- Randy LaJoie
Infobox NASCAR driver
Name = Randall LaJoie
Birthdate = birth date and age|1961|8|28
Birthplace =Norwalk, Connecticut
Cup_Top_Tens = 3
Best_Cup_Pos = 40th - 1995 (Winston Cup)
First_Cup_Race = 1985Coca-Cola 500 (Atlanta)
Last_Cup_Race = 2005Advance Auto Parts 500 (Martinsville)
Years_In_Cup = 12
Total_Cup_Races = 44Busch_Wins = 15
Busch_Top_Tens = 118
Busch_Poles = 9
Best_Busch_Pos = 1st - 1995 & 1996 (Busch Series)
First_Busch_Race = 1986Dixie Cup 200 (Darlington) | First_Busch_Win = 1996Meridian Advantage 200 (Nazareth)
Last_Busch_Win = 2001Sam's Town 250 (Memphis
Years_In_Busch = 19
Total_Busch_Races = 350Best_Truck_Pos = 38th - 2004 (Craftsman Truck Series)
Truck_Top_Tens = 1
First_Truck_Race = 2003Las Vegas 350 (Las Vegas)
Last_Truck_Race = 2004O'Reilly 200 (Bristol)
Years_In_Truck = 2
Total_Truck_Races = 7
Awards = 1981Danbury Fair Racearena Modified Sportsman Champion1983 NASCAR
Busch North Series Rookie of the Year1985 NASCAR Busch North Series Champion
1996 & 1997
Busch Series Champion
Updated_On =December 10 ,2006 Randall LaJoie (born
August 28 1961 ,Norwalk, Connecticut , USA) is a driver in theNASCAR Busch Series , where he is a two-time champion. Presently, he does not have a full-time ride. He is the father of racers Casey andCorey LaJoie .Early racing career
LaJoie started racing go-karts when he was 12 years old. In 1980 he began racing in full-bodied racecars. He was the 1981 track champion in the Modified Sportsman division at the
Danbury Fair Racearena .In 1983 he moved to the
NASCAR Busch North Series , and he was the series Rookie of the Year. That season, he made his first attempt at making theDaytona 500 , but did not qualify. In 1985 he had 15 victories on his way to the series championship.Early NASCAR career
LaJoie made his major-league NASCAR debut in 1985 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Driving the #07
Snellman Construction Chevrolet owned by Bob Johnson, he started sixteenth and finished fourteenth. He ran his next race the following season atPocono Raceway , where he finished 29th after suffering engine failure. He also made his Busch Series debut that season, running four races in his own #03Pontiac , posting a tenth-place finish atCharlotte Motor Speedway . He ran another race in 1987 atDover International Speedway and finished tenth. After a third-place finish the following season, he joinedFrank Cicci Racing mid-way through 1989 and had a career-best second-place run atHickory Motor Speedway . He ended the season 26th in points.He did not return to Cicci in 1990, and ran a handful of Busch Races in his own #71, his best finish 23rd at Richmond. He did not run another NASCAR-sanctioned race until 1993, when he ran seven races for
Dick Moroso and one forBACE Motorsports in the Busch Series. His best finish was second, twice. In 1994, he drove for Moroso full-time in the #20Fina Lube Chevy, posting seven top-tens and finishing sixteenth in points. He also ran three Cup races, finishing in the top-20 in all three of them that season.1995-2002
In 1995, LaJoie was called up to Cup again, driving the #22
MBNA Pontiac Grand Prix forBill Davis Racing . LaJoie ran 13 races for Davis in his rookie season before he was released midway through the year. Following his departure, he returned to Busch to drive the #64 forDennis Shoemaker . He had three top-tens and a pole at Richmond in nine starts. The following season, he was hired by BACE Motorsports to drive its #74 entry. LaJoie won five races over the course of the season and clinched his first Busch Series championship. He followed that up with another five wins and his second straight championship in 1997. After falling back to fourth in the standings in 1998, as well as dealing with internal feuds with team ownerBill Baumgardner , LaJoie left BACE at the end of the season. He returned to the Cup Series that season driving nine races forHendrick Motorsports He signed to drive the #1
Chevrolet Monte Carlo forJames Finch in 1999, despite the fact his team lacked major sponsorship. After a season-opening victory at theNAPA Auto Parts 300 ,Bob Evans Restaurants came on board as the team's sponsor. Despite the added funding, LaJoie dropped to tenth in points. He moved up to seventh in the standings the next season with one win, but chose to depart the team at the end of the season forNEMCO Motorsports . Driving the #7 with sponsorship fromKleenex , LaJoie won two more races, but again fell to twelfth in points. He had fourteen top-ten finishes in 2002 and moved up one spot in the points.Recent years
LaJoie returned to the 7 team in 2003, and won two poles, but was dismissed from the ride midway through the season. He fillied out the year with one race apiece for
Innovative Motorsports andFitzBradshaw Racing , as well as Craftsman Truck race forKevin Harvick Incorporated . He began the 2004 season in FitzBradshaw's #82 car and ran five races with a best finish of 13th, before moving on, running one race each forMarsh Racing andTommy Baldwin Racing . He also teamed withHT Motorsports in the Craftsman Truck Series for six races, finishing eighth at Gateway. In the Cup Series, he had a 43rd place finish forHover Motorsports at Richmond, and also ran two races in the #98Ford Taurus for Mach 1 Racing, his best finish 36th.Mach 1 switched to tbe #34 Chevys in 2005, and he began the season with them before he was released. He reunited with Cicci in the Busch Series with
Dollar General sponsorship and posted three top-ten finishes, finishing 19th in points. Dollar General left the team at season's end, leaving LaJoie without a full-time ride. He had signed to drive for Mach 1, which was under new management again in 2005, but was replaced early in the season by teammateChad Chaffin . He drove one race apiece in the Busch Series forDavis Motorsports ,Jay Robinson Racing , and Vision Racing. He also was a test driver forRichard Childress Racing , filling in forKevin Harvick in the #21United States Coast Guard Chevy during practice and qualifying sessions.As of right now, LaJoie has not confirmed plans for 2007, but Randy owns The Joie of Seating, a racing seat company for race cars. Michael Waltrip Racing uses his seats, and David Reutimann was using one of his seats at his crash at California Speedway in February 2007, that crash was one of the hardest ever recorded by NASCAR.
In addition to his racing seat business, Randy is also a part time co-host of The Driver's Seat with John Kernan on
Sirius Satellite Radio 'sNASCAR channel 128. He also did Television Commentary for the ORP and Montreal Busch Series Races.External links
* [http://www.joieofseating.com/randy-lajoie-racing.html Official website]
* [http://www.joieofseating.com/ The Joie of Seating website]
* [http://www.nascar.com/drivers/dps/rlajoie00/bg/bio.html LaJoie's NASCAR.com profile]
* [http://www.racing-reference.info/driver?id=lajoira01 Driver's statistics at racing-reference.info]
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