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HT Motorsports

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American truck racing team
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Find sources: "HT Motorsports" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(October 2019)

HT Motorsports
Owner(s)Jim & Sharon Harris
BaseMartinsville, Virginia,United States
SeriesCamping World Truck Series
Race driversJoey Logano,Darrell Waltrip,Todd Bodine,Ted Musgrave,Robert Pressley,Terry Cook,David Starr,Mike Bliss,Donny Lia
ManufacturerDodge,Ford,Toyota
Opened2001
Closed2010
Career
Drivers' Championships0
Race victories0

HT Motorsports was an Americantruck racing team fromMartinsville, Virginia, owned by trucking company owner Jim Harris. It fielded entries for the nine years in the Camping World Truck Series before suspending operations early in 2010.

Truck No. 24 history

[edit]

This team debuted at a test session atHomestead-Miami Speedway as the No. 92 withTerry Cook driving. He started fifteenth and finished 20th. The No. 24 originally was intended to be the No. 11 Toyota forRed Horse Racing but driverDavid Starr and Zachry Holdings parted ways with the team in December. This team became the No. 24 for 2009 and Starr had fourteen top-ten finishes. Zachry and Starr left the team after the 2009 season forRandy Moss Motorsports.

Truck No. 25 history

[edit]

HT Motorsports made its NASCAR debut atNew Hampshire International Speedway in2001 as the No. 92 Learnframe Dodge. It made four starts that season withStacy Compton and finished in the top ten in each race.

The team then ran atMartinsville Speedway in2002 as the No. 17 Duck Head FootwearDodge Ram driven byDarrell Waltrip. He qualified eighteenth but finished thirty-eighth. Waltrip returned atIndianapolis Raceway Park withTide sponsorship, and finished sixth.Stacy Compton would drive three additional races that season, posting a best finish of eighth atRichmond.

In2003, HT switched to the No. 59 and hiredRobert Pressley to drive. Driving with associate sponsorship from Melling Engine Parts, Pressley finished in the top-five four times and finished thirteenth in points.Randy LaJoie ran the first two races of 2004, followed by rookieMark McFarland. McFarland finished sixth atMansfield Motorsports Speedway before being cycled out by LaJoie, who had an eighth-place finish atGateway.Andy Houston drove for three races, but did not finish higher than 14th.Sammy Sanders,Bobby Hamilton Jr., and Scott Lynch finished out the year in the 59.

Pressley returned to HT in 2005, but had only three top-ten finishes and finished 20th in the standings. He was released and replaced byMike Wallace at the beginning of 2006, but wrecked out of the two races in which he drove for the team.Steve Park became the team's new driver, as the team switched toFord. Despite a tenth-place finish at Mansfield, he was released after ten races and replaced byChad Chaffin. After a slow start, the team switched to Toyota and Chaffin finished eighth atTalladega Superspeedway.Terry Cook was named the driver of the 59 for 2007, and had two top-tens and finished fourteenth in points. He was released at the end of the season forWhelen Modified driver Donny Lia, who raced the last race of the season.

For 2008,Ted Musgrave will move to the No. 59 team, bringing along his ASE sponsorship. In August 2008 ASE announced they will be leaving NASCAR. After 18 races in season, and a wreck in the 1st practice atLas Vegas Motor Speedway, Musgrave & HT Motorsports parted ways.Stacy Compton replaced him later in the day.Joey Logano made his truck series debut atTalladega starting sixth but crashing early.Terry Cook, recently released fromWyler Racing, drove the No. 59 for the rest of the '08 season.[1] The team switched to the No. 25 for 2009 with Cook returning. He had nine top-tens but was replaced in the final two races byMike Bliss.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"None". RetrievedMay 4, 2023.

External links

[edit]
Years active
2001–2010
Personnel
  • Jim Harris
  • Sarah Harris
Former drivers
NASCAR Hall of Fame
Former personnel
  • Danny Rollins
Partnerships and affiliations
Years active
1997–2012
Personnel
Former drivers
NASCAR Hall of Fame
Former personnel
  • Eric Phillips
  • Doug Wolcott
Partnerships and affiliations
Buyouts and mergers
Years active
1972–2007
Personnel
Former drivers
NASCAR Hall of Fame
Southern 500 wins
Partnerships and affiliations
Buyouts and mergers
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