Tim Steele (racing driver)

Tim Steele
Nationality American
Born (1968-03-01) March 1, 1968
Coopersville, Michigan United States
Retired 2007
Automobile Racing Club of America
Years active 1992-2006
Starts 146
Wins 41
Poles 31
Best finish 1st in 1993, 1996, 1997
Championship titles
1993, 1996, 1997
1984
ARCA RE/MAX Series
(3 times)
NAMRA Champ Car division
Awards
2009

1993
Michigan Motor Sports Hall of Fame
ARCA Rookie of the Year
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career
5 races run over 1 year
Best finish 52nd - 1994
First race 1994 Miller Genuine Draft 400 (Michigan)
Last race 1994 DieHard 500 (Talladega)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 0 0
NASCAR Xfinity Series career
10 races run over 3 years
Best finish 46th - 1997
First race 1993 Detroit Gasket 200 (Michigan)
Last race 1997 Birmingham Auto Dealers 500k (Talladega)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 2 0
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career
13 races run over 1 year
Best finish 25th - 1999
First race 1999 Florida Dodge Dealers 400 (Homestead)
Last race 1999 Kroger 225 (Louisville)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 1 1
Statistics current as of July 24, 2012.

Tim Steele (born March 1, 1968 in Coopersville, Michigan) is a retired American stock car racer.[1] He won three ARCA Remax Series national championships and raced in NASCAR's highest three series.[2] He was inducted in the Michigan Motor Sports Hall of Fame in 2009.[2]

Background

Steele began racing as a 5-year-old in motorcycle ice racing.[2] He finished second in Michigan's 125cc AMA motocross division.[2] In 1984, the 16-year-old won the NAMRA Champ Cars division championship and was the division's Rookie of the Year; he also raced in International Jet Ski Racing events that season.[2] He continued to move up the ladder and began racing late models at Berlin Raceway.[2] He began racing on regional touring series, winning in the American Speed Association in 1990 and the NASCAR All-Pro Series in 1992.[2]

ARCA career

Steele's 1996 ARCA car at Pocono Raceway

Tim started out in the 1993 Season driving for Harold Steele’s HS Die Team.[3] It was a very successful year. He went on to win the Championship that year and earned the Rookie of the Year award.[2][4] He went on and continued to win races also winning the championship in 1996 and 1997. Steele won 12 times in 1997, the most wins in the series since 1973.[2]

In November 1997 he was involved in a serious accident in which he suffered a brain injury. At the time he was planning on moving up to the Winston Cup Series to try and contend for rookie of the year.[4] He was ten days away from signing up with a team to be owned by his father Harold and Green Bay Packers Quarterback Brett Favre, who were planning to purchase Bud Moore Engineering.[3] The accident damaged his brain, doctors told him he could not handle another trauma.[5] Much of 1998 he spent going from doctor to doctor to see if a comeback was possible.[4] He battled a dependency on prescription drug oxycontin which he was taking for headaches.[6] Finally in June 1998, Tim made his comeback to the ARCA series at Pocono. He won the race and went on to race in five more races that year winning three of them. In 1999, Tim only competed in one race at Talladega finishing 34th after a crash.[7]

In 2000 Tim made a full-time comeback to the series. He won three races and accumulated 14 top ten finishes and finished third in the final points standings.[8] In 2001, Steele won four races and finished ninth in the final points standings.[9]

The next five years were not as successful as he only competed in 16 races and earned only 3 top 5 finishes.[1] In 2007, after a Late model crash at Toledo Speedway, Tim decided it was time to call it quits.[4]

Between 1993 and 2006, Steele had attempted 146 races, winning 41, which equates to victories in 28% of all the races he entered.[5] Steele's 24 victories is ARCA's all-time Superspeedway winner, including nine at Pocono Raceway. He recorded 86 top-five finishes, 101 top-10s and led 5,423 laps.[5] That means that Steele led laps in 64% of every race he entered.[5] He also won 31 career pole awards.[3] He was the first ARCA driver to make over $1,000,000 USD in his career, surpassing Bobby Bowsher's previous record of $952,535 USD in 1998.[10]

Other Series

Winston Cup

In 1994, Tim competed in five Winston Cup (now Sprint Cup Series) races in a car owned by Bobby Allison only managing a best finish of 33rd at Pocono.[1] He attempted to qualify for the inaugural Brickyard 400 but failed.[1]

Busch Grand National

In 1993, he competed in two Busch Grand National Series (now Xfinity Series) races at Michigan and Richmond for NASCAR driver Davey Allison's team. Both races ended with Did Not Finishes (DNFs). In 1994, Tim competed in one race at Michigan for his fathers team; it ended in another DNF. In 1995, he competed in seven races for James Finch. This time he managed to accumulate two top tens and one top five finish and an overall average finish of 19.9. This would be the last year he would compete in the series.[1]

Craftsman Truck Series

In 1999 Tim competed in 13 Craftsman Truck Series (now Camping World Truck Series) races in a truck once again owned by his father. He accumulated 1 top ten finish and led 45 laps. He averaged a 19th place finish and finished 25th overall in the standings.[1]

Winston West

1996 and 1998 Tim competed in 2 Winston West races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, scoring a top five and leading 15 laps.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Steele's racing statistics". RacingReference.info. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Tim Steele". Michigan Motorsport Hall of Fame. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 "3-Time ARCA RE/MAX Series Champion Tim Steele Retires". Racing Nation. June 27, 2007. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "ARCAracing.com Asks, 'Where Are They Now?'; Like Dad, Like Daughter, a Steele Family Tradition". ARCA. November 24, 2009. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  5. 1 2 3 4 "3-time ARCA Champion Tim Steele retires". Auto Racing Sport. June 28, 2007. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  6. Ashenfelter, Mark. "ARCA's Steele Admits Drug Problem, Returns After Fighting Addiction". October 21, 2002. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  7. "1999 ARCA Statistics". Racing Reference. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  8. "2000 ARCA Statistics". Racing Reference. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  9. "2001 ARCA Statistics". Racing Reference. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
  10. "Tim Steele ARCA's First Million Dollar Driver". January 26, 1999. Retrieved 27 April 2010.

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Bobby Bowsher
ARCA Series champion
1993
Succeeded by
Bobby Bowsher
Preceded by
Andy Hillenburg
ARCA Bondo/Mar-Hyde Series champion
1996-1997
Succeeded by
Frank Kimmel
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