Darrell Waltrip



























































































Darrell Waltrip

DarrellWaltripFoxNASCARBroadcaster..jpg
Waltrip in 2007

Born Darrell Lee Waltrip
(1947-02-05) February 5, 1947 (age 71)
Owensboro, Kentucky, U.S.
Achievements
1981, 1982, 1985 Winston Cup Series Champion
1989 Daytona 500 Winner
1992 Southern 500 Winner
1978, 1979, 1985, 1988, 1989 Coca-Cola 600 Winner
1977, 1982 Winston 500 Winner
1985 The Winston Winner (inaugural race)
1981 Busch Clash Winner
1976 Snowball Derby Winner
1970, 1973 Fairgrounds Speedway Track Champion
Awards
1989, 1990 Winston Cup Series Most Popular Driver
Named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers (1998)
International Motorsports Hall of Fame (2005)
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America (2003)
NASCAR Hall of Fame (2012)
Fairgrounds Speedway Hall of Fame (2001)

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career
809 races run over 29 years
Best finish 1st (1981, 1982, 1985)
First race
1972 Winston 500 (Talladega)
Last race
2000 NAPA 500 (Atlanta)
First win
1975 Music City USA 420 (Nashville)
Last win
1992 Southern 500 (Darlington)











Wins Top tens Poles
84 390 59


NASCAR Xfinity Series career
95 races run over 14 years
Best finish 22nd (1986)
First race
1982 Mello Yello 300 (Charlotte)
Last race
2006 Goody's 250 (Martinsville Speedway)
First win
1982 Miller Time 300 (Charlotte)
Last win
1989 Goody's 300 (Daytona International Speedway)











Wins Top tens Poles
13 53 4


NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career
17 races run over 6 years
Best finish 37th (1996)
First race
1995 Heartland Tailgate 175 (Heartland)
Last race
2005 Kroger 200 (Martinsville)











Wins Top tens Poles
0 8 0


NASCAR Grand National East Series career
1 race run over 1 year
First race
1973 Salem 100 (Salem)











Wins Top tens Poles
0 0 0


Darrell Lee Waltrip (born February 5, 1947) is an American motorsports analyst, author, national television broadcaster, and former racing driver. He is also a three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion (1981, 1982, 1985) and a three-time NASCAR Cup Series runner-up (1979, 1983, 1986). Posting a modern NASCAR series record of 22 top five finishes in 1983 and 21 top five finishes both in 1981 and 1986, Waltrip won 84 NASCAR Cup Series races, including the 1989 Daytona 500, a record five in the Coca-Cola 600 (formerly the World 600) (1978, 1979, 1985, 1988, 1989), and a track and Series record for any driver at Bristol Motor Speedway with 12 (seven consecutive from 1981 to 1984). Those victories tie him with Bobby Allison for fourth on the NASCAR's all-time wins list in the Cup Series and place him second to Jeff Gordon for the most wins in NASCAR's modern era. He is ranked second for all-time pole positions with 59, including all-time highs with 35 on short tracks and eight on road courses. Competing in 809 Cup starts over four decades and 29 years (1972–2000), he has scored 271 Top 5s and 390 Top 10s. Winning $19,886,666.00 in posted earnings, he became the first NASCAR driver to be awarded over $10 million in race winnings, more than $26 million in today's currency. Waltrip also holds the all-time track record 67 wins at the Fairgrounds Speedway in Nashville, Tennessee, including NASCAR, USAC, ASA, and local Late Model Sportsman NASCAR sanctioned series races. He still holds many NASCAR records, more than a decade after his retirement as an active driver.


He has additionally won 13 NASCAR Busch Grand National Series races, seven American Speed Association (ASA) races, three IROC races, two Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA) races, two NASCAR All-American Challenge Series events, two All Pro Racing Association races, and a USAC race. He competed in the 24 Hours of Daytona.


He has also won many awards in NASCAR. That includes two for NASCAR's Most Popular Driver Award (1989, 1990), three for "American Driver of the Year" (1979, 1981, 1982), and "NASCAR's Driver of the Decade" for the 1980s, as well as three for "National Motorsports Press Association Driver of the Year" (1977, 1981, and 1982), two for "Auto Racing Digest Driver of the Year" (1981 and 1982), the first "Tennessee Professional Athlete of the Year" (1979), one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers in 1998, and the Bill France "Award of Excellence" in 2000. He has been inducted in numorous halls of fame, including the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America for 2003 the International Motorsports Hall of Fame for 2005. After being nominated for the inaugural 2010 and 2011 classes, he was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame's 2012 class.


Waltrip currently serves as a color analyst for Fox Sports alongside Mike Joy, and Jeff Gordon, a columnist at Foxsports.com, and an author. He is the older brother of former NASCAR driver and the now defunct MWR team owner Michael Waltrip.




Contents






  • 1 Early years


  • 2 NASCAR career


    • 2.1 Early years in NASCAR: 1972–1975


    • 2.2 DiGard years: 1975–1980


    • 2.3 Junior Johnson years: 1981–1986


    • 2.4 Hendrick Motorsports years: 1987–1990


    • 2.5 Owner/driver years: 1991-mid 1998


    • 2.6 1998 mid season with Dale Earnhardt, Inc.


    • 2.7 Final years of racing: 1998–2000




  • 3 Craftsman Truck Series


  • 4 Broadcast career: 2001–present


  • 5 Currently


  • 6 Legacy


  • 7 Media appearances


    • 7.1 Film and television


    • 7.2 Books and magazines




  • 8 Motorsports career results


    • 8.1 NASCAR


      • 8.1.1 Winston Cup Series


        • 8.1.1.1 Daytona 500




      • 8.1.2 Busch Series


      • 8.1.3 Craftsman Truck Series




    • 8.2 International Race of Champions




  • 9 See also


  • 10 References


  • 11 External links





Early years


Waltrip was born on February 5, 1947 in Owensboro, Kentucky. Starting his driving career in Go-karts at age 12, Waltrip entered his first stock car race just four years later. Waltrip and his father built a 1936 Chevrolet coupe and headed to a local dirt track near their Owensboro home. The first night out was far from a success as the youngster, barely old enough to drive on the street, slammed the wall and heavily damaged the coupe. Waltrip soon left the dirt and found his niche on asphalt where the smoothness he learned in the karts proved a valuable asset. Waltrip was a 1965 graduate of Daviess County High School in Owensboro.


He was an early racer at the Kentucky Motor Speedway (an asphalt track in Whitesville) and Ellis Raceway, a dirt track on US Highway 60 west in Daviess County (Ellis Raceway is now closed), driving a car called "Big 100" built by Harry Pedley, owner of Pedley's Garage, on West Second Street, in Owensboro and sponsored by R.C. Bratcher Radiator and Welding Co. His success gained the attention of Nashville owner/driver P. B. Crowell, who urged Waltrip to move to the area to race at the Fairgrounds Speedway, at the Tennessee State Fairgrounds in Nashville, where he would win two track championships, in 1970, and 1973.


Waltrip drove the #48 P. B. Crowell owned Ford sponsored by American Home, in Nashville, where he aggressively promoted the week's race when he appeared on a local television program promoting the speedway's races, and was not afraid to embrace the local media when other competitors were reluctant to do so. Some of the notorious "on air" trash-talking included making fun of some of the other local drivers such as Coo Coo Marlin (whose son Sterling later raced at the circuit and is a two-time Daytona 500 winner) and James "Flookie" Buford, whose nickname he would mock on air. It pleased track management that he was helping sell tickets, leading to packed grandstands and extra paychecks from track operators for his promotional skills.


He became friends with WSM radio host Ralph Emery in his early years, forming a bond which would be influential throughout his career, as Waltrip would appear frequently on Emery's early morning television show on local Nashville television station, WSMV, and later substitute for Emery in the 1980s on Emery's television show, Nashville Now on the former TNN cable network (later, Spike TV). Waltrip would use the success he enjoyed at the Music City Motorplex, and his notoriety and public speaking skills that he acquired from television appearances in Nashville, as a springboard into NASCAR's big leagues.


He became a Christian in 1983 but it was years later before God came first in his life.[1] One of the charities he supports is the Motor Racing Outreach (MRO)[2] providing spiritual support to racers and their families.



NASCAR career



Early years in NASCAR: 1972–1975


Waltrip started in NASCAR Winston Cup, NASCAR's top racing series at age 25, (25 years, 3 months, 2 days), on May 7, 1972, at the 1972 Winston 500, at Talladega, Alabama, the series' fastest and longest track at 2.66 miles, (4.281 kilometers), driving a 1969 Mercury Cyclone he purchased from Holman Moody, originally the Ford Fairlane driven by Mario Andretti to victory in the 1967 Daytona 500. Waltrip finished 38th in his first NASCAR Winston Cup race after retiring on lap 69 due to engine failure. Waltrip paid $12,500 for the car, a spare engine and some spare parts and drove it in 5 cup series events until mid-1973. The car was converted from the Ford Fairlane Andretti drove, to a 1969 Mercury Cyclone as driven by Waltrip, and later converted to a 1971 Mercury Cyclone. The car was sponsored by Terminal Transport of Owensboro, Kentucky, Waltrip's first major sponsor. Waltrip still owns the car today as part of a collection of cars he has raced and is one of his favorites.


The early years found Waltrip competing against legendary stock car racers such as Richard Petty, David Pearson, Cale Yarborough, and Bobby Allison, among others. Waltrip soon earned the respect of his more experienced peers. He was given the #95 as a number but Waltrip preferred car #17 because his hero, David Pearson, had success with the number in earlier years. As an owner/driver, Waltrip ran 5 races in 1972, 14 races in 1973, 16 races in 1974, with 7 top-five finishes, and 17 races as an owner/driver in 1975, with his first Winston Cup victory coming at his home track, May 10, 1975, at age 28, (28 years, 3 months, 5 days), in the Music City 420, outpacing the field by two laps at the track where he had won 2 track championships in Nashville, Tennessee, in the #17 Terminal Transport Chevrolet, a car Waltrip owned.


During the 1973 season, Waltrip drove 5 NASCAR Cup races for Bud Moore Engineering.



DiGard years: 1975–1980




Waltrip in 1979


Except for five races in 1973, driving for Bud Moore Engineering, Waltrip primarily drove his own cars at the beginning of his NASCAR career until the middle of the 1975 Winston Cup season when he was signed to a multi-year contract and replaced driver Donnie Allison to drive the #88 DiGard Chevrolet, Waltrip's long-awaited jump into the big leagues of United States stock car auto racing. The DiGard racing team was founded in part by Mike DiProspero and Bill Gardner, who were brothers-in-law, with the legendary Robert Yates as engine builder.



Waltrip's first race with DiGard came on August 17, 1975, at the Talladega 500, Talladega Superspeedway, in Talladega, Alabama, finishing 42nd after experiencing engine failure. Waltrip would compete in ten more races in the 1975 season for DiGard, sponsored by Terminal Transport, and get his second career NASCAR Winston Cup victory October 12, 1975, in the Capital City 500, in Richmond, Virginia. He would post three top-five and four top-ten finishes in the 11 races he ran for DiGard in 1975.




DiGard Gatorade Chevrolet Monte Carlo that Waltrip drove to victory in the 1978 World 600, Concord, NC, May 28, 1978


During the late 1970s, Waltrip would begin his domination of NASCAR's short track venues, especially at the Bristol International Speedway (Bristol, Tennessee), Martinsville Speedway (Martinsville, Virginia) and the Music City Motorplex (Nashville). He holds the track record at Bristol International Speedway, for wins with 12 victories, and for pole positions at Martinsville Speedway, with 8 pole position awards.


In 1976, Gatorade became Waltrip's primary sponsor as he started his first full race season at age 29, driving the DiGard Gatorade Chevrolet. Waltrip won only one NASCAR Winston Cup race in 1976, the Virginia 500, at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia, but in 1977 and 1978, working with legendary NASCAR crew chief Buddy Parrott, he won six times each year, including his first of four career victories at the Talladega Superspeedway, in Talladega, AL, on May 1, 1977, and his first of a five career victories in the series' longest race, a grueling 600 mile race, the Coca-Cola 600 (formerly the World 600), May 28, 1978. Waltrip, and Parrott, would win 21 NASCAR races together from 1977 through 1980.


In perhaps the most famous and most well known NASCAR race, the 1979 Daytona 500, held February 18, 1979, a race that Richard Petty won, Waltrip was a pre-race favorite to win the race. As the first NASCAR race covered "flag to flag" on national television, Cale Yarborough, and Donnie Allison, while battling for the lead on the last lap, came together and crashed hard, taking each other out, in the third turn. While the Allison and Yarborough cars were spinning and coming to rest in the grassy infield, attention turned quickly to the new leaders, Richard Petty running third, and Waltrip, running closely behind in fourth, as a fist fight ensued between Yarborough, Donnie Allison, and his brother and racer, Bobby Allison, in the turn three grass. Earlier in the race, Waltrip's DiGard Gatorade Oldsmobile, dropped a cylinder and while able to hang onto the slipstream of the Petty car on the final lap, was not able to draft past the Petty car in the fourth turn on the final lap due to the reduction in horsepower. Still, Waltrip finished runner-up in perhaps the most famous race in NASCAR history, and was an early turning point in Waltrip's career.


The 1979 Daytona 500 would be an early season precursor for the remaining nine months of the racing season. Waltrip and Petty would engage in a bitter battle, race after race, for the 1979 NASCAR championship. In that 1979 season, Waltrip won seven NASCAR Winston Cup races and was a serious contender for what would have been his first NASCAR Winston Cup Championship despite numerous engine failures, mechanical problems, and differences with DiGard management. On September 23, 1979, after winning pole position and leading 184 laps at the Old Dominion 500, at Martinsville, Virginia, Waltrip again experienced engine failure. The DiGard team pitted the car and made a rare mid-race engine change in a record 11 minutes. Waltrip lost 29 laps in the pits but was able to finish 11th, as Petty finished 2nd.


At the start of the final race of the season, the Los Angeles Times 500, at Ontario Motor Speedway, Ontario, California, Waltrip led Richard Petty by a scant 2 points in the year-long championship battle after finishing the race 5th ahead of Petty's 6th-place finish in the previous race, the Dixie 500, Atlanta Motor Speedway, November 4, 1979. However, Petty won an unprecedented seventh, and his final, NASCAR Winston Cup Championship by finishing the final race of the season in 5th position, as Waltrip finished 8th. The final margin of Petty's Championship victory over Waltrip was only 11 points, the third-closest points race in NASCAR Winston Cup history.


Waltrip closed out the 1970s driving the #88 DiGard Chevrolet, sponsored by Gatorade, ranked NASCAR's #2 driver, having won 22 NASCAR Winston Cup races in just 149 race starts. His aggressive driving style and outspoken demeanor earned him the nickname "Jaws", a reference to the 1975 film about a killer shark. The nickname was given to Waltrip by rival Cale Yarborough in an interview after Waltrip crashed Yarborough out of a race. Waltrip himself preferred the nicknames "D.W." or "D-Dubya" but he acknowledged Yarborough by displaying an inflatable toy shark in his pit at the next race.




Darrell Waltrip, discussing his 5th-place finish and prospects for winning his first NASCAR driving championship after the Dixie 500, Atlanta Motor Speedway, November 4, 1979, driving his DiGard Gatorade Chevrolet Monte Carlo


At the height of his NASCAR Winston Cup success in the early 1980s, fans often booed Waltrip, in large part because of his success on the track defeating more established drivers with large fan followings, but also because of his open criticism of NASCAR, his aggressive "take no prisoners", "win at all costs" approach to driving, and his public attempt to be released from his driving contract with DiGard in 1980, a year in which Waltrip won five NASCAR Winston Cup races. Still, Waltrip had a huge and devoted fan following. It was often said by race commentators and sports columnists that "you either hate him or love him".


It was Waltrip's rival Cale Yarborough, driver for legendary owner Junior Johnson, that privately told Waltrip that he intended to cut back on his racing appearances and leave Junior Johnson & Associates team at the end of the 1980 season, opening the position for Waltrip, but only if Waltrip could successfully negotiate an early termination of his contract with DiGard. Waltrip successfully negotiated his exit from DiGard, and would take over the No. 11 for 1981



Junior Johnson years: 1981–1986




1983 Junior Johnson Pepsi Challenger Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS. The paint scheme also found its way on a Nimrod Racing Aston Martin Waltrip drove in the 1983 24 Hours of Daytona.


Waltrip's success driving the Junior Johnson prepared cars came immediately and even surpassed the highly successful years he had with DiGard. In his first two years as driver for the Mountain Dew sponsored, Junior Johnson prepared Buick Regal, Waltrip won 12 races each year,[3] 14 pole positions in each year, and his first two NASCAR Winston Cup Championships, in 1981 and 1982. Waltrip's success and driving prowess helped to bring the Buick Grand National into prominence, since he drove a Regal (whose platform spawned the Grand National) during his years of sponsorship by Mountain Dew. The company later honored the Waltrip years with throwback paint schemes, once in 2006 and again in 2008.


It was during the early 1980s, with Junior Johnson, that Waltrip first worked with Jeff Hammond, a pit crewman for Johnson. Hammond was at first skeptical of Waltrip's driving style since it differed so much from the former driver for whom he worked, Cale Yarborough. Yarborough made adjustments to his driving based on the handling of the car in a particular race whereas Waltrip wanted the car adjusted around his driving style. Hammond eventually came to appreciate Waltrip's "finesse", and smooth driving style which proved highly successful. Waltrip and Hammond would benefit from each other's knowledge and abilities and would work together for most of their careers in the sport. Waltrip and Hammond work together, even today, as broadcaster and analyst at Fox Sports, and Speed TV.


Waltrip's first season with Junior Johnson was a huge success. He won 12 races including big races such as the Southern 500, the Food City 500, and the Riverside 400 event. He almost set a win record at Talladega for his 1981 season (winning the big races) by nearly winning the Talladega 500. On the final lap rookie Ron Bouchard dove under Waltrip and Terry Labonte to take the lead. Bouchard beat Waltrip by a foot in a 3-wide drag race in what has been called the biggest upset in NASCAR history. Waltrip reportedly said "Where the hell did he come from?" in an interview. Waltrip also stated in a post-race conference that part of the reason he lost the race was because he thought Bouchard was a lap down and therefore did not block Bouchard.


He ended 1981 with 11 poles, 12 wins, 21 top fives, and 25 top tens. Four of his 12 wins were consecutive. Not only did Waltrip win 12 races, he also won the Winston Cup championship against nemesis Bobby Allison by over 72 points.


In 1982, Waltrip won 12 races and basically repeated his 1981 season. He won the Winston Cup championship again against Bobby Allison.


At the 1983 Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on February 20, 1983, Waltrip, a pre-race favorite to win the race, drove the Junior Johnson prepared 1983 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Pepsi Challenger. He was involved in an accident when his car spun on lap 64, at exit of turn 4, at nearly 200 mph (320 km/h), as he was making an evasive maneuver to avoid rear-ending a much slower car ahead of him. Waltrip locked his brakes but the car slid for several hundred feet, then struck an earthen embankment near the entrance to pit road. The force of the impact was so violent that Waltrip's car was thrown back onto the track, in front of oncoming traffic. Waltrip then made hard contact with the outside concrete retaining wall once again into oncoming traffic. Cale Yarborough, the eventual winner of the race, barely avoided hitting the demolished Pepsi Challenger. Waltrip suffered a concussion and was taken by ambulance to the Halifax Medical Center for observation and medical treatment. The crash was a wake-up call and a life-changing event for Waltrip. When he heard drivers and fans joking that the crash would "knock him sane" or "finally shut him up", he realized for the first time how unpopular he was and resolved to clean up his image. The years following that crash would see a different Darrell Waltrip, one who worked hard to repair and rebuild his relationship with fans and fellow drivers. Years later, Waltrip would be voted (by NASCAR fans) "Most Popular Driver", two years in a row, (1989, 1990).




1985 Budweiser Chevrolet Monte Carlo owned by Junior Johnson, and driven by Waltrip to the 1985 NASCAR driving championship


Waltrip would continue his unprecedented success driving for Junior Johnson through the 1986 NASCAR Winston Cup season, winning his third NASCAR Winston Cup Championship, in 1985, winning the inaugural all-star race, The Winston, in 1985, and compiling 43 additional wins.


However, Waltrip was quick to recognize the new and rapid expansion of the sport's popularity, evolving and expanding interest in NASCAR, even among housewives, teens and young adults, and others never before considered NASCAR fans, all primarily due to increasing national network and cable subscription television which televised almost every NASCAR event live, and the growing interest of new family oriented sponsors never before associated with motorsports. NASCAR was becoming a multi-regional, multi-racial, and multi-national and multi-cultural sport enjoyed by men, women and children alike. In addition to the huge influx of money from new sponsors and television, the more astute NASCAR team owners immediately embraced new resources, such as computers, telemetry, research and development, multi-car teams for information sharing, wind-tunnel testing, and the procurement of aerodynamicist, computer modelers, and structural engineers. Waltrip, now one of two drivers for Johnson, was quick to envision the future of NASCAR and sought to take advantage of the coming changes, something his car owner, Junior Johnson, although a pioneer of the sport, was somewhat reluctant to embrace. Afterall, Johnson had enjoyed success for decades and won numerous races and championships spanning decades using his own formulas for success.


Well aware of Junior Johnson's long-standing, steadfast rule of never discussing an adjustment to a driver's contractual salary, and never really comfortable with the allocation of resources that Johnson's two car team required, Waltrip approached Johnson about an increase in his contract salary. Although the story, as told by Waltrip, is most likely fokelore, Waltrip drove his final race for Junior Johnson on November 16, 1986, in a Chevrolet sponsored by Budweiser, finishing 4th, at that year's Winston Western 500 at Riverside International Raceway in Riverside, California, completing one of the most successful owner/driver partnerships in all of motorsports history. Waltrip and Johnson remain close friends and have huge respect for each other as driver and owner and pioneers of the sport.



Hendrick Motorsports years: 1987–1990




1989 Hendrick Motorsports Tide Chevrolet Lumina


Waltrip's partnership with car owner Junior Johnson led to huge success with three national championships and 43 NASCAR Winston Cup wins. The connection between fast cars and alcohol consumption became a concern for him. He began to seek other opportunities after a conversation with his friend and pastor Cortez Cooper. Johnson had signed Budweiser to be his team's primary sponsor in 1984, which unintentionally made Waltrip one of the faces of the connection he was so concerned about.


Years before, Waltrip had opened a Honda dealership in his home town of Franklin, Tennessee, with the help of his friend, Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports. During the 1986 season, Waltrip and Hendrick discussed the possibility of Waltrip joining the Hendrick organization, which fielded cars for Geoff Bodine and Tim Richmond and the two discussed the potential of Waltrip moving to a new team. Waltrip was still under contract with Johnson for the 1986 season, but following the year he was able to break the contract in a unique way. As he recounted in an interview for the Fox Sports Net series Beyond the Glory in 2001,[4] Waltrip gained his release by purposely breaking one of Johnson's cardinal rules: asking for a raise (Johnson forbade his drivers from discussing money matters, including raises, with him). After signing, Hendrick formed a third team for Waltrip, carrying the #17 and sponsorsed by Tide.


In 1987, his first year with Hendrick Motorsports, Waltrip had limited success, compared to his previous years with Johnson. He won only one race (at the Goody's 500) and had six Top 5 finishes. In 1988, he won two races, including his fourth Coca-Cola 600 (formerly World 600) win.


In the first race of 1989, the Daytona 500, Waltrip won the race for the first time in his 17th attempt with a fuel conservation strategy along with his long-time crew-chief Jeff Hammond, making his final pit stop for fuel a distant 53 laps (132 miles) from the finish. Most of the other cars could run no more than 45 or 46 laps on a tank of fuel, so that meant Waltrip would need to feather the throttle and "draft" off other cars in order to save enough fuel to make it to the finish without an additional pit stop. Hammond, interviewed by television pit reporters during the final stint of the race, said that his strategy was for Waltrip to "draft off anybody, and everybody", to save fuel. Even though Waltrip's car ran much slower than other cars in the last 53 laps, he was able to avoid making the additional pit stop for fuel that the other cars had to make. The strategy provided Waltrip with the track position needed to win the race. His post-race interview with CBS pit reporter Mike Joy, became famous, with Waltrip shouting "I won the Daytona 500! I won the Daytona 500! Wait, this is the Daytona 500 ain't it? ...Thank God!", accompanied by the "Ickey Shuffle" dance in Victory Lane. Later, after the Daytona 500 win, Waltrip visited president George H. W. Bush at the white House in Washington, D.C.


Waltrip's popularity as a driver would come full circle on the evening of The Winston, a NASCAR allstar racing event held May 21, 1989, (an event that did not award points toward the NASCAR national championship), at Charlotte Motor Speedway. On the final lap, Waltrip was leading the race and poised to win when Rusty Wallace hit Waltrip's car exiting the 4th turn and spun Waltrip into the infield, costing him the victory and the $200,000 purse. Not only was Waltrip and his crew upset at being knocked out of the victory, the 150,000 fans watching the race issued boos to Wallace, the winner. The two crews scuffled in the pits and harsh words were said after the race. Waltrip was quoted after the race as saying "I hope he chokes on it", referring to the $200,000 that Wallace collected for the victory. Waltrip's car was clearly superior to that of Wallace and, had it not been for the contact initiated by Wallace on the final lap, Waltrip would have won the all-star event. During the 1989, and 1990 seasons, Waltrip was voted NASCAR's Most Popular Driver by fans.


Waltrip would win 6 NASCAR Winston Cup races in 1989, his best year with Hendrick Motorsports, and helped develop NASCAR's version of the new Chevrolet Lumina in 1989, and delivered its first victory by winning a historic and unprecedented fifth Coca-Cola 600 (formerly the World 600), that May. Besides establishing a race record for victories, the win prepared him for a chance to win the one remaining "major race" which had eluded him since his first race at the Heinz Southern 500 at Darlington. A Darlington victory would award him a one million dollar bonus for winning three of the sport's four majors in the same season, the Daytona 500, the Winston 500, Coca-Cola 600, and the Mountain Dew Southern 500. The pressure of both the million dollar bonus and Career Grand Slam adversely affected Waltrip. He made contact with the wall early in the 1989 Southern 500 and was never a contender for winning the race, and the million dollar bonus.


For many reasons, Waltrip was unable to carry his success of the previous year into 1990. Waltrip failed to visit victory lane all season although he actually won a NASCAR Winston Cup race for which he is officially posted as finishing 2nd. The win came April 22, 1990, in the First Union 400, at North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, in his final year with Hendrick Motorsports. 1990 was the first year since 1974, that Waltrip did not win a race. Brett Bodine was credited with the official victory, although NASCAR, and even Larry McReynolds, the crew chief at the time for Brett Bodine, later admitted to Waltrip, that Bodine did not actually win the race. Jeff Hammond, Waltrip's crew chief, appealed to NASCAR officials to correct what was clearly an error in NASCAR's scoring of the event. Waltrip even protested to NASCAR head Bill France, Jr.. Although France knew that a scoring error had been made, Bodine, had already been declared the race winner. According to Waltrip, France, told him to "leave that boy alone, D.W., that's his first win and you are going to win a lot more races." The controversy was the result of a scoring error on the part of NASCAR when the pace car collected the wrong car after a caution flag. NASCAR spent 18 laps under caution attempting to determine the true race leader. This was before the current computerized timing and scoring technology that is now used. Bodine, who actually finished the race on the tail end of the lead lap, almost a full lap behind Waltrip, was officially credited with the win, the only victory of his career.


While practicing for his 500th career NASCAR start in the Pepsi 400, at the Daytona International Speedway, Waltrip's car spun in oil laid down by another car experiencing engine failure, and was hit by an oncoming car driven by Dave Marcis. Waltrip suffered a broken arm, a broken leg, and a concussion. He missed the Pepsi 400, but came back to run one lap at Pocono, before giving way to Jimmy Horton as a relief driver. (A driver who starts, and completes one lap, is credited the NASCAR points regardless of who is driving the car at the finish). Despite missing the next five races due to his injuries, Waltrip finished 20th in driver points and the team finished 5th in owner points with substitute drivers taking turns in the car. 



Owner/driver years: 1991-mid 1998




Waltrip in the pits during the 1994 Brickyard 400.


After his 4th season as driver for Hendrick Motorsports, Waltrip formed his own team to field cars in the 1991 NASCAR Winston Cup season. Driving his own cars had been his passion since he successfully drove his own cars in his early NASCAR career in the early and mid-'70s. He would continue his relationship with Chevrolet and drive a Chevrolet Lumina with Western Auto as the primary team sponsor. Waltrip purchased team assets, including the racing facilities, from his former owner Rick Hendrick in Charlotte, North Carolina, and hired long-time friend and crew chief, Jeff Hammond, to oversee the building of race cars and to continue as crew chief. Waltrip and Hammond enjoyed much success together as Hammond had been with Waltrip during the championship winning years with Junior Johnson, and most of the Hendrick Motorsports years, and was Waltrip's crew chief for his 1989 Daytona 500 win and 3 of his 5 Coca-Cola 600 wins.


In the 1991 season, Waltrip visited victory lane twice, his first win in his second stint as owner/driver coming in only the 7th race of the season on April 21, 1991, in the First Union 400, at North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina. His second win of the year came in the 13th race of the season on June 16, 1991, in the Champion Spark Plug 500, at Pocono Raceway, in Long Pond, Pennsylvania.


Just two races after celebrating his second win of 1991, Waltrip would again be involved in another serious crash, again at the Daytona International Speedway, in Daytona Beach, Florida. It came after completing the 119th of 160 laps on the 2.5 mile superspeedway. Waltrip and driver Alan Kulwicki were racing side by side, leading a large grouping of cars, battling for 5th position. The car drafting Alan Kulwicki bumped the Kulwicki car, causing his car to hit Waltrip's Western Auto Chevrolet at speeds approaching 200 mph on the long backstretch. Waltrip's car slowed and was collected by driver Joe Ruttman's car, both cars sliding sideways several hundred feet on the grassy infield. The tires of Waltrip's car clipped the edge of an access road causing it to become airborne and tumbling end over end several times before coming to a stop, up-side down, in a grassy area near turn 3. Waltrip was extricated and only suffered minor injuries but many feared that he could have re-injured his shattered leg from the crash at the same track the previous year. (Slow-motion video and still photography showed that Waltrip's left arm was outside the car as the car tumbled, and came to rest.) Waltrip still had a plate in his left leg from the compound fractures he suffered in the earlier crash at the Pepsi 400, at the Daytona International Speedway, (Waltrip commented on a January 10, 2013, SPEED Television broadcast of the Daytona NASCAR winter testing, that he had spent more time in the hospital from injuries suffered at the Daytona Speedway, than at any other track he had raced). Waltrip would compete in the following race, the summer race at the Pocono Raceway, in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, but was crashed again when driver Ernie Irvan spun driver Hut Stricklin, in front of almost the entire field. Waltrip won the year's spring race at the track just 5 weeks before.


Waltrip finished the first year of his second stint as owner/driver 8th in the overall NASCAR Winston Cup points championship, after being as high as 3rd place after 14 races. His first year was generally viewed as a successful first year outing. However, Waltrip was now 44 years old, had children, and had many pressures as owner/driver that he did not concern himself with driving for multimillion-dollar, highly financed race teams, such as Hendrick Motorsports.


In 1992, Waltrip collected three more wins, including the Mountain Dew Southern 500, a race held at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina, United States, September 6, 1992, (the last major race which had eluded his 20-year career), and finished 9th in points, after being as high as 6th after 22 races. That would be Waltrip's 84th, and final NASCAR career victory, tying him with Bobby Allison for what was then third on the all-time list, behind Richard Petty, with 200 wins, and David Pearson, with 105 wins. Both he and Allison have since been passed by Jeff Gordon, who has 93 wins by the time he retired at the end of the 2015 season.


In 1993, Waltrip signed former Richard Childress Racing engine builder Lou LaRosa, to build engines, and Barry Dodson, a former championship winning crew chief. He posted four top ten finishes, but did not finish higher than third. 1994 saw him make his final appearance in the top ten in championship points by finishing 9th. He had a then unprecedented streak over two seasons, of 40 races, without a DNF, all with in-house engines. His only engine failure in the season was after the car crossed the finish line. Waltrip finished 19th in points in 1995 when he crashed at The Winston, and was forced to let relief drivers take over for several weeks. His second half of the season was highlighted by his final career pole position at the NAPA 500.




Waltrip in his 1997 Western Auto Chevrolet Monte Carlo.


In 1996, Waltrip posted two top-ten finishes. Western Auto remained the sponsor as part of Waltrip's 25th anniversary celebration. While the year was one of Waltrip's most profitable, his results continued to fall off.


At the 1997 UAW-GM Quality 500, Waltrip failed to qualify for the first time in over 20 years as Terry Labonte also failed to make the race. Because Labonte was a more recent Cup champion (in fact, he was the defending Cup champion that season), he was able to take the past champion's provisional. Waltrip, who was 20th in owner points, was too low in the owner points position to make the race (only the top four in owner points of cars not in the field, excluding the most recent former champion not in the field, were added after qualifying under 1997 rules). After the season, Waltrip and his team were struggling to find sponsors, but were able to put together a last-minute deal with the Ohio-based company Speedblock for 1998. Speedblock only paid portions of what was promised, and the deal was canceled. Waltrip's team at this point was nearly insolvent, and he sold the team to Tim Beverly.



1998 mid season with Dale Earnhardt, Inc.


Beverly chose not to race the team immediately, instead choosing to rebuild the team (now part of Dale Earnhardt, Inc. after two sales and a merger). During this time, Waltrip signed with Dale Earnhardt, Inc. to drive the #1 Pennzoil Chevy, filling in for injured rookie Steve Park. During his tenure with DEI, Waltrip posted a fifth-place finish at the California 500, and led in the final stages of the Pocono 500 and finished sixth. In 2008, Waltrip admitted the reason that he failed as a driver-owner team was because he thought like a driver, not as an owner.



Final years of racing: 1998–2000


At the 1998 Brickyard 400, Beverly returned Waltrip's former team as the #35 Chevrolet Monte Carlo with Tabasco sponsorship with Waltrip driving. A sponsorship conflict with Tabasco would switch the team to the Pontiac Grand Prix. Waltrip resigned at the end of the season, citing performance issues. After a brief flirtation with retirement, Waltrip signed to drive the #66 Big K Ford Taurus for Haas-Carter Motorsports, with teammate Jimmy Spencer. Waltrip failed to qualify seven times during that season with a new qualifying rule for the Past Champion's Provisional. On August 5, 1999, Waltrip announced during the practice session for the Brickyard 400 that he would retire from NASCAR at the end of the 2000 season following a farewell tour.


During his retirement year of 2000, Waltrip's best run came at the Brickyard 400, where he qualified on the outside pole and finished eleventh. His final race came on November 19, 2000, in the NAPA 500, at Atlanta Motor Speedway, where he posted a 34th-place finish in the Haas-Carter Motorsports owned #66 Route66 Big K Ford Taurus. He finished 36th in points that season.



Craftsman Truck Series



In 1995, Waltrip built a Craftsman Truck Series team, and found success by 1997, when Rich Bickle finished second in overall season standings, winning three races, and made Waltrip one of the few car owners to have won races in NASCAR's three national series. When Sears ceased sponsorship of the team in 1997, Waltrip suspended his truck team, not returning until 2004, when he re-entered the series as an owner and part of Toyota's NASCAR development program.



Broadcast career: 2001–present


After his 2000 retirement, Waltrip signed with Fox, to be lead NASCAR analyst and race commentator on the network's NASCAR telecasts, teaming with Mike Joy and Larry McReynolds. Waltrip had previously appeared on several IROC broadcasts for ABC, prior to his signing during the 1999, and 2000 seasons. Waltrip also appeared on many Busch Series races on TNN with Mike Joy, from 1994 to 1998, on weekends when Winston Cup was not participating.


Waltrip began his career with Fox, in the 2001 Daytona 500. His younger brother, Michael Waltrip, won the race, but Michael's victory was overshadowed by the death of Dale Earnhardt. On the last lap, Earnhardt's car made contact with Sterling Marlin, as the black #3 drifted low on the track, probably attempting a blocking maneuver so that either Michael Waltrip or Dale Earnhardt, Jr., could win the race. Both cars were fielded by DEI, although Earnhardt (Sr.) himself drove for RCR. After contacting the Marlin car, Earnhardt's car suddenly veered right and slammed hard into the retaining wall in turn four along with Ken Schrader. This was before NASCAR mandated the use of the HANS device to reduce the risk of catastrophic head and neck injuries, and the "SAFER" (Steel and Foam Energy Reduction) barriers used at all NASCAR tracks today. After the cars of Earnhardt and Schrader came to rest in the infield, Schrader immediately exited his car and went to the attention of Earnhardt. Schrader gestured for the rescue crews to hurry to the Earnhardt car, but Earnhardt had died instantly during the crash. Meanwhile, Michael Waltrip won the race with Darrell Waltrip shouting for joy as he called the final run to the checkered flag. His joy at his brother's victory soon gave way to concern for Earnhardt as he watched replays of the crash. Waltrip and Earnhardt had been bitter rivals on the track in the 1980s but as the years passed, the rivalry and bitterness had given way to a deep respect and close friendship. After the race, Waltrip was taken from the Fox Broadcast booth to the Halifax Medical Center to meet with the Earnhardt family and his brother Michael. Waltrip later gave the invocation at the Earnhardt funeral and gave the invocation at the following week's race praying for Earnhardt and the promise of moving on from the tragedy.


A week after Daytona, Waltrip interviewed NASCAR President Mike Helton for a pre-race segment during the broadcast at North Carolina Speedway (Rockingham). Waltrip believed that four deaths in the previous ten months, all caused by basilar skull fractures incurred in accidents, were too many, and was not shy about asking Helton for an explanation. Helton's responses irritated Waltrip, who was referred to by one magazine as "acting a lot more like the next Mike Wallace (of 60 Minutes) than the next John Madden."


As a long-time advocate for motorsports safety, Waltrip then pushed for mandatory head-and-neck restraints, and two weeks later, demonstrated the device during the broadcast at Atlanta Motor Speedway, explaining the benefits and how the device worked. Seven months later, NASCAR mandated the devices after a crash during an ARCA Re/Max Series race, held after qualifying for the UAW-GM Quality 500, killed driver Blaise Alexander.[5]


As the cars take the green flag to start each race, Waltrip shouts "Boogity, boogity, boogity, let's go racing boys and girls!" This somewhat nonsensical phrase has become Waltrip's trademark in recent years. (The phrase "boogity, boogity, boogity" also appears in the 1960 doo wop parody "Who Put the Bomp" by Barry Mann.) Humble Pie used the shorter phrase "boogity-boogity" in their 1970 song "Red Light Mama, Red Hot". Ray Stevens used the phrase throughout his 1974 hit, The Streak. Jerry Reed also said this phrase in the 1977 movie "Smokey and the Bandit." Waltrip was featured on a 1992 home video from Ray Stevens entitled the Amazing Rolling Revue. In this home video Waltrip played the part of the out of control driver of the tour bus/rolling venue. Waltrip explained that the catchphrase arose because, as a driver, he grew tired of hearing his spotter or crew chief say "green, green, green" at the start of every race and wanted to hear something more original. The catchphrase had always been preceded by fellow analyst and former crew chief Larry McReynolds telling Waltrip to "reach up there and pull those belts tight one more time!" until recent years, when McReynolds used the phrase less and less and eventually phased it out altogether.


In 2011, Waltrip stated that his favorite race to have broadcast thus far was the 2010 Aaron's 499. The race lead was exchanged many times among many different drivers rather than the lead being dominated by a single driver. The race ended with driver Kevin Harvick beating driver Jamie McMurray for the win by only the length of a bumper.


Waltrip also lends his unique verbiage to his commentary, speaking of "coop-petetion" when racers work together, but keep each other under a watchful eye, "s'perince" when talking about driving skills of a veteran driver, and "using the chrome horn", when a driver somewhat purposefully bumps a car that's in the way (bumpers on cars used to be made of metal and coated in chrome). In early 2007, Waltrip was nominated for an Emmy in the category "Outstanding Event Analyst".


In March, 2011, FOX awarded Waltrip a 2-year contract extension, taking him through 2014, the same year the network's NASCAR contract ends (although the broadcast contract has been extended to 2024).


In October 2011 Waltrip, Joy and Australian Leigh Diffey traveled to Australia to host Speed's coverage of the Supercheap Auto Parts Bathurst 1000 race held at the famous Mount Panorama Circuit. Since Waltrip had not hosted in Australia before, he counted on Australian NASCAR driver Marcos Ambrose to help him learn about the country. During the trip, in regards to hosting, Waltrip and Joy are most famous for helping Ambrose reconcile with a former Bathurst rival Greg Murphy, known for an infamous Lap 143 dustup at the 2005 event following a restart that led to a famous squabble. The interview took place during a safety car session after Murphy had exited the car during a driver change. In the days leading up to the race, Waltrip was taken on a few laps of the track by V8 Supercar driver Jason Bright in Bright's Brad Jones Racing Holden VE Commodore, describing the 6.213 km (3.861 mi) long mountain circuit as a "Geological oddity".[6]



Currently


Waltrip fielded a Toyota sponsored by Japanese industrial giant NTN for his Craftsman Truck Series team in 2004. David Reutimann drove the truck for the team and earned Rookie of the Year honors that year. Waltrip's team expanded to two trucks in 2005. In August 2005, the revived Darrell Waltrip Motorsports won its first race, the Toyota Tundra 200 at Nashville Superspeedway with Reutimann driving. During the 2007 season, A.J. Allmendinger drove the #00 Red Bull Toyota but with minimal success. By years end the team was sold to The Racer's Group, a road racing operation.


Waltrip has made occasional starts (three or less each year) in the Craftsman Truck Series and Busch Series since his "retirement" in 2000. Each of these races have been either at Martinsville Speedway or Indianapolis Raceway Park.


Waltrip was the honorary starter at the 2007 Food City 500 and was also the honorary starter for the 2008 Gatorade Duel as Gatorade was one of Waltrip's former sponsors. He also started/completed a Busch Series race at Martinsville in his brother's "Aaron's Dream Machine" after appearing in ads in 2003–2005 begging his brother to let him drive the Aaron's Dream Machine.


In 2009, he appeared in commercials for Rejuvenate Auto with his #11 Mountain Dew Chevrolet. Waltrip also appeared in Fox public service announcements for breast cancer awareness.


In 2010 and 2011, Waltrip voiced his support for saving the old Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway, now known as simply the Fairgrounds Speedway, in Nashville. The speedway was first opened in 1904, and hosted a weekly racing series for decades. It is the track where Waltrip first had success at weekly racing events in the 1960s and 70s, winning two track championships and where his first NASCAR victory came May 10, 1975. The speedway and adjacent Tennessee State Fairgrounds is located in an urban area of south Nashville, roughly 2 miles (3.2 km) from its downtown business district. Some residents living close to the speedway have complained of noise and many local politicians have proposed closing the speedway and developing the property.


Currently, Waltrip continues as a race commentator for Fox and remains active in the sport. In March 2011, FOX announced that Waltrip would continue as their lead NASCAR analyst and race commentator through 2014. In May 2015, FOX announced that Jeff Gordon would join him and Mike Joy starting in 2016, replacing their long-time broadcast partner Larry McReynolds.


In 2017, Waltrip announced on his Twitter page that he had undergone a knee replacement from an injury that occurred during the 1991 Pepsi 400. This was also mentioned in his Facebook account.


Waltrip currently owns Honda, Volvo, Subaru, and Buick/GMC automobile dealerships in Franklin, Tennessee.



Legacy


Waltrip is considered by most in the racing community as a true ambassador to the sport of motor racing. He is a passionate promoter of all forms of racing, especially American stock car auto racing.


Waltrip is recognized by many who closely follow motorsports as NASCAR's first "total package" driver. He was media savvy, articulate, attractive and possessed the driving skills that would take him to the pinnacle of the sport. His style attracted big-budget sponsors that are necessary to fund the multimillion-dollar NASCAR teams. Today, it is customary for the team's sponsor to have considerable input into who the team's driver will be that represents their brand or product on the track. Today's NASCAR driver fits the mold that Waltrip first ushered into NASCAR in the 1970s.


As a Fox Sports analyst and broadcaster, Waltrip's opinions, views and comments carry considerable weight with drivers, team owners, fans and NASCAR heads. Waltrip has never been shy about expressing his views, even if controversial. His critical comments about safety have played a significant role in many safety innovations current drivers enjoy today including the "HANS" (head and neck restraining device, credited for saving the lives of many drivers in all forms of motorsports), "soft walls" or "SAFER" (steel and foam energy reduction) barriers, "full face" helmets, and the new cars now driven by all NASCAR drivers.


Waltrip has been a design consultant on some of the newer tracks including the Kentucky Motor Speedway, and the Nashville Superspeedway.


Waltrip has a building which holds many of the race cars he drove throughout his career.


On June 14, 2011, he was selected to the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2012.


Waltrip officially won 84 NASCAR cup races, but yet another, additional, and uncounted "win" was as relief driver for Donnie Allison, at the 1977 Talladega 500. (Allison received credit for the win because he was driving the car when the race started). In that race, Waltrip retired after 106, of 188, laps. Allison sought a relief driver for his #1 Hawaiian Tropic sponsored Chevrolet, due to the excess heat of the day, and Waltrip was asked to complete the race in Allison's car. The irony was that Waltrip replaced Allison at the DiGard #88 race team just two years previously, which was part of the long lore of the "Allisons vs Waltrip" battle that lasted for more than 16 years.


His 84 wins in the Cup series are tied for fourth place in NASCAR history, with Bobby Allison. In 2011, Jeff Gordon scored his 85th career victory surpassing Waltrip for most wins in the "modern era" of NASCAR. (NASCAR's "modern era" takes into account current scheduling, and the elimination of dirt tracks from scoring statistics; several of Allison's wins came before the start of the "modern era").



Media appearances



Film and television


Waltrip's entertainment appearances were influenced by his early 1970s work with Ralph Emery in Nashville radio and television, and that led to his work as a fill-in for Emery.


In the 1980s and 1990s, he would substitute for Emery on The Nashville Network's Nashville Now and later hosted himself the network's two successor variety shows, "Music City Tonight" and "Prime Time Country".


Waltrip worked on Days of Thunder as Hendrick Motorsports was a major provider of cars and drivers (he helped hire Bobby Hamilton for the project), and one of his injury substitutes was lead stunt driver Greg Sacks.


Waltrip has twice been a presenter at the GMA (Gospel Music Association) Music Awards, partnering with Kathy Troccoli both times. In 1999, they presented the "Song of the Year" award to Mitch McVicker and Rich Mullins for "My Deliverer". Rich Mullins and Mitch McVicker were thrown from their truck after not wearing seat belts, and Mullins was killed in the accident.


In 2006, Waltrip and Nicole C. Mullen hosted a DirecTV special, Songs of Faith. He provided the voice of race announcer Darrell Cartrip in the Pixar feature films Cars (2006), Cars 2 (2011), and Cars 3 (2017).[7] He also appeared in the broadcast booth in the films Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, where his phrase was "in racing you have good days and bad days and Ricky Bobby just had himself a bad day". On December 15, 2006, Waltrip played the role of Mother Ginger in the Nashville Ballet's production of The Nutcracker.


He currently appears in advertisements for Toyota and Aaron's alongside his brother, Michael, where his gimmick is constantly asking Michael's permission to drive the Aaron's Dream Machine (a nickname for the #99 Nationwide Series car). Waltrip has also made a number of appearances in "comedic" segments appearing during his actual Fox broadcasts.


He was featured in two NASCAR Series videos Darrell Waltrip: Quicksilver which explained Waltrip's career and future and he appeared in the NASCAR Video series where he teaches helpful driving tips for driving on the freeway and long-distance drives.


In February, 2011, Waltrip appeared in The Day which was a one-hour documentary about the tragic death of Dale Earnhardt at the 2001 Daytona 500.


Waltrip initially believed accidents would happen to him. He was featured in a video testimonial on IamSecond.com talking about his Christian faith in Jesus Christ in which he discussed the meaninglessness of the rest of his career, compared to that relationship.


Waltrip, along with fellow commentators Mike Joy and Jeff Gordon, made a cameo appearance as themselves in the 2017 heist comedy film Logan Lucky.



Books and magazines


Waltrip has also been successful in the publishing field. In September 1994, he was featured as the cover story in Guideposts.


His autobiography, DW: A Lifetime Going Around in Circles, was a New York Times best-seller when it was released around the 2004 Daytona 500. The book was co-written with Jade Gurss.


In May 2004, Waltrip became the second sports figure to be featured in former NBA player and basketball coach Jay Carty's One-on-One series of devotional books. Darrell Waltrip One-on-One: The Faith that Took Him to the Finish Line is a sixty-day devotional book featuring Waltrip's stories and how they can relate to Christian faith, and Carty's devotionals.



Motorsports career results



NASCAR


(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)



Winston Cup Series

























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































NASCAR Winston Cup Series results
Year
Team
No.
Make
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34

NWCC
Pts
Ref

1972

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports
95

Mercury

RSD

DAY

RCH

ONT

CAR

ATL

BRI

DAR

NWS

MAR

TAL
38

CLT

DOV

MCH

RSD

TWS

DAY

BRI

TRN

ATL
8

TAL
27

MCH

NSV
3

DAR

RCH

DOV

MAR

NWS

CLT
6

CAR

TWS

56th
827
[8]

1973

RSD

DAY
12

RCH

CAR
6

BRI
30

ATL
33

NWS

DAR
24

MAR

TAL
31

NSV
24

CLT
7

DOV

TWS
2

RSD

MCH

DAY
25

BRI

ATL
31

TAL
7

28th
2968.2
[9]

Chevy


NSV
24


DOV
20


Bud Moore Engineering
15

Ford


DAR
8

RCH
26


NWS
30

MAR

CLT
38

CAR
27


1974

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports
95

Chevy

RSD

DAY
7

RCH

CAR
25

BRI

ATL
7

DAR
9

NWS

MAR

TAL
DNQ

NSV
3

DOV
20

CLT
4

RSD

MCH

DAY
24

BRI

NSV
3

ATL
4

POC

TAL
44

MCH

DAR
2

RCH

DOV
35

NWS

MAR

CLT
3

CAR
5

ONT
6

19th
609.97
[10]

1975
17

RSD

DAY
26

RCH
15

CAR
21

BRI
6

ATL
5

NWS
7

DAR
2

MAR
2

TAL
4

NSV
1

DOV
22

CLT
4

RSD
21

MCH
5

DAY
4

NSV
28

POC
34

7th
3462
[11]

DiGard Motorsports
88

Chevy


TAL
42

MCH
7

DAR
34

DOV
27

NWS
3

MAR
17

CLT
24

RCH
1

CAR
32

BRI
3

ATL
36

ONT


1976

RSD
21

DAY
32

CAR
2

RCH
24

BRI
2

ATL
5

NWS
22

DAR
31

MAR
1*

TAL
33

NSV
12

DOV
30

CLT
11

RSD
6

MCH
29

DAY
39

NSV
3

POC
26

TAL
37

MCH
27

BRI
3

DAR
3

RCH
4

DOV
31

MAR
2

NWS
24

CLT
11

CAR
3

ATL
7

ONT
40

8th
3505
[12]

1977

RSD
9

DAY
7

RCH
2

CAR
2

ATL
7

NWS
7

DAR
1

BRI
19

MAR
21

TAL
1

NSV
3

DOV
4

CLT
6

RSD
26

MCH
35

DAY
2

NSV
1

POC
3

TAL
22

MCH
1

BRI
2

DAR
6*

RCH
7

DOV
5

MAR
10

NWS
1

CLT
5

CAR
3

ATL
1

ONT
29

4th
4498
[13]

1978

RSD
23

DAY
28

RCH
4

CAR
21

ATL
35

BRI
1

DAR
2

NWS
1*

MAR
1*

TAL
22

DOV
6*

CLT
1*

NSV
26

RSD
16

MCH
28*

DAY
3

NSV
2

POC
1*

TAL
34

MCH
3

BRI
3

DAR
2

RCH
1

DOV
5

MAR
2

NWS
2*

CLT
2

CAR
3

ATL
28

ONT
5

3rd
4362
[14]

1979

RSD
1*


CAR
17

RCH
3

ATL
3

NWS
5

BRI
3

DAR
1*

MAR
3


NSV
21

DOV
18

CLT
1*

TWS
1*

RSD
2

MCH
13


NSV
1*


MCH
19

BRI
1

DAR
11*

RCH
2

DOV
29

MAR
11

CLT
3

NWS
13

CAR
6

ATL
5

ONT
8

2nd
4819
[15]

Olds


DAY
2


TAL
2


DAY
4


TAL
1*


Al Rudd Auto
22

Chevy


POC
7*


1980

DiGard Motorsports
88

Chevy

RSD
1*


RCH
1*

CAR
4

ATL
28

BRI
2

DAR
4

NWS
12

MAR
1*


NSV
4

DOV
20

CLT
2*

TWS
4

RSD
1

MCH
26


NSV
4

POC
26


BRI
3

DAR
25*

RCH
6

DOV
1*

NWS
2

MAR
21

CLT
18

CAR
3

ATL
26

ONT
25*

5th
4239
[16]

Olds


DAY
40


TAL
42


DAY
31


TAL
11


Halpern Enterprises
02

Chevy


MCH
4*


1981

Junior Johnson & Associates
11

Chevy

RSD
17

1st
4880
[17]

Buick


DAY
36

RCH
1*

CAR
1

ATL
36

BRI
1*

NWS
3

DAR
1*

MAR
26

TAL
3

NSV
2

DOV
12

CLT
9

TWS
30

RSD
1*

MCH
7*

DAY
10

NSV
1*

POC
1*

TAL
2

MCH
2

BRI
1*

DAR
2

RCH
3*

DOV
2

MAR
1

NWS
1*

CLT
1

CAR
1*

ATL
2

RSD
6


1982

DAY
20

RCH
27

BRI
1*

ATL
1

CAR
7*

DAR
23

NWS
1*

MAR
5

TAL
1

NSV
1*

DOV
15

CLT
22

POC
13

RSD
32

MCH
2

DAY
36

NSV
1*

POC
6

TAL
1*

MCH
7

BRI
1

DAR
24

RCH
3

DOV
1*

NWS
1*

CLT
14

MAR
1*

CAR
1

ATL
3

RSD
3

1st
4489
[18]

1983

Chevy

DAY
36

RCH
29

CAR
3

ATL
40

DAR
2

NWS
1*

MAR
1*

TAL
33

NSV
1*

DOV
2

BRI
1*

CLT
4

RSD
7

POC
2

MCH
4

DAY
20

NSV
2

POC
2

TAL
2

MCH
2

BRI
1*

DAR
3

RCH
3

DOV
5

MAR
3

NWS
1*

CLT
2

CAR
5

ATL
9

RSD
6*

2nd
4620
[19]

1984

DAY
3

RCH
2*

CAR
10

ATL
10

BRI
1*

NWS
6

DAR
1*

MAR
3

TAL
38

NSV
1

DOV
6

CLT
26

RSD
11

POC
6

MCH
3

DAY
31

NSV
2

POC
22

TAL
6

MCH
1

BRI
21*

DAR
40

RCH
1*

DOV
11

MAR
1*

CLT
27

NWS
1*

CAR
4

ATL
6

RSD
34

5th
4230
[20]

1985

DAY
3

RCH
3*

CAR
18

ATL
16

BRI
23

DAR
2

NWS
2

MAR
23

TAL
24

DOV
5

CLT
1

RSD
8

POC
3

MCH
2

DAY
3

POC
3

TAL
9

MCH
2

BRI
4*

DAR
17

RCH
1

DOV
2

MAR
2

NWS
14

CLT
4

CAR
1

ATL
3

RSD
7

1st
4292
[21]

1986

DAY
3

RCH
5

CAR
5

ATL
4

BRI
3

DAR
2

NWS
4

MAR
27

TAL
34

DOV
5

CLT
5

RSD
1

POC
40

MCH
5

DAY
4

POC
4

TAL
25

GLN
2

MCH
3

BRI
1*

DAR
5

RCH
29

DOV
14

MAR
4

NWS
1

CLT
9

CAR
3

ATL
39

RSD
4

2nd
4180
[22]

1987

Hendrick Motorsports
17

Chevy

DAY
8

CAR
7

RCH
20

ATL
6

DAR
10

NWS
21

BRI
12

MAR
21

TAL
11

CLT
5

DOV
7

POC
13

RSD
30

MCH
7

DAY
4

POC
19

TAL
4

GLN
11

MCH
17

BRI
21

DAR
10

RCH
2

DOV
10

MAR
1

NWS
12

CLT
9

CAR
3

RSD
6

ATL
18

4th
3911
[23]

1988

DAY
11

RCH
4

CAR
24

ATL
3

DAR
24

BRI
23

NWS
14

MAR
5

TAL
37

CLT
1

DOV
23

RSD
28

POC
6

MCH
8

DAY
5

POC
5

TAL
33*

GLN
20

MCH
17

BRI
7

DAR
4

RCH
8

DOV
17

MAR
1

CLT
2

NWS
12

CAR
31

PHO
13

ATL
5

7th
3764
[24]

1989

DAY
1

CAR
29

ATL
1

RCH
7

DAR
36

BRI
2

NWS
8

MAR
1*

TAL
5

CLT
1

DOV
9

SON
38

POC
32

MCH
3

DAY
19

POC
4

TAL
2

GLN
16

MCH
37

BRI
1*

DAR
22

RCH
6

DOV
18

MAR
1

CLT
14

NWS
20

CAR
3

PHO
4

ATL
5

4th
3971
[25]

1990

DAY
14

RCH
12

CAR
6

ATL
26

DAR
11

BRI
9*

NWS
2

MAR
4

TAL
10

CLT
22

DOV
19

SON
33

POC
8

MCH
15

DAY
INQ

POC
20

TAL

GLN

MCH

BRI

DAR

RCH
3

DOV
19

MAR
19

NWS
7

CLT
9

CAR
8

PHO
4

ATL
5

20th
3013
[26]

1991

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports

DAY
24

RCH
7

CAR
9

ATL
9

DAR
25

BRI
6

NWS
1

MAR
3

TAL
2

CLT
8

DOV
7

SON
25

POC
1

MCH
7

DAY
32

POC
29

TAL
15

GLN
6

MCH
32

BRI
8

DAR
24

RCH
7

DOV
19

MAR
15

NWS
20

CLT
9

CAR
32

PHO
2

ATL
10

8th
3711
[27]

1992

DAY
26

CAR
10

RCH
5

ATL
39

DAR
24

BRI
25

NWS
15

MAR
3

TAL
29

CLT
38

DOV
5*

SON
8

POC
13

MCH
2

DAY
13

POC
1

TAL
23

GLN
12

MCH
2

BRI
1*

DAR
1

RCH
3

DOV
20

MAR
15

NWS
9

CLT
34

CAR
22

PHO
3

ATL
23

9th
3659
[28]

1993

DAY
18

CAR
30

RCH
8

ATL
35

DAR
16

BRI
6

NWS
5

MAR
4

TAL
26

SON
35

CLT
11

DOV
24

POC
30

MCH
19

DAY
13

NHA
19

POC
10

TAL
37

GLN
14

MCH
13

BRI
29

DAR
28

RCH
7

DOV
3

MAR
18

NWS
11

CLT
19

CAR
7

PHO
7

ATL
3

13th
3479
[29]

1994

DAY
28

CAR
23

RCH
16

ATL
3

DAR
26

BRI
15

NWS
28

MAR
4

TAL
14

SON
18

CLT
30

DOV
6

POC
30

MCH
10

DAY
25

NHA
23

POC
28

TAL
24

IND
6

GLN
7

MCH
9

BRI
4

DAR
13

RCH
10

DOV
3

MAR
10

NWS
13

CLT
9

CAR
23

PHO
10

ATL
21

9th
3688
[30]

1995

DAY
32

CAR
38

RCH
7

ATL
34

DAR
21

BRI
3

NWS
10

MAR
4

TAL
4

SON
35

CLT
18

DOV
20

POC
42

MCH
26

DAY
34

NHA
17

POC
36

TAL
43

IND
17

GLN
8

MCH
15

BRI
4

DAR
40

RCH
22

DOV
36

MAR
8

NWS
14

CLT
34

CAR
12

PHO
38

ATL
16

19th
3078
[31]

1996

DAY
29

CAR
16

RCH
27

ATL
32

DAR
34

BRI
26

NWS
25

MAR
16

TAL
21

SON
14

CLT
13

DOV
39

POC
30

MCH
25

DAY
26

NHA
37

POC
40

TAL
9

IND
40

GLN
18

MCH
22

BRI
11

DAR
32

RCH
22

DOV
39

MAR
23

NWS
27

CLT
42

CAR
21

PHO
10

ATL
37

29th
2657
[32]

1997

DAY
10

CAR
32

RCH
16

ATL
16

DAR
11

TEX
43

BRI
25

MAR
9

SON
5

TAL
32

CLT
21

DOV
28

POC
7

MCH
24

CAL
15

DAY
14

NHA
33

POC
26

IND
14

GLN
18

MCH
15

BRI
42

DAR
26

RCH
32

NHA
32

DOV
32

MAR
24

CLT
DNQ

TAL
37

CAR
29

PHO
12

ATL
40

26th
2942
[33]

1998

DAY
33

CAR
41

LVS
35

ATL
40

DAR
30

24th
2957
[34]

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
1

Chevy


BRI
23

TEX
36

MAR
40

TAL
15

CAL
5

CLT
17

DOV
20

RCH
32

MCH
12

POC
6

SON
13

NHA
13

POC
13


Tyler Jet Motorsports
35

Chevy


IND
13

GLN
25


Pontiac


MCH
25

BRI
27

NHA
32

DAR
38

RCH
18

DOV
21

MAR
21

CLT
22

TAL
23

DAY
28

PHO
31

CAR
32

ATL
38


1999

Haas-Carter Motorsports
66

Ford

DAY
21

CAR
27

LVS
25

ATL
20

DAR
41

TEX
25

BRI
32

MAR
12

TAL
26

CAL
15

RCH
25

CLT
43

DOV
DNQ

MCH
39

POC
34

SON
12

DAY
38

NHA
33

POC
25

IND
42

GLN
15

MCH
DNQ

BRI
14

DAR
29

RCH
32

NHA
DNQ

DOV
DNQ

MAR
23

CLT
DNQ

TAL
DNQ

CAR
34

PHO
26

HOM
43

ATL
DNQ
37th
2158
[35]

2000

DAY
32

CAR
39

LVS
38

ATL
31

DAR
43

BRI
31

TEX
24

MAR
43

TAL
26

CAL
29

RCH
DNQ

CLT
DNQ

DOV
33

MCH
DNQ

POC
DNQ

SON
28

DAY
27

NHA
33

POC
22

IND
11

GLN
20

MCH
DNQ

BRI
42

DAR
42

RCH
DNQ

NHA
29

DOV
31

MAR
27

CLT
30

TAL
35

CAR
37

PHO
33

HOM
36

ATL
34
36th
1981
[36]

Mansion Motorsports
85

Ford


CLT
36


- Qualified but replaced by Jimmy Horton


Daytona 500




































































































































































Year
Team
Manufacturer
Start
Finish

1973

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports

Mercury
11
12

1974

Chevrolet
11
7

1975
33
26

1976

DiGard Motorsports

Chevrolet
4
32

1977
10
7

1978
8
28

1979

Oldsmobile
4
2

1980
7
40

1981

Junior Johnson & Associates

Buick
2
36

1982
2
20

1983

Chevrolet
31
36

1984
26
3

1985
3
3

1986
6
3

1987

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
5
8

1988
4
11

1989
2

1

1990
9
14

1991

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports

Chevrolet
10
24

1992
12
26

1993
26
18

1994
32
28

1995
5
32

1996
40
29

1997
22
10

1998
43
33

1999

Haas-Carter Motorsports

Ford
43
21

2000
43
32


Busch Series




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































NASCAR Busch Series results
Year
Team
No.
Make
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35

NBSC
Pts

1982

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports
47

Pontiac

DAY

RCH

BRI

MAR

DAR

HCY

SBO

CRW

RCH

LGY

DOV

HCY

CLT
6

ASH

HCY

SBO

CAR

CRW

SBO

HCY

LGY

IRP

BRI

HCY

RCH

MAR

78th
330
17


CLT
1

HCY

MAR


1983

DAY
1

RCH

CAR

HCY

MAR

NWS

SBO

GPS

LGY

DOV

BRI

CLT

SBO

HCY

ROU

SBO

ROU

CRW

ROU

SBO

HCY

LGY

IRP
2

GPS

BRI

HCY

DAR

RCH

NWS

SBO

MAR

ROU

CLT
11

HCY

MAR
52nd
480

1984

DAY
1

RCH

CAR

HCY

MAR

DAR

ROU

NSH
21

LGY

MLW
25

DOV

CLT
2

SBO

HCY

ROU

SBO

ROU

HCY

IRP
3

LGY

SBO

BRI

DAR

RCH

NWS

CLT
1

HCY

CAR

MAR

53rd
345

1985

Olds

DAY
3

CAR

HCY

28th
977

Chevy


BRI
1

MAR

DAR
11

SBO

LGY

DOV
1

CLT

SBO

HCY

ROU

IRP
4

SBO

LGY

HCY

MLW
17

BRI

DAR
1

RCH
5

NWS

ROU

CLT

HCY

CAR

MAR


1986

Olds

DAY
3

CAR

HCY

MAR

22nd
1743

Chevy


BRI
6


JFC
1


IRP
8

SBO


OXF
35

SBO

HCY

LGY

ROU


Pontiac


DAR
1

SBO

LGY


DOV
1

CLT
30

SBO

HCY

ROU


RAL
1


DAR
21

RCH

DOV

MAR

ROU

CLT
2

CAR

MAR


Lindy White Racing
1

Chevy


BRI
3


1987

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports
17

Chevy

DAY
2

HCY

MAR

DAR
4

BRI

LGY

SBO

CLT
2

DOV

IRP
34

ROU

JFC
24

OXF

SBO

HCY

RAL
5

LGY

ROU

BRI
26

JFC
5

DAR
7

RCH

DOV

MAR

CLT
2

CAR
29

MAR

29th
1439

1988

DAY
3

HCY

CAR

MAR

DAR
10

BRI

LNG

NZH

SBO

NSH
1

CLT
37

DOV
31

ROU

LAN

LVL
16

MYB

OXF

SBO

HCY

LNG

IRP
5

ROU

BRI
29

DAR

RCH

DOV

MAR

CLT
5

CAR
4

MAR

29th
1262

1989

DAY
1

CAR

MAR

HCY

DAR
37

BRI

NZH

SBO

LAN

NSH

CLT
2

DOV
37

ROU

LVL

VOL

MYB

SBO

HCY

DUB

IRP
32

ROU

BRI

DAR

RCH
28

DOV
5

MAR

CLT
31

CAR
4

MAR

36th
985

1990

DAY
30

RCH

CAR

MAR

HCY

DAR
6

BRI

LAN

SBO

NZH

HCY

CLT
29

DOV
36

ROU

VOL

MYB

OXF

NHA

SBO

DUB

IRP

ROU

BRI

DAR

RCH

DOV

MAR

CLT

NHA
34

CAR
15

MAR

50th
533

1991

DAY
32

RCH
11

CAR
35

MAR

VOL

HCY

DAR
24

BRI

LAN

SBO

NZH

CLT
6

DOV
3

ROU

HCY

MYB

GLN

OXF

NHA

SBO

DUB

IRP
29

ROU

BRI

DAR
6

RCH
6

DOV

CLT
6

NHA

CAR
15

MAR

30th
1305

1992

DAY
8

CAR

RCH
4

ATL
38

MAR

DAR

BRI

HCY
5

LAN

DUB

NZH

CLT
34

DOV

ROU

MYB

GLN

VOL

NHA

TAL
18

IRP

ROU

MCH
26

NHA

BRI

DAR

RCH
2

DOV

CLT
27

MAR

CAR
4

HCY

36th
1173

1993

DAY
7

CAR

RCH
30

DAR

BRI

HCY

ROU

MAR

NZH

CLT

DOV

MYB

GLN

MLW
12

TAL
16

IRP

MCH
37

NHA

BRI

DAR

RCH
DNQ

DOV

ROU

CLT
DNQ

MAR

CAR

HCY

ATL

50th
513

1995

Labonte Motorsports
11

Chevy

DAY

CAR

RCH
8

ATL

NSH

DAR

BRI

HCY

NHA

NZH

CLT

DOV

MYB

GLN

MLW

TAL

SBO

IRP

MCH

BRI

DAR

RCH

DOV

CLT

CAR

HOM

82nd
142

2006

Michael Waltrip Racing
99

Dodge

DAY

CAL

MXC

LVS

ATL

BRI

TEX

NSH

PHO

TAL

RCH

DAR

CLT

DOV

NSH

KEN

MLW

DAY

CHI

NHA

MAR
28

GTY

IRP

GLN

MCH

BRI

CAL

RCH

DOV

KAN

CLT

MEM

TEX

PHO

HOM
122nd
79


Craftsman Truck Series












































































































































































































































NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series results
Year
Team
No.
Make
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

NCTS
Pts

1995

Ken Schrader Racing
52

Chevy

PHO

TUS

SGS

MMR

POR

EVG

I70

LVL

BRI

MLW

CNS

HPT
6

IRP

FLM

41st
450

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports
17

Chevy


RCH
8

MAR
35

NWS
21

SON

MMR

PHO


1996
5

HOM

PHO

POR

EVG

TUS

CNS

HPT
11

BRI

NZH

MLW

LVL

I70

IRP

FLM

GLN

NSV

RCH
9

NHA

MAR
5

NWS
10

SON

MMR

PHO

LVS
20

37th
660

2002

HT Motorsports
17

Dodge

DAY

DAR

MAR
34

GTY

PPR

DOV

TEX

MEM

MLW

KAN

KEN

NHA

MCH

IRP
6

NSH

RCH

TEX

SBO

LVS

CAL

PHO

HOM

62nd
211

2003

Michael Waltrip Racing

Chevy

DAY

DAR

MMR

MAR
7

CLT

DOV

TEX

MEM

MLW

KAN

KEN

GTY

MCH

IRP
29

NSH

BRI

RCH

NHA

CAL

LVS

SBO

TEX

MAR
7

PHO

HOM
59th
368

2004

Darrell Waltrip Motorsports
11

Toyota

DAY

ATL

MAR
24

MFD

CLT

DOV

TEX

MEM

MLW

KAN

KEN

GTY

MCH

IRP
28

NSH

BRI

RCH

NHA

LVS

CAL

TEX

MAR
DNQ

PHO

DAR

HOM
93rd
91

2005

DAY

CAL

ATL

MAR
DNQ

GTY

MFD

CLT

DOV

TEX

MCH

MLW

KAN

KEN

MEM

IRP

NSH

BRI

RCH

NHA

LVS

73rd
124
12


MAR
13

ATL

TEX

PHO

HOM


International Race of Champions


(key) (Bold – Pole position. * – Most laps led.)



























































































































International Race of Champions results
Year
Make
Q1
Q2
Q3
1
2
3
4
Pos.
Points
Ref

1977−78

Chevy


MCH
3

RSD
5

RSD
4

DAY
2
3rd
N/A
[37]

1978−79

MCH
8

MCH

RSD

RSD

ATL

13th
N/A
[38]

1979−80

MCH
3

MCH

RSD

RSD
1

ATL
6

2nd
32
[39]

1984


MCH
4

CLE
5

TAL
1

MCH
6
3rd
52
[40]

1985


DAY
1

MOH
7

TAL
C

MCH
4
2nd
45
[41]

1986


DAY
7

MOH
3

TAL
4

GLN
3
5th
48
[42]

1987


DAY
3

MOH
12

MCH
2

GLN
10
5th
42
[43]

1990

Dodge


TAL
4

CLE

MCH
12

9th
23
[44]

1997

Pontiac


DAY
11

CLT
11

CAL
11

MCH
11
11th
18
[45]


See also



  • Michael Waltrip

  • Darrell Waltrip Motorsports



References





  1. ^ "Darrell Waltrip's Christian Testimony". Retrieved 22 April 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Waltrip Brothers' Charity Championship". Retrieved 22 April 2016.


  3. ^ Caraviello, David (January 14, 2014). "TOP 10 DEBUTS WITH NEW TEAMS". NASCAR. Retrieved January 18, 2014.


  4. ^ "Beyond the Glory: The Waltrips", FSN, 2001.


  5. ^ "SPORT: NASCAR 2001, Shaken but Not Shattered – – Car and Driver – June 2001". Car and Driver. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2010-09-07.


  6. ^ Darrell Waltrip Bathurst lap on YouTube


  7. ^ "Darrell Waltrip". I am Second. Retrieved 22 April 2016.


  8. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1972 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  9. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1973 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  10. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1974 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  11. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1975 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  12. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1976 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  13. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1977 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  14. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1978 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  15. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1979 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  16. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1980 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  17. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1981 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  18. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1982 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  19. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1983 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 13, 2015.


  20. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1984 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 17, 2015.


  21. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1985 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 18, 2015.


  22. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1986 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 18, 2015.


  23. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1987 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  24. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  25. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  26. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1990 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  27. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1991 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  28. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  29. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1993 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  30. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1994 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  31. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1995 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  32. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1996 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  33. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  34. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1998 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  35. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 1999 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  36. ^ "Darrell Waltrip – 2000 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved February 21, 2015.


  37. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1978 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  38. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1979 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  39. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1980 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  40. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1984 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  41. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1985 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  42. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1986 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  43. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1987 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  44. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1990 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.


  45. ^ "Darrell Waltrip − 1997 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved March 2, 2015.




External links












  • Darrell Waltrip driver statistics at Racing-Reference


  • Darrell Waltrip owner statistics at Racing-Reference


  • Darrell Waltrip on IMDb

  • Career Stats – NASCAR.com

  • Darrell Waltrip Honda









































Sporting positions
Preceded by
Dale Earnhardt
Terry Labonte


NASCAR Winston Cup Champion
1981, 1982
1985
Succeeded by
Bobby Allison
Dale Earnhardt

Achievements
Preceded by
Dale Earnhardt

Busch Clash Winner
1981
Succeeded by
Bobby Allison
Preceded by
Inaugural race

The Winston Winner
1985
Succeeded by
Bill Elliott
Preceded by
Bobby Allison

Daytona 500 Winner
1989
Succeeded by
Derrike Cope
Preceded by
Harry Gant

Southern 500 Winner
1992
Succeeded by
Mark Martin
Preceded by
Donnie Allison

Snowball Derby Winner
1976
Succeeded by
Ronnie Sanders
Awards
Preceded by
Bill Elliott

NASCAR's Most Popular Driver Award
1989, 1990
Succeeded by
Bill Elliott









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