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Martin Truex, Jr.

 
Wikipedia: Martin Truex, Jr.
Martin Truex, Jr.
MartinTruexJrAugust2007.jpg
Born June 29, 1980 (1980-06-29) (age 29)
Hometown Mayetta, New Jersey
Achievements 2004 Nationwide Series Champion
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series statistics
Car #, team #56 - Michael Waltrip Racing
2008 Sprint Cup position 15th
Best cup position 11th - 2007 (Sprint Cup)
First race 2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 (Atlanta)
First win 2007 Autism Speaks 400 (Dover)
Wins Top tens Poles
1 34 3
NASCAR Nationwide Series statistics
Best NNS position 1st - 2004, 2005 (Busch Series)
First race 2001 MBNA.com 200 (Dover)
Last race 2009 Dover 200 (Dover)
First win 2004 Sharpie Professional 250 (Bristol)
Last win 2006 Aaron's 312 (Talladega)
Wins Top tens Poles
13 57 10
Statistics current as of September 19, 2009.

Martin Lee Truex, Jr. (born June 29, 1980 in Mayetta, New Jersey) is a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver. He currently drives the #56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota Camry for Michael Waltrip Racing. Truex won the Nationwide Series Championship in 2004 and 2005. Truex is a graduate Southern Regional High School.[1]

Contents

Early career

Truex was born in Ocean County, New Jersey, and grew up in the Mayetta section of Stafford Township, New Jersey.[2] His father, Martin Sr., was a former race winner in the NASCAR Camping World East Series, then called the NASCAR Busch Grand National Division North Series. The younger Truex began racing in the NASCAR Camping World East Series in 2000, and won 5 races in 4 years with a family owned team. After moving south, Truex rented a home from Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in Mooresville, North Carolina, before he purchased his own home.

In 2000, Truex, following in his father's footsteps, began racing in the NASCAR Camping World Series, East (then called the Busch North Series). He ran three full seasons (2000 to 2002) and made limited starts in 2003. During his time in the Camping World Series, Truex claimed 13 poles and 5 wins driving his family owned #56 SeaWatch Chevy.

2001-2005

Truex made his first NASCAR Nationwide Series start in 2001 at Dover International Speedway in his father's #56 XST Paintable Silicon Chevy. He started 19th but finished 38th after an early wreck. In 2002, Truex drove one race for Phoenix Racing at New Hampshire International Speedway, starting thirteenth and finishing twenty-ninth. He ran three races the rest of that season for his father, his best finish seventeenth at Dover.

In 2003, he began the season with his father's team, before he was hired by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. to drive his #81 Chance 2 Motorsports Chevy. He made his debut with Chance 2 at Richmond International Raceway, where he qualified sixth and led eleven laps before transmission failure forced him to a 31st place finish. He split time between Chance 2 and his father's team for the balance of the season, except at Dover, where he drove for Stanton Barrett. He had a sixth-place run at Bristol Motor Speedway, and ended the season with two consecutive second-place finishes. He ran a total of ten races that season.

Truex raced full time for Chance 2 in 2004. At Bristol Motor Speedway, he would earn his first career victory, and he would later add 3 more victories over the next 7 races. This would include a victory at Talladega Superspeedway which broke his car owner's streak of winning restrictor plate races in the Nationwide Series, and a victory at the final NASCAR event held at Nazareth Speedway. He took the lead in the championship after Nazareth, but lost it to rookie Kyle Busch a few races later. However, a series of top 5's and top 10's in the second half of the season would allow Truex to pull away from Busch, clinching the Nationwide Series championship with a race to spare. While on his way to that championship, Truex made an appearance in Sprint Cup as a relief driver to Dale Earnhardt Jr., who'd suffered burns in a sports car accident. Truex started his first career Cup race for Dale Earnhardt, Inc. in the #1 at Atlanta Motor Speedway later that year, qualifying 33rd and finishing 37th.

Truex stayed in the Nationwide Series to defend his championship in 2005, winning the title for the second season in a row. He won the first NASCAR Nationwide Series points race held outside the United States, in Mexico, as well as defending his Nationwide wins at Talladega and Dover International Speedway. He took his first win at Daytona International Speedway on July 1, 2005.

2006-2009

2008 car

In 2006, Truex moved to the #1 Bass Pro/DEI Chevy full-time in the Nextel Cup Series. He had two top-five finishes but finished nineteenth in points. Truex got his first win of the 2007 at the NASCAR Nextel All-Star Open, securing a spot in the 2007 Nextel All-Star Challenge, where he finished 10th. A few weeks later, he won the Autism Speaks 400 scoring his first Sprint Cup Series win with an interval of seven seconds between himself and pole sitter Ryan Newman. He led over half of the race (219 of 400 laps). His performance led to a jump in overall points advancing him to 13th. He followed this performance at Dover with a third place finish at Pocono Raceway, and a second place finish at Michigan Speedway. With a 15th place finish in the Chevy Rock and Roll 400, Truex clinched a spot in his first Chase for the Sprint Cup, and finished 11th in points at season's end. He did not win in 2008, but had eleven top-tens and finished 15th in points. At the beginning of the 2009 season, his team, Dale Earnhardt, Inc. merged with Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates and be renamed Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates. Truex began the year by winning the pole for the Daytona 500. Overall in the season, Truex has acclaimed 3 pole positions (Daytona, Atlanta, and Phoenix). [3] 2009 would be his final season with Earnhardt Ganassi Racing.

2010-Present

At the conclusion of the 2009 season, Truex left Earnhardt Ganassi Racing and will drive the #56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota Camry for Michael Waltrip Racing, receiving owner points from the #55 car formerly driven by Waltrip.

References

  1. ^ McGee, Ryan. "As the new face of DEI, Truex Jr. weathers the storm", ESPN, August 20, 2007. Accessed February 27, 2008. "By the time Martin Jr. was a teenager, his driving talent was obvious, proven by a handful of regional and track championships. When he strode into Jerry Salvatore's shop class at Ocean County's Southern Regional High School, he began to learn the art of welding, too."
  2. ^ "Stafford Township native Truex Jr. looks for strong finish to NASCAR season", Press of Atlantic City, November 16, 2007. Accessed November 16, 2007. "Truex, a Stafford Township native, enters Sunday's race in 11th place in the standings."
  3. ^ "Truex takes first lap at PIR to third pole of the season", Nascar.com, November 14, 2009. Accessed November 14, 2009. "Truex takes first lap at PIR to third pole of the season"

External links


Preceded by
Brian Vickers
NASCAR Busch Series Champion
2004, 2005
Succeeded by
Kevin Harvick
Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
Earnhardt family Dale Earnhardt | Teresa Earnhardt | Dale Earnhardt, Jr. | Kerry Earnhardt | Jeffrey Earnhardt
Winning drivers Steve Park | Dale Earnhardt, Jr. | Michael Waltrip | Martin Truex, Jr.
Partnerships and affiliations Chip Ganassi Racing | Ginn Racing | Earnhardt Ganassi Racing | Richard Childress Racing

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