Turn One Racing

Turn One Racing
Owner(s) Stacy Compton
Base Mooresville, North Carolina
Series Sprint Cup Series
Camping World Truck Series
Car numbers 06, 46, 60, 64, 66, 74
Race drivers Stacy Compton, Cole Whitt, Dakoda Armstrong, Tony Raines, Reed Sorenson, Chad McCumbee, Narain Karthikeyan, Johnny Benson, Terry Cook, Jack Sprague, Justin Marks, Grant Enfinger, JR Fitzpatrick, Ricky Rudd
Manufacturer Chevrolet
Toyota
Opened 2005
Closed 2013
Career
Latest race 2013 Ford EcoBoost 200
Drivers' Championships 0
Race victories 1
Pole positions 1

Turn One Racing (formerly Wyler Brothers Racing) is an American NASCAR motor racing team that competes in the Camping World Truck Series. The team was owned by Ohio car dealer Jeff Wyler until 2009 when driver Stacy Compton bought the assets of Wyler Racing and moved the team's base to Mooresville, North Carolina.

Sprint Cup Series

On October 6, 2006, Wyler Racing tested a Toyota Camry Car of Tomorrow at Talladega Superspeedway with Ricky Rudd as the driver.[1] During the 2007 season, the team competed in their first NASCAR Nextel Cup race in the Crown Royal Presents The Jim Stewart 400 with Johnny Benson driving the number 46 Toyota Camry.[2] In the race, the team recorded a finishing position of thirty-first.[2]

After a five-year hiatus, the team planned to return to the series with an alliance with Richard Childress Racing.[3] in 2012 by competing in eight to ten races, beginning at Phoenix International Raceway.[4] Stacy Compton was entered to run the 2012 Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway,[5] but Reed Sorenson qualified the car.[6] In the race, Sorenson finished 42nd.[7] After two races with the team, Sorenson moved to FAS Lane Racing to drive the number 32 car.

Camping World Truck Series

The 60 truck in 2007.

Purchasing equipment from the defunct Fiddleback Racing, the 60 team began running in 2005 at The Milwaukee Mile, when Chad Chaffin finished seventeenth. Chaffin ran ten races for the team that season, posting a top-ten at the Sylvania 200. At the end of the season, he was replaced by Sprague, who had three top-tens in five starts for the team. In 2006, Con-way became the team's new sponsor, and Sprague responded with two wins and a fifth-place finish in points. The following year, Sprague won the first race of the season at Daytona, but fell to ninth in the standings.

Sprague and Con-way left at the end of 2007 for Kevin Harvick Incorporated and Roush Fenway Racing respectively. The team was to merge with South Point Racing to form Wyler-Gaughan Racing in 2008, but the deal fell through. Richard Johns was to be the driver of the No. 60, bringing along sponsorship from havfun.com for both the 2008 and 2009 seasons, but the deal fell through. The team replaced Johns with Terry Cook, who was originally scheduled to drive a second truck, the No. 06. Cook had two top-fives and was running tenth in points when the team released Cook and replaced him with Sprague. For 2009, Compton drove the No. 60 mostly unsponsored until Safe Auto Insurance Company signed a 2-year deal to sponsor the team. Near the end of 2009, Wyler was unsure if the team would be able to continue into 2010, and Compton purchased the No. 60 truck in late 2009 so that the team could continue running. The team ran as Wyler Racing for most of 2010 until Compton renamed the team Turn One Racing, LLC. India's Narain Karthikeyan shared the driver seat with Compton starting at Martinsville Speedway and selected events, with Compton serving as Karthikeyan's driving coach. The team added on the No. 64 Truck with Chase Mattioli driving at Pocono. With Safe Auto departing for ThorSport Racing and Karthikeyan returning to F1 to drive for Hispania Racing, Red Bull development driver Cole Whitt, who ran the No. 60 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, drove the No. 60 full-time for Rookie of the Year with Red Bull sponsorship. Justin Marks returned with GoPro sponsorship for the first 12 races, before being replaced by various drivers to fill out the rest of the year.

Turn One Racing announced in 2011 that they intended to field a truck for Johnny Benson in 2012, but the deal fell through due to sponsorship issues. Cole Whitt left the team to drive for JR Motorsports in the Nationwide Series. Turn One Racing announced that they would be running a partial Sprint Cup schedule. JR Fitzpatrick drove the No. 60 with sponsorship from Equipment Express for the first two races, but decided to race in the Canadian Tire Series for the remainder of 2012. He was replaced by Chad McCumbee and Grant Enfinger for the following three races in the hopes of securing more sponsorship. Crew chief Kevin Starland left to join RBR Motorsports. After Starland's departure, the Truck team went on hiatus for the rest of 2012. The team was revived in 2013 with the arrival of Dakoda Armstrong and Winfield. Later in the season, on August 5, Joe Shear, Jr., son of former driver Joe Shear, joined the No. 60 team from ThorSport Racing.[8] The team once again shut down for the 2014 season.

References

  1. "Wyler Racing/Rudd to test Car of Tomorrow". Motorsport. 2006-12-10. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  2. 1 2 Rodman, Dave (2007-05-06). "Benson, Wyler Racing off to good beginning in COT". NASCAR.com. Retrieved 2007-05-10.
  3. Aumann, Mark (2012-01-20). "Turn One to run partial Cup schedule in 2012". NASCAR. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  4. "Turn One Racing to Make NASCAR Sprint Cup Debut at Phoenix". Turn One Racing. 2012-01-20. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  5. Pistone, Pete (2012-03-12). "Bristol's Food City 500 entry list released". CBS Sports. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  6. "2012 Food City 500 qualifying results". Racing-reference.info. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  7. "2012 Food City 500 Results". Sporting News. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  8. "Armstrong, No. 60 team land Shear as crew chief". NASCAR. 2013-08-05. Retrieved 2013-08-08.
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