John Nemechek
John Nemechek | |||||||
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Born |
Lakeland, Florida, United States | March 12, 1970||||||
Died |
March 21, 1997 27) Homestead, Florida, United States | (aged||||||
Cause of death | Major head injuries from racing accident at Homestead-Miami Speedway | ||||||
NASCAR Nationwide Series career | |||||||
1 race(s) run over 1 year(s) | |||||||
Best finish | 92nd (1994) | ||||||
First race | 1994 Kroger 200 (IRP) | ||||||
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career | |||||||
43 race(s) run over 3 year(s) | |||||||
Best finish | 13th (1996) | ||||||
First race | 1995 Copper World Classic (Phoenix) | ||||||
Last race | 1997 Florida Dodge Dealers 400 (Homestead) | ||||||
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John Hunter Nemechek (March 12, 1970—March 21, 1997) was an American race car driver who most notably competed in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
Life and racing career
The younger brother of four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race winner Joe Nemechek, John followed his brother into racing, running his first race at the age of twelve in an 80 class dirtbike race. After a quick progression to the 250cc class, he moved onto mini-stock cars, where he raced against his brother, and eventually late-model stocks.
When he wasn't racing, Nemechek served as the front-tire changer on Joe's pit crew, and was on Joe's 1992 Busch Series Championship winning team. He would begin attempting NASCAR races himself, and ran one Busch Race at IRP in 1994. He finished 30th after his #89 Chevrolet suffered engine failure. The following season, he began racing the #8 Chevrolet C/K in the new Craftsman Truck Series. In the first year of competition, Nemechek ran 16 races and had two top-ten finishes. He followed that up with two more top-tens in 1996 and a thirteenth place finish in points, running a single truck he built himself titled The War Wagon under his own team, Chek Racing, Inc.
Death
On March 16, 1997, Nemechek was running a truck race at Homestead-Miami Speedway when with 25 laps to go, he suddenly lost control of his truck and slammed into the Turn 1 wall driver's-side first, suffering major head injuries. He was extricated and transported to a nearby hospital, where he clung to life over the next five days before finally succumbing on March 21, just nine days after his 27th birthday.
Legacy
Following the incident, Homestead was reconfigured into a true oval with a six-degree banking to reduce the possibility of the type of crash that killed Nemechek. His brother Joe was able to pay tribute to his brother by winning a Busch Series race that November at the now-reconfigured circuit; he later named his son John Hunter after his late brother.
External links
- John Nemechek driver statistics at Racing Reference
- John Nemechek's fatal crash