|
|
|
RACING
NEWS
|
| Friday, November 14, 2008 | | Rick Fuller Retires From NASCAR Modified Racing | Massachusetts Driver Won 20 Races, 1993 Series Title
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Nov. 12, 2008) – Former NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Rick Fuller brought to a close one of the most successful driving careers in the 24-year history of the tour with the announcement that he has retired from racing.
Fuller, of Auburn, Mass., made his NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour debut in the series' inaugural race on March 31, 1985 at Thompson (Conn.) International Speedway with a 13th place finish in the Icebreaker. Ultimately, Thompson became the site of his last race when was caught up in an early accident and came home 30th in the No. 77 Toyota Certified Used Vehicles Modified in the Xtra Mart World Series on Oct. 19.
Fuller compiled 20 wins, 145 top fives, 231 top 10s and 11 Coors Light Pole Awards in 439 career NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts. His win total ranks seventh in tour history.
Fuller got his start in weekly series action. He won Late Model championships at Westboro (Mass.) Speedway in 1980 and at Thompson in 1982. Fuller later moved on to the Modified division where he captured the Thompson track title in 1985.
"Early on in my career, winning really wasn't that big of an effort," Fuller said. "It wasn't uncommon in the first few years that I started out racing for me to win 30 or 40 feature events. Once I moved solely into the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, it was a humbling experience. To win just one or two races a year was huge. To actually win the championship was a monster accomplishment."
The highlight of Fuller's distinguished career was his championship season of 1993. A year after his brother, Jeff, had captured the title, Fuller strung together a win and 14 top 10s in 17 starts to finish 93 points ahead of Reggie Ruggiero for the crown.
As part of NASCAR's celebration of 60 Years of Modified Champions, Fuller was honored at Thompson prior to the Sunoco Modified Mania 150 on Sept. 7.
Fuller, voted the series' Most Popular Driver in 2000, is one of just three drivers to have made starts in each of the first 24 years of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour along with Carl Pasteryak and Jamie Tomaino.
"The past couple of years Toyota Certified Used Vehicles had the confidence to back me in an attempt to run for another championship and I have to thank them and the Curt Chase family for doing the same," Fuller said. "The championship I won in 1993 was with the No. 77 team, and for them to have the confidence in me to make another run at that meant an awful lot to me."
While Fuller hasn't necessarily lost the drive to compete, there are a number of reasons why 2008 became a good time to close the book on his racing career. Fuller has kids of his own who are at the beginning of their racing careers, and he has also started to turn his attention toward supporting them.
"I had a really good run at this and I had a lot of fun, but right now I'm looking at other opportunities in racing," Fuller said. "My son, Alex, is racing Quarter Midgets at the "Little T" at Thompson and my daughter, Meghan, says she wants to start, and that will probably occupy a lot of my time."
While the 2008 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season will be the last full-time run of Fuller's distinguished career, he didn't necessarily close the door on his availability for a spot start or part-time ride in the future.
Have an opinion on
this story? Post a message on
The Southern Motor Racing Forum OR Send the Editor an E-mail!
|
|
|
| |
|
|
Listen
to interviews by
clicking on titles. |
|
MORE
NEWS!
|
|
It was touted as the Frost Bite Winter Nationals, however with 75 degree weather it was more like a Modified Spring Sizzler at Orange County Speedway in NC.
Matt Hirschman of Northhampton PA, a northern modified series campaigner, overcame Ronnie Silk with less than 8 laps left in the Ollie Jenkins Memorial ASA modified season opener.
And it couldn’t have happened at a better time as Hirschman has no type of ride lined up this year...
Lia Returns To Whelen Modifieds
|
2007 Champion Will Reunite With Garbarino and ‘Mystic Missile’ Team for 2009 Campaign
by Jason Cunningham February 24, 2009 - 12:52pm
Donny Lia, who captured the 2007 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour in his first and only season in the famed ‘Mystic Missile,’ will return to the team for another title run in 2009.
Bob Garbarino, who got his first championship ring after 47 years as a Modified team owner with Lia at...
ASA Modified Tour on Display at Piedmont Expo
|
(King, NC): The American Speed Association sanctioned Southern Modified Race Tour will be on site on January 16 and 17 for Phillip Walker’s 23rd Annual Piedmont Racing Expo. The event will be held in the Exposition Center on the NC State Fairgrounds Complex in Raleigh, NC.
“This show is a highlight for the ASA / SMRT Modifieds this year” said Southern Modified Race Tour promoter, Randy Myers. “Phillip’s event is one of the best in the a...
Banquets On Tap This Weekend Close Out 2009 Season
|
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 8, 2008) – The 2008 seasons will ceremoniously conclude this weekend for the NASCAR Camping World Series East and NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour respective series’ annual awards banquets at Mohegan Sun Resort in Uncasville, Conn. Veteran drivers Matt Kobyluck and Ted Christopher will each celebrate their first NASCAR touring championship of their distinguished careers.
Kobyluck will be the guest of honor at the NASCA...
Ray Evernham To Buy Speedway
|
by Frank Taylor NASCAR team owner Ray Evernham announced Thursday night in Lincolnton that he is in advanced negotiations to purchase the East Lincoln Speedway and plans to retire from NASCAR.
Evernham and partner Bob Mack of Cornelius-based RPM Group Holdings said they had hoped to have the keys to the speedway in their hands when they appeared at the Lincolnton-Lincoln County Chamber of Commerce’s Business After-Hours event to ...
Rick Fuller Retires From NASCAR Modified Racing
|
Massachusetts Driver Won 20 Races, 1993 Series Title
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Nov. 12, 2008) – Former NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Rick Fuller brought to a close one of the most successful driving careers in the 24-year history of the tour with the announcement that he has retired from racing.
Fuller, of Auburn, Mass., made his NASCAR Whel...
Hirschman Dominates Chemung 120
|
Leads Wire-To-Wire For Second Win
 by Jason Cunningham CHEMUNG, N.Y. – Matt Hirschman led start-to-finish Saturday in the Chemung 120 to capture his second NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour win of the season and gained on the championship points lead of Ted Christopher with two races remaining.
Hirschman (No. 59 Ed Bennett Properties Chevr...
Reitenour Selected for NASCAR DIVERSITY Combine
|
(South Boston VA)Miamisburg High School Senior, Megan Reitenour was selected to participate in the testing and evaluation combine to possibly earn the opportunity to compete with an established NASCAR team for a full season.
The Drive for Diversity Program, is managed by Access Marketing & Communications and is supported by NASCAR. This program provid...
FasTrack Publisher Passes Away
|
Hal Hamrick, an announcer for Universal Racing Network which broadcast the first Daytona 500, passed away on Saturday. He was 79. Hamrick was also an administrator and publicist at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway and Hickory Motor Speedway. He was also the publisher of FasTrack, the only weekly publication dedicated to covering grassroots racing in the Uni...
 Martinsville Speedway is known for its fine hospitality and for its Hot Dogs. And it is known for one of the most familiar names in NASCAR racing, T. Taylor Warren, a photo journalist. Warren was absent and well missed this past weekend at the Whelen Made in America 300. Its not that often that you find Warren missing a race at Martinsville Speedwa...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|