GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing
Car number/class | No. 99 Daytona Prototype |
---|---|
Sponsor | GAINSCO Auto Insurance Lowe's (Rolex 24 and other selected races when Johnson drives) |
Base | Lewisville, Texas, USA |
Team owner/s | Bob Stallings |
Race drivers | Alex Gurney Jon Fogarty Memo Gidley Darren Law Jimmy Vasser (Rolex 24 and other endurance races) Jimmie Johnson (Rolex 24 and other selected races) Cristiano da Matta (selected races) |
Engineer | |
Chassis | Riley MkXXII |
Engine | Chevrolet 5.0L V8 |
Rolex Series career | |
Debut | 2005 Road & Track 250 |
Latest race | 2013 Porsche 250 |
Races competed | 89 |
Team Championships | 2 |
Drivers' Championships | 2 |
Race victories | 16 |
Pole positions | 30 |
2012 position | 7th (340 points) |
GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing is a racing team in the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series based in Lewisville, Texas. The team campaigns the No. 99 GAINSCO Auto Insurance Chevrolet-powered Riley, driven by Alex Gurney and Jon Fogarty. Primary sponsorship comes from GAINSCO Auto Insurance.
Initially, the team's owner and founder, SCCA Formula Atlantic National Champion Bob Stallings, drove No. 99. In 2006, with hopes of his team reaching its "championship potential", Stallings decided, two races into the season, to "step out of the cockpit", signing Jon Fogarty as his full-time replacement.[1]Jimmy Vasser drives for the team in select endurance races, and Rocky Moran, Jr. has also driven No. 99.
At Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in 2008, for the first time the team campaigned a second car, driven by Vasser and fellow Champ Car champion Cristiano da Matta, the latter making his first racing start since a critical injury in a 2006 testing crash.
In 2005 and 2006, the team was known as GAINSCO/Blackhawk Racing.
Prior to the 2010 season, the GAINSCO DP was powered by Pontiac. It has since been rebadged as Chevrolet.
First victory and championship
In 2007, GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing won its first Rolex Sports Car Series race – the Mexico City 400k at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez. This success would lead to six more wins to break the single season record of victories. This included a streak of three in a row broken at Iowa by Scott Pruett. Eventually, their victory at Sonoma gave them a one-point advantage over Pruett and three markers over Max Angelelli. In the Sunchaser 1000k season finale, Alex Gurney and Jon Fogarty rallied to finish eighth after a series of mishaps and claim GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing's first Rolex championship.
References
- ↑ "Bob Stallings.". GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing. Retrieved 31 December 2012.