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Tyler Jet Motorsports

Defunct NASCAR team


Summary

Defunct NASCAR team

FieldValue
nameTyler Jet Motorsports
ownersTim Beverley
seriesWinston Cup Series
wins0
drivers_champ0
manufacturerPontiac, Chevrolet
driversJohnny Benson, Darrell Waltrip, Rich Bickle, David Green
baseHarrisburg, North Carolina
opened1998
closed2000

Tyler Jet Motorsports (TJM) was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series team.

History

Tyler Jet Motorsports was owned by Tim Beverley, owner of the airplane sales company that shared a name with the race team, and was formed in 1998 when Beverley bought Darrell Waltrip's race team after Waltrip could not find sponsorship to continue running as an owner-driver. Beverly later bought the NASCAR operation of ISM Racing after owner Bob Hancher backed out of the Cup Series at the midway point of the season, having failed to qualify for the majority of events they had entered with the #35 Tabasco Pontiac. Beverley combined the two operations into one, fielding the former ISM car with Waltrip, who had spent the interim period as a long term substitute at Dale Earnhardt, Inc., starting to drive the #35 at Indianapolis. However, Beverley had inherited problems that began when Hancher, against the wishes of Tabasco maker McIlhenny Company, had fired Todd Bodine earlier in the season. McIlhenny became even more furious when Beverley switched manufacturers from Pontiac to Chevrolet immediately after signing Waltrip to drive the #35, and a court battle ensued that forced Beverley to resume running Pontiacs beginning with the Pepsi 400 at Michigan. The team's best finish was in its first race, with Waltrip finishing thirteenth in a Chevrolet. The #35 only ran in the top 20 once more before the season ended, and after the season McIlhenny, who had been using the race team more as a marketing tool than anything else, pulled its sponsorship from the #35 and left NASCAR altogether; this ended what has been referred to as the "Tabasco Fiasco" in NASCAR circles in the years since. Waltrip left the team as well following the 1998 season, joining Haas-Carter Motorsports for what would be the last two years of his career.

In 1999, the team fielded Pontiacs and switched to the No. 45, with sponsorship from the 10-10-345 long-distance telephone service. Rich Bickle, (who incidentally, had driven for Darrell Waltrip in the Craftsman Truck Series) was hired as the driver, but was released late in the season, and was replaced by David Green. Green recorded the best finish of his Cup series career, a 12th at Phoenix, and won the only pole in his (and the team's) Cup career, the following weekend at the inaugural Cup series race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. During the team's first two seasons of operations, four drivers and three crew chiefs were hired.

For the 2000 season, Tyler Jet switched to the No. 10 and hired Johnny Benson to pilot the car on November 22, 1999. Their first exposure came at the Daytona 500, where the team did not have a sponsor for the entirety of speedweeks which the car was white just the black No. 10 on the side. The team would get a sponsor on late Saturday night, the night before the race where Lycos came on to sponsor them. The decals were put on the car on the morning of the race. Benson started 27th and took the lead late in the race with 43 laps to go with pit strategy by taking two tires and held the lead for 39 laps, only to be passed by Dale Jarrett and other cars that had made full pit stops under a late race caution and finished 12th.

Lycos signed on as sponsor for the No. 10 and stayed with them until the 2000 Pepsi 400, where Tyler Jet pulled them off the car due to nonpayment; Lycos would eventually sue Tyler Jet on July 16, 2001. They would run unsponsored for the next four races, but Beverley was forced to sell the team afterwards. The car, which had just acquired sponsorship from Aaron's, was sold to MB2 Motorsports on July 20. The team would continue to be based in Tyler Jet's shop located near Lowe's Motor Speedway, and ran until the end of the 2005 season when the car number, sponsor (Valvoline) and driver (Scott Riggs) moved to Evernham Motorsports. The successor team and car were Ginn Racing's No. 14, which was sold to Dale Earnhardt, Inc. and merged into its No. 15 team, which in turn was folded after the merger that created Earnhardt Ganassi Racing; the resulting team, by 2014 was simply known as Chip Ganassi Racing, was in turn purchased by Trackhouse Racing Team in 2021.

Car No. 10 results

YearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334OwnersPts1998Darrell Waltrip35Chevy41st2180Pontiac1999Rich Bickle4535th2723Jack SpragueDavid Green2000nowrapJohnny Benson Jr.1013th3741
DAYCARLVSATLDARBRITEXMARTALCALCLTDOVRCHMCHPOCSONNHAPOCIND
13GLN
25
MCH
25BRI
27NHA
32DAR
38RCH
18DOV
21MAR
21CLT
22TAL
23DAY
28PHO
31CAR
32ATL
38
DAY
33CAR
DNQLVS
23ATL
30DAR
DNQTEX
12BRI
DNQMAR
11TAL
14CAL
32RCH
10CLT
25DOV
33MCH
24POC
24SON
21DAY
18NHA
14POC
7IND
DNQGLN
36MCH
28BRI
DNQDAR
23
RCH
DNQ
NHA
40DOV
42MAR
36CLT
42TAL
17CAR
24PHO
12HOM
22ATL
21
DAY
12CAR
14LVS
6ATL
DNQDAR
24BRI
2TEX
42MAR
16TAL
13CAL
23RCH
25CLT
16DOV
15MCH
24POC
34SON
18DAY
13NHA
14POCINDGLNMCHBRIDARRCHNHADOVMARCLTTALCARPHOHOMATL

Car No. 17 results

YearDriverNo.Make123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233OwnersPts1998nowrapRon Hornaday Jr.17Chevy55th121
DAYCARLVSATLDARBRITEXMARTALCALCLTDOVRCHMCHPOCSON
14NHAPOCINDGLNMCHBRINHADARRCHDOVMARCLTTALDAYPHOCARATL

References

References

  1. (February 7, 2012). "Sundays Will Never Be the Same". Simon and Schuster.
  2. (February 15, 2002). "NASCAR Teams Racing to Find Sponsors".
  3. (November 25, 1999). "Back Surgery Goes Well For Mark Martin". [[Orlando Sentinel]].
  4. Buck, Ron. (February 20, 2000). "Frozen moment: Horde of Fords mug Benson".
  5. "Lycos v. TJ Motorsports". CaseText.
  6. (July 20, 2000). "MB2 acquires Tyler Jet Motorsports assets". Motorsport.
  7. Miller, Henry. (July 29, 2000). "Benson and Schrader pool their efforts to find victory lane". [[Lodi News-Sentinel]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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