NASCAR’s Next Wave Of Superstars Just Over The Horizon
Youth Thrives From Entry Level To National Series During 2012 Campaign
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 13, 2012) – NASCAR has a talent-laden farm
system loaded with the stock car racing’s future stars.
From
the NASCAR Nationwide and NASCAR Craftsman Truck series through the
sanctioning body’s touring divisions and on the Whelen All-American
tracks,
there’s a single common denominator: Youth, lightning fast youth.
The
pipeline leading to the ultimate destination – the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series – figures to overflow for years to come. And from the looks of
2012,
current NASCAR Sprint Cup competitors had best be ready to defend their
turf and their jobs.
Dillon Brothers Lead The Charge – Again
Austin
Dillon made history in 2011, becoming the NASCAR Camping World Truck
Series’ youngest champion at age 22. That goal accomplished, his owner
and grandfather, Richard Childress gave Dillon an even greater
challenge, a full-time opportunity in the NASCAR Nationwide Series,
where he thrived in his No. 3 Chevrolet. The young competitor won twice
at Kentucky Speedway, never left the top four in points
and claimed Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors.
There’s
another Dillon on the horizon – Ty Dillon – and the 20-year-old is
coming up fast in his older sibling’s mirror. Like Austin, Ty won NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series rookie honors in his first full season. He
also scored a victory, at Atlanta Motor Speedway, led the championship
standings with his No. 3 Chevrolet and was on the threshold of a title
as late as the waning laps at Homestead-Miami
Speedway.
Buescher Triumphs, Piquet’s Stock Car Fortunes Rise
A
first NASCAR national series victory – not with his No. 31 Turner
Motorsports Chevrolet but in the 2012 NASCAR Nationwide Series opener at
Daytona
International Speedway – propelled James Buescher on a championship
course. The 22-year-old Texan did win in the NASCAR Camping World Truck
Series, four times in fact, twice in Kentucky and at Kansas and
Chicagoland.
Piquet,
the one-time Formula 1 driver from Brazil, became a NASCAR star in a
break-out year. Like Turner teammate Buescher, Piquet won in two series
– NASCAR Camping World Truck and NASCAR Nationwide Series, his latter
victory scored at the fabled Road America road course in Elkhart Lake,
Wis. Piquet, 27, won at Michigan and Las Vegas en route to a
seventh-place championship performance. He also led the
series with four Keystone Light poles.
Patrick Proves Ready For Prime Time
Danica
Patrick became NASCAR’s highest finishing female competitor in 2011
with a fourth-place finish at Las Vegas. She set another record for her
gender as a fulltime NASCAR Nationwide Series competitor in the No. 7
JR Motorsports Chevrolet during the past season – the first female to
produce a top-10 finish (10th) in a national series. Patrick’s
17th-place performance at Phoenix, her last of 10 premier
series starts, readied her for a NASCAR Sprint Cup rookie campaign in
2013.
Record Number Of NASCAR Camping World Truck First-Time Winners
There
were nine of them in 2012, all under the age of 30, beginning with John
King’s upset victory in the season-opening race at Daytona. King,
23, was participating in just his eighth series event. As noted,
Buescher, Dillon and Piquet also were first-time winners. They were
joined by 2011 Sunoco Rookie of the Year Joey Coulter, 22, at Pocono;
Cale Gale, 27, at Homestead; Parker Kligerman, 22, at
Talladega and Justin Lofton, 26, at Charlotte. Number nine, Ryan
Blaney, became the youngest series winner at 18 years 8 months when he
captured the series’ second visit of the season to Iowa Speedway.
Among the season’s top-five championship finishers, only runner up Timothy Peters is older than 22.
Young Stars On The Rise In NASCAR Touring, Whelen All-American
A
year after becoming the youngest race winner and pole sitter in NASCAR
K&N Pro Series West history, Dylan Kwasniewski took the big step in
his
sophomore season in becoming the youngest champion in the 59 years of
the series. The 17-year-old Las Vegas driver won three times and posted
12 top fives in 15 races en route to taking the title by six points over
teammate and defending champion Greg Pursley.
Kyle
Larson had never raced a stock car prior to February. That lack of
experience didn’t slow down the transition for the 20-year-old
open-wheel
star from Elk Grove, Calif. Larson won twice – including at New
Hampshire – on his way to winning the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East
championship. He joined Joey Logano and Ryan Truex in becoming the only
drivers in the series’ history to win rookie of the year
and the championship in the same season. He also gave Rev Racing and
NASCAR Drive for Diversity their first NASCAR touring title. Larson, an
Earnhardt Ganassi Racing development driver, nearly won for Turner
Motorsports in his fourth career NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series start.
Darrell
Wallace Jr. picked up his sixth career win in the NASCAR K&N Pro
Series East at Greenville early in the year. It was a big milestone year
for the 19-year-old from Concord, N.C., a graduate of the NASCAR Drive
for Diversity program, as he made four NASCAR Nationwide Series starts
for Joe Gibbs Racing. Wallace scored three top 10s and earned his first
21 Means 21 Pole Award presented by Coors
Brewing Co., at Dover. He became the first African-American driver to
win a pole in the Nationwide Series.
After
capping 2012 by winning the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West finale at
Phoenix, Ryan Blaney continued his successful progression. After
rallying
from a spin to finish second in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East
opener at Bristol, Blaney also finished second at Iowa in a partial
season in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series. The 18-year-old from High
Point, N.C., made 13 NASCAR Nationwide Series starts and nine
in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, highlighted by his
breakthrough victory at Iowa.
Corey
LaJoie contended for victories but just couldn't get to Victory Lane
through his first 23 career NASCAR K&N Pro Series East starts. After
breaking through for his first win at Bowman Gray Stadium in
Winston-Salem, N.C., though, the 21-year-old driver from Concord, N.C.,
was the hottest driver in the series. Including his win at Bowman Gray,
LaJoie scored five victories and two runner-up finishes
in the final 10 races of the season to finish second in the
championship points race to Larson.
Lee
Pulliam has only been racing for six seasons. But the 24-year-old from
Semora, N.C., quickly rose to the top in the NASCAR Whelen All-American
Series. Driving the asphalt Late Model divisions at Motor Mile Speedway
in Radford, Va., Kingsport (Tenn.) Speedway, Caraway Speedway in
Asheboro, N.C., Southern National Raceway Park in Kenly, N.C., and South
Boston (Va.) Speedway, Pulliam collected 22 wins
and 30 top fives in 36 starts to win his first NASCAR Whelen
All-American Series national title. The championship came a year after
he finished third in the national standings.
Other
breakthrough performances: Chase Elliott, 17, became the youngest pole
winner in NASCAR K&N Pro Series history and also scored his first
career
NASCAR win at Iowa. … Ben Kennedy, the 20-year-old grandson of Bill
France Jr., earned his first NASCAR victory in the historic inaugural
NASCAR oval race in Europe at Tours in France. He also finished ninth in
NASCAR K&N Pro Series East points. … Ryan Preece,
22, from Berlin, Conn., had two wins and six poles and finished second
in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. He also ran his Modified at weekly
tracks in Connecticut and at Riverhead (N.Y.) Raceway, winning 14 times
and finishing fifth in the NASCAR Whelen All-American
Series national standings.
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