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Futurliner Bus No. 11 sold for a record US$4,000,000 (plus premium) to Arizona-based real estate developer Ron Pratte on January 21, 2006 at a Barrett-Jackson auction in Arizona and was driven to its new home in Chandler. [23] Mr. Pratte sold the same bus on January 17, 2015 at Barrett-Jackson Auto Auction in Scottsdale, Arizona to
The field of Mid-American Stock Cars take the green flag at Lake Geneva Raceway in 2006 Bill Prietzel, Maxwell Schultz, James Swan, Andrew Meyerhofer, Ron Vandermeir Jr, and Rick Corso at WIR in 2023 The Mid-Am Racing Series , formerly Mid American Stock Car Series , is an elite sportsman traveling stock car racing series in the Midwestern ...
16-Ron Hornaday Jr. 55-Dorsey Schroeder; 93-Mike Skinner; 1-Bobby Hamilton; 43-Jimmy Hensley; 14-Rick Crawford; 6-Rick Carelli; 19-Tony Raines; Failed to qualify: 5-Robbie Pyle, 45-Michael Cohen, 54-Jon Leavy, 82-Randy Nelson. This was the first Craftsman Truck Series race at Heartland Park Topeka held on the 2.1 mile configuration.
His truck then spun driver's side first into the wall, making the truck slightly airborne. Teague was airlifted to a local hospital for precautionary reasons. At Indianapolis Raceway Park in the Action Packed Racing Cards 150 , on the last lap of the race, the No. 77 of Gary St. Amant (who finished 11th) spun out off of turn 2 and hit a light ...
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The 1999 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series was the fifth season of the Craftsman Truck Series, the third highest stock car racing series sanctioned by NASCAR in the United States. Chevrolet switched to the Silverado for their trucks after four seasons with the C/K. Jack Sprague of Hendrick Motorsports was crowned champion.
The races were broadcast during coverage of the Winter Heat Series [1] and were held on tracks primarily based on the West Coast of the United States, featuring four to five trucks each. [2] The series helped begin the careers of future NASCAR drivers like Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch, Matt Crafton, and Ron Hornaday Jr. [3]
The 1998 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series was the fourth season of the Craftsman Truck Series, the third highest stock car racing series sanctioned by NASCAR in the United States. Ron Hornaday Jr. of Dale Earnhardt, Inc. won the championship.