- Sterling Marlin
Infobox NASCAR driver
Name = Sterling Marlin
Birthdate = birth date and age|1957|6|30 | Birthplace = Columbia,Tennessee
Cup_Car_Team = #09 -Phoenix Racing
Previous_Year = 2007
Prev_Cup_Pos = 40th | Best_Cup_Pos = 3rd - 1995, 2001 (Winston Cup)
Cup_Wins = 10
Cup_Top_Tens = 216
Cup_Poles = 11
First_Cup_Race = 1976Music City USA 420 (Nashville)
Last_Cup_Race = 2008AMP Energy 500 (Talladega)
First_Cup_Win = 1994Daytona 500 (Daytona)
Last_Cup_Win = 2002 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 (Darlington)
First_Busch_Race = 1986Winn-Dixie 300 (Charlotte)
First_Busch_Win = 1990All Pro 300 (Charlotte)
Last_Busch_Win = 2000Cheez-It 250 (Bristol)
Last_Busch_Race = 2008Pepsi 300 (Nashville)
Years_In_Busch = 17
Total_Busch_Races = 77
Awards = 1983 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Rookie of the Year1995 & 1996 Tennessee Professional Athlete of the Year
2002 Tennessee Professional Athlete of the Year Nominee
Achievements = 1980-1982 Nashville Speedway USA Track Champion
1994 & 1995 Daytona 500 winner
Updated_On =September 12 ,2008 Sterling Marlin (born
June 30 ,1957 inColumbia, Tennessee ) is aNASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver who drives the #09 Finch Racing car on a part time basis. He is the son of former NASCAR driverCoo Coo Marlin . Outside of racing he enjoys watching Tennessee Volunteers football and collecting Civil War artifacts. He is married to Paula and has a daughter, Sutherlin, and a son, Steadman, who sometimes races in the Nationwide Series.Beginnings
While he attended
Spring Hill High School , Marlin played high school basketball and football, earning the captain status his senior year while he played quarterback and linebacker. In 1976, he made his NASCAR debut at Nashville Speedway, filling in for his injured father in the #14H.B. Cunningham Chevrolet. He started 30th and finished 29th after sufferingoil pump failure early in the race. He made two more starts in 1978, finishing ninth atWorld 600 and twenty-fifth at Nashville for Cunningham. He ran Nashville again in 1979, finishing seventeenth. In 1980, he posted two top-tens, eighth in theDaytona 500 for Cunningham, and seventh at Nashville forD.K. Ulrich . From 1980 to 1982,Marlin was a three time track champion at the historicNashville Speedway USA .1983-1990
In 1983, Marlin was hired by
Roger Hamby to drive his #17Hesco Exhaust Chevrolet . He posted a tenth-place finish atDover International Speedway and finished nineteenth in the standings, clinching the Rookie of the Year award. After finishing 15th at Daytona for Hamby in 1984, Marlin spent most of the season running forSadler Brothers Racing , posting two top-ten finishes. He also competed in one race apiece forJimmy Means andDick Bahre . Marlin only made eight starts in 1985, seven of them coming for Sadler, his best finish twelfth atTalladega Superspeedway . He ended his season atCharlotte Motor Speedway , driving theHelen Rae Special . He finished 29th, after suffering flywheel failure.Marlin moved over to the #1
Bull's Eye Barbecue Sauce car owned byHoss Ellington in 1986. His best finish that season came at theFirecracker 400 , where he finished second. He got a full-time job in 1987, when he was hired byBilly Hagan to drive the #44Piedmont Airlines Oldsmobile . He had four top-fives and finished eleventh in points. The following season, he had seven finishes of eighth or better in the first ten races and finished tenth in the standings. In 1989, the team received sponsorship fromSunoco and switched to the number 94. He tied a career-best thirteen top-ten finishes but dropped to twelfth in the final standings. He left the team at the end of the 1990 season. During the 1990 season, he won his first careerBusch Series race at Charlotte, driving the #48Diamond Ridge Chevrolet owned by Fred Turner.1991-1997
Marlin signed to drive the #22
Maxwell House Ford Thunderbird forJunior Johnson in 1991. He had a second-place finish at Daytona to start the season and won two poles atTalladega Superspeedway and the Firecracker 400, finishing seventh in the standings. The next season, he won an additional five poles and had six top-five finishes. Despite his career-high pole total, Marlin departed to drive the #8Raybestos Ford forStavola Brothers Racing . He had just one top-five finish and fell to fourteenth in the standings.Marlin's first career win came in his 279th career start at the 1994 Daytona 500 driving for
Morgan-McClure Motorsports in the #4Kodak car. He went on to win the 500 again in the following year, becoming only one of three drivers to win consecutive Daytona 500s. The other two men that have accomplished that feat wereRichard Petty andCale Yarborough . He also became the only driver to have his first two career wins at the Daytona 500. Marlin won two more times during the 1995 season and finished a career high third in the point standings, during a four-year run with Morgan-McClure Motorsports. In 1997, he did not return to victory lane but dropped to twenty-fifth in the final standings. He left the #4 team at year's end.1998-2005
In 1998, he joined
SABCO Racing to drive the #40Coors Light Chevy. He opened the season by winning theGatorade 125 , a qualifying race for the Daytona 500, but three weeks later, he failed to qualify for thePrimestar 500 , the first race he had missed since 1986. He finished in the top-ten six times and had a thirteenth-place points finish. In 1999, he won his first pole since 1995 atPocono Raceway , but dropped down to sixteenth in the standings. In 2000, he won his second career Busch Series race, driving SABCO's #82 entry atBristol Motor Speedway . During the season, he lost teammateKenny Irwin, Jr. in a practice crash atNew Hampshire International Speedway . After finishing in the top-ten seven times, he fell back to nineteenth in the overall standings.In 2001, SABCO's majority ownership stake was purchased by CART (now IRL) championship owner
Chip Ganassi and the team switched toDodge Intrepid s. In his first race with the new team, Marlin won the Gatorade 125 qualifying race at Daytona. Three days later at the Daytona 500, Marlin appeared to make contact withDale Earnhardt , causing Earnhardt to crash head-on into the Turn 4 wall, an impact that would kill him. In the following days, Marlin and his family received hate mail and death threats from angry fans who felt that Marlin had killed Earnhardt. He was eventually publicly defended by two of Earnhardt's drivers,Dale Earnhardt, Jr. andMichael Waltrip , and was also cleared of any wrongdoing by NASCAR's investigation into the accident. He won Dodge's first race in its return to NASCAR atMichigan International Speedway , as well as winning theUAW-GM Quality 500 . He tied his career best points finish of third that season.Marlin scored two victories early in the 2002 season at
Las Vegas Motor Speedway andDarlington Raceway . He led the2002 Daytona 500 with six laps remaining until ared flag caution caused all drivers to have to stop and hold their positions. While waiting for the race to resume, Marlin climbed out of his car to look at the right front fender on his car. The fender was rubbing on the tire, and he pulled on it. Under NASCAR rules, no work of any kind is allowed to be performed on any car during ared flag caution period. Marlin was ordered to the back of the lead lap as a penalty.Ward Burton would go on to win, and Marlin finished eighth.Marlin led the 2002 points standings for 25 straight weeks, holding a triple-digit advantage through most of the run. He lost the points lead to Mark Martin after the
Sylvania 300 , and would stand fourth in points going into theProtection One 400 atKansas Speedway . During the race Marlin crashed and suffered a severe neck injury, causing him to miss the remainder of the season. His replacement, rookieJamie McMurray , won the fall Charlotte race in his second start. Marlin called the victorious McMurray on national television minutes after the stunning win, congratulating McMurray and the team on prime-time television. He finished 18th in the final standings despite missing the final seven races. Marlin did not finish in the top-five in 2003, but had 11 top-tens and matched his previous year's finish of eighteenth in points. Despite three top-fives in 2004, he fell to 21st in points. During the 2005 season, Ganassi announced Marlin would be replaced byDavid Stremme for the 2006 season in order to attract the younger male demographic.Marlin joined
MB2 Motorsports for 2006 to drive the Waste Management Chevy, running with the #14 in tribute to his father, Coo Coo Marlin, who died during the 2005 season. Marlin's only Top 10 finish in 2006 was ninth place finish at Richmond. His 2006 season was shadowed by bad luck and #14 finished 36th in owner points.Presently
Marlin was able to qualify via speed for each of the first five races of the 2007 season, his #14 team was the only team out of the top 35 from 2006 to do this. Marlin's run in the #14 ended on July 17, 2007, when Ginn Racing announced
Regan Smith , who had been splitting time with Mark Martin in Ginn'sU.S. Army -sponsored #01 car, would replace him beginning at theAllstate 400 at the Brickyard at Indianapolis. He attempted to qualify for two races in 2007, but he failed to qualify for either. He tried to make theSharpie 500 at Bristol in the #78 car as a replacement forKenny Wallace , and theUAW-Ford 500 at Talladega, replacing Mike Wallace in the #09 car. However in November he managed to qualify the #09 and drove at Phoenix for a 25th place finish, and a week later at Homestead finishing 33rd.Marlin failed to qualify for the 2008 Daytona 500 in the #09 car. Then at Talladega, Sterling Marlin qualified and the following week at Richmond as well. For Darlington, Marlin raced the #40 car and qualified 14th. Marlin then the Coca-Cola 600 at
Lowe's Motor Speedway in the #40, still in for the injuredDario Franchitti . He finished out the reast of the season driving for Phoenix Racing.print Cup Statistics
"Last Updated: July 5, 2007"
Busch Series Statistics
External links
* [http://www.racing-reference.info/driver?id=marlist01 Driver's page at racing-reference.info]
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