIX was the second and final year the Dodge Avenger was used in competition, and continued the format introduced in IROC XVIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Darlington Raceway, race three ran at Talladega Superspeedway, and the year finished at Michigan International Speedway. - Iroc XIII
The thirteenth year of IROC competition took place in 1989. IROC XIII saw the use of the Chevrolet Camaro in all races for the final year, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Nazareth Speedway, race three ran at Michigan International Speedway, and race four concluded the year at Watkins Glen International. - John Rostek
John Rostek (November 12, 1925 - December 29, 1969) was a NASCAR driver from Fort Collins, Colorado. Despite racing in just six Grand National (later NEXTEL Cup) events in his career, Rostek earned one victory, one pole and three top-tens. Five of his six races came in 1960, when Rostek debuted at Daytona, racing in the Daytona 500 qualifier. But a crash on the fifth lap would end his chances of a good finish and making the 500, finishing 39th. - Iroc XI
The eleventh year of IROC competition took place in 1987. IROC XI saw the use of the Chevrolet Camaro in all races, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Mid-Ohio, race three ran at Michigan International Speedway, and race four concluded the year at Watkins Glen International. Geoff Bodine won the championship, and took home $191,900 for his efforts. - Iroc XVI
The sixteenth year of IROC competition took place in 1992. IROC XVI was the third year the Dodge Daytona was used in competition, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Talladega Superspeedway, and races three and four ran at Michigan International Speedway. Ricky Rudd won the series championship, and took home $175,000 for his efforts. - Iroc II
The second year of IROC competition took place over three weekends in 1974 to 1975. IROC II saw the use of the Chevrolet Camaro in all races, which replaced the Porsche Carrera RSR race cars used in the first year of competition. The only track carried over from the first year was Riverside International Raceway, as the series raced on the oval at Daytona International Speedway instead of the infield road course. - Iroc X
The tenth year of IROC competition took place in 1986. IROC X saw the use of the Chevrolet Camaro in all races, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Mid-Ohio, race three ran at Talladega Superspeedway, and race four concluded the year at Watkins Glen International. Al Unser, Jr. won the championship, and took home $164,100 for his efforts. - Iroc XII
The twelfth year of IROC competition took place in 1988. IROC XII saw the use of the Chevrolet Camaro in all races, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Riverside International Raceway, race three ran at Michigan International Speedway, and race four concluded the year at Watkins Glen International. Al Unser, Jr. won his second championship, and took home $211,900 for his efforts. - Iroc Xv
The fifteenth year of IROC competition took place in 1991. IROC XV was the second year the Dodge Daytona was used in competition, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Talladega Superspeedway, race three ran at Michigan International Speedway, and the year finished at Watkins Glen International. Rusty Wallace won the series championship, and took home $175,000 for his efforts. - Iroc IX
The ninth year of IROC competition took place in 1985. IROC IX saw the use of the Chevrolet Camaro in all races, and continued the format introduced in IROC VIII. Race one took place on the Daytona International Speedway, race two took place at Mid-Ohio, race three was rained out at Talladega Superspeedway, and race four concluded the year at Michigan International Speedway. Harry Gant won the championship in a tie-breaker with Darrell Waltrip, … - Bill Braun
Bill Braun is an American former NASCAR driver who, in 1951, competed in the single Grand National (Nextel Cup after 1971) event of his career. At the end of the race, held at Daytona International Speedway, the Paterson, New Jersey-based Braun emerged with a 10th place finish. - Wayne Riggle
Some Pictures I Took At O'Leno State Park In NW Florida. Some Of The Really Good Ones Were Too Large To Load :( You Can Click On Them To See The Whole Picture At Once And Leave Any Comments. - Christopher
My name is Chris, I'm a pretty simple guy. I'm 6' tall, approximately 298 pounds (yea, I'm a fat kid, fuck you if you dont like it), brown hair (when I'm not bald), and blue eyes. I drink, and I cuss more than any one person should. I'm honest, sometimes brutally, and I say alot of heartless and hostile shit sometimes, but I'm generally a really nice guy....I've even been called sweet once or twice, but dont tell anyone. - Lacey
Not currently living my real life... but keeping it meatless...
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