Bill Davis Racing

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Bill Davis Racing
Owner(s) Name(s) Bill & Gail Davis
Racing Series NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
Number of Championships None
Car Number(s) #22 (Sprint Cup)
#5, #22, #23 (Craftsman Truck Series)
Driver(s) Dave Blaney (#22-Sprint)
Mike Skinner (#5-Craftsman)
Scott Speed (#22-Craftsman)
Johnny Benson (#23-Craftsman)
Michael Annett (Development)
Primary Sponsor(s) Caterpillar (#22-Sprint)
Toyota Tundra (#5-Craftsman)
Red Bull (#22-Craftsman)
Toyota Certified Used Vehicles (#23-Craftsman)
Shop Location High Point, North Carolina
Homepage BDR Website

Bill Davis Racing is a racing team that participates in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and Craftsman Truck Series. They currently field a full-time entry in the Sprint Cup series for Dave Blaney, while fielding three full-time entries in the Craftsman Truck Series for Mike Skinner, Scott Speed, and Johnny Benson.

The team has run Toyota-branded stock cars and trucks in both the Craftsman Truck series (Toyota Tundra) and Sprint Cup Series (Toyota Camry) since 2007. Dodge, Ford, and Pontiac previously backed the team.

Contents

[edit] Beginnings

BDR was formed by then-truck rental owner Bill Davis, who himself was a former motocross racer. Davis helped his friend and business partner Julian Martin develop his son Mark's ASA racing program. When Martin signed with J.D. Stacy, Davis took a break from racing, but returned to hire Martin to drive his Busch Series car for 15 races with sponsorship from Carolina Ford Dealers. In 1990, Davis moved the team to North Carolina while his wife Gail stayed in Arkansas to oversee the trucking operation.

[edit] Sprint Cup

[edit] Car #22 History

Upon arriving in Carolina, Davis was asked by the Ford Motor Company to hire an up-and-coming Midwest driver Jeff Gordon. Gordon won the NASCAR Busch Series Rookie of the Year in 1991, and won 11 pole positions the next year. Davis was hoping to move Gordon and crew chief Ray Evernham to the Winston Cup series, but they were lured away by Rick Hendrick. Davis still moved up to the Cup series full time in 1993 however, with driver Bobby Labonte, who finished runner up to Jeff Gordon for Rookie of the Year driving the #22 Maxwell House Ford. After 1994, Labonte left for Joe Gibbs Racing. MBNA replaced Maxwell House as sponsor and the team switched to Pontiac. Originally, Davis went with another rookie and Busch Series standout Randy LaJoie to drive the car. Midway through the year, LaJoie was fired from the team and replaced by a series of rotating drivers including Wally Dallenbach, who finished 2nd at Watkins Glen. Finally, Ward Burton was hired to finish out the year. He won at North Carolina Motor Speedway before the season was out. They did not win again until 2000 when Burton won at the spring Darlington race. It was BDR's last win in a Pontiac as they joined several teams in switching to Dodge Intrepids for the following season.

The #22 Caterpillar car in 2008
The #22 Caterpillar car in 2008

Burton returned to victory lane the following season, winning the 2001 Southern 500, Dodge's second win since returning to NASCAR. He added two more wins in 2002, scoring a victory in the Daytona 500 (Dodge's first Daytona 500 win in 28 years) and later in the year at the New England 300 at New Hampshire. With several races to go in a disappointing 2003 season, Burton moved to Haas CNC Racing, and was replaced with Davis's Busch driver Scott Wimmer. Wimmer raced full-time in 2004, finished 3rd in the first race of his rookie season. In late 2005, BDR announced it would part ways with Wimmer at the end of the year. Dave Blaney, who previously drove the #93 for BDR, was hired to drive the #22 beginning with the 2006 season. He had two top-tens and finished 26th in the standings. In 2007, the team switched to Toyota. Blaney won the pole for the 2007 Lenox Industrial Tools 300 in New Hampshire, the first pole for Toyota in the Sprint Cup Series[1]. Blaney scored his first top 10 with Toyota at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 29, and later that season finished third at Talladega, the best finish of any Toyota in 2007. Additionally, Blaney was the only Toyota driver in the top 35 in owner points after 2007 season.The team had a rough start to the 2008 season. They missed the Aarons 499 which was a hard hit for the team. They came back the next week at Richmond to finish in the 18th position. The following week at Darlington they finished in the 9th position, their best of the year.

[edit] Car #23 History

The #27 car made its debut at the season finale NAPA 500 in 2000 with Scott Wimmer driving the #23 AT&T sponsored Pontiac. The team didn't race again until the season finale NAPA 500 in 2001 with Hut Stricklin driving the Hills Brothers sponsored Dodge.

For 2002, the car was renumbered to #27 with Scott Wimmer behind the wheel as an R&D team. The team returned in 2003 but ran Chevrolet equipment rather than the Dodge's ran by the other BDR teams. In 2006 the #23 returned to the track as an R&D team for Davis. Mike Skinner failed to qualify for the 2005 Daytona 500, but Bill Lester became the first African-American since Willy T. Ribbs to compete in a Cup race at the Golden Corral 500. He started nineteenth and finished 39th. Lester attempted two more races that season, finishing 32nd at Michigan International Speedway, but failing to qualify at California Speedway. The 23 attempted the Daytona 500 in 2007 with Mike Skinner, but did not qualify. In the latter stages of 2007, the car switched to the 27 and made the UAW-Ford 500 and the Checker Auto Parts 500 with Jacques Villeneuve driving.

[edit] Car #27 History

What is now the #27 Toyota started as the #93 Amoco Pontiac driven by sprint car racer Dave Blaney. The team moved to Winston Cup in 2000. Despite failing to qualify at the spring Rockingham race, Blaney finished 3rd in the Rookie of the year standings. The team flirted with victory lane a few times in 2001, but Amoco decided not to renew its contract, and Blaney left for Jasper Motorsports.

In 2002, Hut Stricklin brought his Hills Bros. sponsorship over from Junie Donlavey's operation. Stricklin missed the season-opening Daytona 500, and failed to record any top 10 finishes. He was released following the night race at Bristol. Kenny Wallace finished out the season for the car with help from Geoff Bodine, Scott Wimmer, and Tom Hubert. Wallace also piloted the car in 2003 with Stacker 2 sponsorship, before moving down to the team's Busch program.

In 2004 and 2005 the car ran mostly unsponsored, with a couple of drivers running selected events. Shane Hmiel, Tony Raines, and Blaney ran the car in 2004. Mike Skinner ran six events in 2005.

In the fall of 2005, it was announced that the team would return to full-time competition as the #55 car in 2006 as a partnership between Bill Davis Racing and Michael Waltrip Racing. The partnership allowed Bill Davis to return his second team to full-time status while Michael Waltrip and his sponsor NAPA Auto Parts would have a car to race while building Michael Waltrip Racing. The agreement also allowed for the transfer of owner points from BDR to MWR following the season. Soon afterwards, Jasper Motorsports closed down, and Waltrip purchased that team's owners points to be guaranteed a starting spot in the first five races of the 2006 season, with former Jasper owner Doug Bawel being listed as owner.

Jeremy Mayfield was hired drive the car full-time in 2007, with the car renumbered #36 for new sponsor 360 OTC. After four consecutive failed qualifying attempts, the 36 car made its first start of 2007 at the 2007 Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Mayfield drove the car at every track except for Infineon Raceway, when Butch Leitzinger drove the re-numbered #23 for one race. In October, Mayfield departed to Haas CNC Racing, and was replaced by Skinner and Benson for the balance of the season..[2] The car was then scheduled to become the #27 Toyota for Jacques Villeneuve in 2008, but the deal fell through after sponsorship could not be found. Benson and Skinner were hired to take over in the interim, before the team folded four races into the season after continued financial difficulties.

[edit] Nationwide Series

BDR began fielding cars in the Nationwide Series in 1996, when Burton drove eight races in the #22 MBNA Pontiac, posting three top-tens. Davis did not field a Busch team again until 1998, when he fieled the #93 Amoco Pontiac piloted by sprint car ace Dave Blaney. Running a limited schedule, Blaney finished in 6th place 3 times. Blaney had an even better 1999 season, winning the pole position several times and finished eighth in points. That same year, Davis fielded a second car for Burton, the #02 sponsored by Siemens. He finished in the top-ten in every race and won a pole at Darlington.

In 2000, Davis opened the #20 ride sponsored by AT&T. Rookie Mike Borkowski started the year in the ride, but after the Busch 200, he was released. Dave Blaney and Tom Hubert shared the ride for the year before Scott Wimmer took over in the final part of the season. Burton's team changed to the #22 sponsored by Polaris, and had two top-five finishes, then closed up.

Wimmer took over the #20, renumbered the #23, for 2001, posting eight top-tens and finishing eleventh in points in a Jani-King sponsored car. Siemens became a part-time sponsor in 2002, but the team threatened to shut down to a lack of finances. However, it remained open, and Wimmer won four races in the second-half of the season, finishing 3rd in points. For 2003, Stacker 2 came onboard as sponsor, and he picked up a win at Pikes Peak. At the end of the season, Wimmer moved to Cup, and Kenny Wallace took his place, posting ten top-ten finishes and finishing ninth in points. After Wallace and Stacker 2 left for ppc Racing, Davis sold the equipment to Keith Coleman Racing. The team still remained involved in Busch supplying engines to MacDonald Motorsports.

[edit] Craftsman Truck Series

[edit] Truck #5 history

The #5 truck.
The #5 truck.

The #5 truck started out in 2004 at Bang! Racing as the #42 driven by Mike Skinner. Skinner started the year with two top-fives, but his performance began to decline, and his team was sold to Davis, changing to the #5, starting at the Las Vegas 350. He won two poles and had a sixth-place run at the season-ending race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. In 2005, he won seven poles and two races, at Bristol and Richmond respectively, finishing fifth in points. In 2006, he had thirteen top-tens including a win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, and almost won the 2007 championship before suffering tire failures in the season finale. Skinner is signed to drive for BDR through the 2009 season.

[edit] Truck #22 history

BDR's original foray into the Truck Series, it debuted in 2004 at the Florida Dodge Dealers 250, where Bill Lester drove it to a sixteenth place run. He posted just one top-ten that year and finished 22nd in points. The next season, he won two poles (back-to-back at Kansas and Kentucky), had a best finish of fifth and moved up to seventeenth in points. Lester failed to finish in the top-ten during the 2006 season and dropped to twentieth in points. Tyler Walker began the season driving the renumbered #36 truck full-time in 2007, with sponsorship from 360 OTC. Six races into the season, rookie Ryan Mathews replaced Walker after it was learned that Walker was suspended for violating NASCAR's substance abuse policy, and the team had lost its sponsor, 360 OTC (which wanted #36). Mathews, in his short season, posted two top tens, one top five, and one pole at Kentucky Speedway. Mathews then step[ed out of the truck for the debut of 1995 Indianapolis 500 winner and 1997 Formula One Champion Jacques Villeneuve. In preparation for this, the truck was renumbered #27, which Villeneuve used in his 1995 CART and Indy 500 championship season, as a tribute to his father Gilles. The Truck will switch back to the #22 in 2008 and began the year with Phillip McGilton as the driver, before he was replaced by Scott Speed.

[edit] Truck #23 history

The 23 truck in 2007.
The 23 truck in 2007.

The #23 truck began in 2004 when Davis purchased its equipment from Phil Bonifield. The truck was piloted by Shelby Howard. Howard ran eight races before he was released, and Johnny Benson took over. Despite running a limited schedule, Benson finished 25th in points. Benson became the full-time driver in 2005, and had six top-fives en route to a tenth place points finish. Benson went on to collect five wins during the 2006 season with additional backing from Exide Batteries and finished runner-up to Todd Bodine for the championship. 360 OTC sponsored the 23 for ten races during the 2007 season. Benson won four races and finished third in points.

[edit] Truck #24 history

The #24 truck entered as a research and development entry for BDR in 2005. Steve Park drove the #67 South Padre Island entry in a pair of races towards the end of the year following his release from Orleans Racing. His best finish was 16th at Texas. In 2006, A. J. Allmendinger drove the newly-numberd 24 for three races, posting a fifth-place run at Talladega Superspeedway. ARCA RE/MAX Series driver Phillip McGilton was to make his NASCAR debut in this truck at Homestead-Miami Speedway before going full-time with the #22 team in 2008, however plans were changed as Blaney was put in the #22 truck sponsored by Caterpillar.

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Bill Davis Racing
Sprint Cup Drivers Dave Blaney (#22)
Craftsman Truck Series Drivers Mike Skinner (#5) | Scott Speed (#22) | Johnny Benson (#23)
Development drivers Michael Annett
Owner(s) Bill Davis
Languages