Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Mike Shiplett

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NASCAR crew chief
Mike Shiplett
Shiplett atKansas Speedway in 2022
Personal information
Birth nameMichael Gene Shiplett
Born (1972-05-17)May 17, 1972 (age 52)
Amherst, Ohio, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Northwestern Ohio[1]
OccupationCrew chief
Years active1995–present
Sport
CountryUnited States
SportMotor racing
LeagueNASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
Team42.Niece Motorsports

Michael Gene Shiplett (born May 17, 1972)[2] is an AmericanNASCAR crew chief who works forNiece Motorsports as the crew chief of their No. 42Chevrolet Silverado in theNASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driven byMatt Mills. He previously worked forRichard Childress Racing as their Xfinity Series competition director as a crew chief forStewart-Haas Racing,Chip Ganassi Racing,Turner Motorsports andEvernham /Richard Petty Motorsports.

Racing career

[edit]

Early career

[edit]

He started his racing career by working in his uncle's racing shop in Ohio, going from working on the street stock cars his uncle owned to being given the opportunity to drive them when he was 15. However, a local rule prohibited him from driving a street stock car until he was 16.[1] He moved up the ladder of racing, from street stocks tolate models before going to college and graduating with a degree in diesel technology from theUniversity of Northwestern Ohio in 1992.[3]

Shiplett earned his first job as a mechanic forLiberty Racing in 1995 as they made their transition into the brand-newNASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.[1] He moved toButch Mock Motorsports in 1999, becoming thecar chief for the No. 75 truck.[3] He got another opportunity to be in the same position in 2001 forUltra Motorsports.[3] He worked for the team again in 2002 on their No. 7 car driven byCasey Atwood.[4]

2003–2008:Evernham Motorsports

[edit]

2003–2006: Mechanic and car chief

[edit]

Shiplett got his first big break in 2003, when he was hired byEvernham Motorsports to serve as the lead mechanic for the team's No. 19 car driven byJeremy Mayfield.[4] In 2006, he was promoted to be the car chief (which Evernham Motorsports referred to as a "car director") of the No. 9 car driven byKasey Kahne.[5] Kahne had one of his best seasons with Shiplett and crew chiefKenny Francis in 2006, winning a career-high 6 races en-route to an 8th-place finish in that year's Chase for the Nextel Cup.[6]

2007: Busch Series No. 9 car

[edit]

Due to the success of the 2006 season, Shiplett was rewarded with his first opportunity as crew chief (which Evernham Motorsports referred to as a "team director"). He crew chiefed their No. 9 car in theBusch Series in2007, driven by multiple drivers.[7] The No. 9 Busch Series team won 2 races in 2007, with both wins coming from Kasey Kahne.

2008: Cup Series No. 10 car

[edit]

He was promoted once again in 2008 to be the crew chief for the No. 10 car driven byPatrick Carpentier.[8] Although Carpentier won a pole at New Hampshire,[9] the 2008 season was a disaster for Shiplett and Carpentier, with 5 DNQs (Did not qualify). Things came to a head at the fall race atTalladega, where Carpentier failed to qualify for the fifth time that season. Shiplett and Carpentier got into a heated argument after Shiplett blamed Carpentier for failing to qualify, which led to Carpentier's firing.[10] Carpentier was replaced byTerry Labonte,Mike Wallace, andA. J. Allmendinger. The No. 10 team finished an abysmal 37th in owners points in 2008.[11]

2009–2011:Richard Petty Motorsports (first stint)

[edit]
Shiplett in 2009 talking toReed Sorenson, who he crew chiefed that year
Shiplett (third from left) with his pit crew, his driverA. J. Allmendinger andChief of Staff of the United States Air ForceNorton A. Schwartz and his wife on pit road before the2011 Coke Zero 400

Despite the poor performance of the No. 10 team during the 2008 season, Shiplett stayed with Gillett Evernham Motorsports as it merged withPetty Enterprises to formRichard Petty Motorsports (RPM).[12] The No. 10 team became the No. 43 team in 2009, with new driverReed Sorenson behind the wheel.[13] After 22 races, the No. 43 and 44 teams switched atMichigan, with Shiplett becoming the new crew chief forA. J. Allmendinger in the 44 for the final 14 races of the season.[14] Despite the crew swap, Shiplett's teams improved in 2009, with Allmendinger finishing 24th in points and Sorenson finishing 29th.[15]

Because Shiplett had more success with Allmendinger in 2009 than Sorenson, Shiplett stayed with Allmendinger for 2010 as the No. 44 team became the No. 43 team and Richard Petty Motorsports merged withYates Racing.[16][17] Allmendinger and Shiplett improved on their brief 2009 season with a points finish of 19th and a pole atPhoenix Raceway.[18]

Shiplett and Allmendinger were retained by Richard Petty Motorsports as they downsized from 4 to 2 teams.[19][20] After eight years at Richard Petty Motorsports and its predecessors, Shiplett was fired on July 18, 2011 after theNew Hampshire race.[21] At the time of his firing, the No. 43 team was in 16th place in the points standings.[22] Shiplett was replaced byGreg Erwin for the rest of the2011 season.[23]

2012:Turner Motorsports

[edit]

After being fired from Richard Petty Motorsports, Shiplett was hired byTurner Motorsports to be the crew chief of their No. 38 entry driven by longtime Evernham Motorsports/Richard Petty Motorsports driver Kasey Kahne andWorld of Outlaws driverBrad Sweet for the first 23 races.[24] Shiplett was also a crew chief in theTruck Series for 1 race atRockingham Speedway with Kahne, which they won.[25]

2013–2014:Richard Petty Motorsports (second stint)

[edit]

Shiplett returned to Richard Petty Motorsports for the 2013 and 2014 seasons and joined their research and development team along with being thecar chief for the No. 9 team driven byMarcos Ambrose.[1][26] He was the crew chief for one race during the2013 season forCorey LaJoie'sNationwide Series debut atHomestead-Miami Speedway,[26] where LaJoie finished 34th.[27]

2015–2018:Chip Ganassi Racing

[edit]

Before the 2015 season, Shiplett was given another opportunity to be a crew chief when he was hired byHScott Motorsports withChip Ganassi to be the crew chief for their No. 42 entry driven byKyle Larson,Brennan Poole, andJustin Marks.[28] Shiplett's drivers combined earned 1 win at Homestead–Miami Speedway[29] and finished 15th in the owner's championship.[30]

Shiplett and the entire No. 42 team except for Poole and co-owner Harry Scott[31] returned for the 2016 season, with Marks racing in 17 races and Larson in 16.[32] Shiplett's team improved on their 2015 campaign, finishing 7th in the owner's championship and scoring 3 wins, 2 by Larson and 1 by Marks.[33][34]

Shiplett and the No. 42 team returned for the2017 season, adding new development driversAlex Bowman andTyler Reddick.[35] During the season under Shiplett, Larson earned 3 wins early in the season, Reddick earned his first career Xfinity win atKentucky Speedway,[36] and Bowman earned his first career Xfinity win atCharlotte Motor Speedway.[37] With Marks, Larson, Reddick, and Bowman, Shiplett's team improved to 5th in the owner's championship.

Before the 2018 season, it was announced that Shiplett would return to Chip Ganassi Racing's Xfinity Series team in 2018 with Larson, Marks, andJohn Hunter Nemechek as drivers for Shiplett's No. 42 team.[38][39] After theNew Hampshire race, Shiplett was suspended for one race and fined $10,000 after failing post-race inspection.[40]Ross Chastain joined the No. 42 team on August 23, 2018 for 3 races[41] and did extremely well under Shiplett, winning 1 race,[42] winning a pole,[43] and finishing second in another race.[44] Overall, Shiplett and the No. 42 team earned 6 wins (4 with Larson, 1 with Chastain, and 1 with Nemechek[45]) and finished 2nd in the owner's championship. After the season, Chip Ganassi Racing's Xfinity program folded and Shiplett was released from Chip Ganassi Racing after the team's main sponsor,DC Solar, was exposed as aPonzi scheme and forced to shut down.[46]

2019–2022:Stewart-Haas Racing

[edit]

2019: Xfinity Series No. 00 car

[edit]

On February 1, 2019, it was announced that Shiplett and the former No. 42 team would joinStewart-Haas Racing and their No. 00 Xfinity Series program, working exclusively with driverCole Custer for the full season.[47] In their first season together, Shiplett and Custer had an extremely successful season, winning 7 races. In contention for the championship atHomestead-Miami Speedway, Custer was unable to passTyler Reddick in the closing laps and finished second in the race and in the overall points standings.[48][49]

2020–2022: Cup Series No. 41 car

[edit]

Despite the disappointing end to the 2019 season, Shiplett and Custer were promoted to the No. 41 team in theNASCAR Cup Series for the2020 season.[50] Custer broke through when he won the2020 Quaker State 400 atKentucky Speedway to clinch a playoff berth, giving Custer and Shiplett their first career Cup Series wins as driver and crew chief, respectively.[51] In Shiplett's 150th career start atBristol, the No. 41 team was eliminated in the first round of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.[3][52] Despite the win and playoff berth, the team struggled throughout the season and finished 16th out of 16 playoff drivers in the points standings.[53]

Early in the season after the2021 Pennzoil 400 atLas Vegas, Shiplett was suspended for 1 race and fined $20,000 for failing post–race inspection.[54]

Shiplett returned as the crew chief of the No. 41 car a third straight year in 2022. He and Custer missed the playoffs again. However, their teammateChase Briscoe did make the playoffs and duringthe race at the Charlotte Roval, Custer was in front of Briscoe on the last lap and intentionally slowed down and checked up heading into the "bus stop", which resulted in Briscoe gaining positions and passing cars and advancing to the next round of the playoffs. As a result, NASCAR announced on the Tuesday after the race that Custer would lose 50 driver points, the No. 41 car would lose 50 owner points, and Shiplett would be indefinitely suspended.[55] The team appealed the penalty, which allowed Shiplett to crew chief the car until the appeal date,[56] but on October 27, Stewart-Haas Racing lost the appeal against Custer's penalties.[57]

2023–present:Richard Childress Racing,Bret Holmes Racing andNiece Motorsports

[edit]

On January 10, 2023, NASCAR lifted Shiplett's suspension.[58] After that was announced, later in the same day,Richard Childress Racing announced that Shiplett would join the team in the role of Xfinity Series competition director.[59]

On January 19, 2024, it was announced that Shiplett would be joiningBret Holmes Racing to crew chief their No. 32 truck in theNASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driven byBret Holmes. On October 25, BHR abruptly announced that they would immediately be shutting down, leaving Shiplett without a job. Almost immediately, he was picked up byNiece Motorsports to crew chiefMatt Mills' No. 42 truck to finish the year, with Mills' crew chief Jon Leonard being moved to the team's part-time No. 44 truck.[60][61]

Personal life

[edit]

Shiplett was born and raised inAmherst, Ohio[2] although he currently lives inDenver, North Carolina (in theCharlotte metropolitan area where most NASCAR teams are based) with his wife, Brooke.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcde"Mike Shiplett Bio".Stewart Haas Racing. 29 December 2016.
  2. ^ab"Mike Shiplett PDF"(PDF).TrueSpeedCommunication.
  3. ^abcdKim, Andrew."Shiplett to reach 150 Cup starts as crew chief at Bristol".Speedway Media.
  4. ^ab"New duties for key Evernham Motorsports personnel".Motorsport.com. January 16, 2003. RetrievedOctober 12, 2022.
  5. ^"Major changes at Evernham".Crash.net. 17 November 2005.
  6. ^"Kasey Kahne Driving Stats".Racing Reference.
  7. ^"2007 Busch Series Team/Driver Chart".Jayski.
  8. ^"Mike Shiplett is Pat Carpentier's crew chief".Auto123.com. 15 December 2007.
  9. ^Voyer, Michael."Patrick Carpentier Gets His First Career Pole at New Hampshire".Bleacher Report.
  10. ^Crandall, Kelly."Fightin' Words: Patrick Carpentier Released From Gillette Evernham".Bleacher Report.
  11. ^"2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Owner Standings".TobyChristie.com.
  12. ^Newton, Dave (January 9, 2009)."Petty, Gillett Evernham merge".ESPN.go.com.Charlotte, North Carolina:ESPN. Retrieved17 April 2021.
  13. ^"2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Owner Standings".TobyChristie.com.
  14. ^Buchanan, Mary Jo."Richard Petty Motorsports Is King of the Swap".Bleacher Report.
  15. ^"NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings for 2009".Racing Reference.
  16. ^"2010 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Team/Driver Chart".Jayski.
  17. ^Spencer, Reed (September 10, 2009)."Petty, Yates to merge, switch to Fords".Sporting News. Archived fromthe original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved17 April 2021.
  18. ^Buchanan, Mary Jo."AJ Allmendinger Scores First Ever NASCAR Cup Series Pole".Bleacher Report.
  19. ^"2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup Team/Driver Chart".Jayski.
  20. ^Pearce, Al (24 August 2010)."NASCAR: Richard Petty Motorsports to run only two cars in 2011".Autoweek.
  21. ^"NASCAR: AJ Allmendinger gets new crew chief".Auto123.com. 19 July 2011.
  22. ^Pennell, Jay (18 July 2011)."NASCAR News: Greg Erwin Replaces Mike Shiplett As No. 43 Crew Chief At Richard Petty Motorsports".SB Nation.
  23. ^"Erwin replaces Shiplett as Allmendinger's crew chief".SportingNews.
  24. ^"Turner Motorsports announced Mike Shiplett as crew chief for Kasey Kahne and Brad Sweet".Speedway Media.
  25. ^"Kasey Kahne surges to trucks win in Rockingham return".The Spokesman–Review.
  26. ^ab"Son of former champ to make Nationwide debut".NASCAR.com.
  27. ^"2013 Ford EcoBoost 300".Racing Reference.
  28. ^"Chip Ganassi and Harry Scott Jr. team to field 1 Xfinity Series entry in 2015".StarTribune.
  29. ^"Larson picks up first 2015 win at Homestead finale".NASCAR.com.
  30. ^"Larson picks up first 2015 win at Homestead finale".NASCAR.com.
  31. ^Bruce, Kenny (February 11, 2016)."Brennan Poole to drive full-time for Chip Ganassi Racing in XFINITY Series".nascar.com. Retrieved11 February 2016.
  32. ^"Chip Ganassi Racing announces 2016 driver lineup".Speedway Digest. 8 March 2013.
  33. ^Pantorno, Joe."NASCAR Xfinity Series at Mid-Ohio 2016: Results Winner, Standings and Reaction".Bleacher Report.
  34. ^"NXS: Chip Ganassi Racing 2016 Review, 2017 Preview".Bleacher Report.
  35. ^Crandall, Kelly."Ganassi Team Cranks Up Xfinity Series Program".Racer.
  36. ^Hatch, Charlie."Tyler Reddick gets dominating first win at Kentucky in Xfinity Series playoff opener".USA Today.
  37. ^Spencer, Reid (8 October 2017)."Alex Bowman scores first NASCAR victory with Xfinity win at Charlotte".Autoweek.
  38. ^"2018 NASCAR Xfinity Series Team Chart".Jayski.
  39. ^Weaver, Matt (12 December 2017)."John Hunter Nemechek joins Chip Ganassi Racing NASCAR Xfinity team for 2018".Autoweek.
  40. ^Vincent, Amanda (25 July 2018)."NASCAR Suspends Two Xfinity Series Crew Chiefs after New Hampshire Race".TheDrive.
  41. ^Beaver, Dan (23 August 2018)."Ross Chastain to run three Xfinity races with Chip Ganassi Racing".NBC Sports.
  42. ^Pockrass, Bob (16 September 2018)."Perseverance pays off as Ross Chastain earns first Xfinity win".ESPN.com.
  43. ^"Chip Ganassi Racing Taps Ross Chastain to Drive the No. 42 Chevrolet".Speedway Digest. 21 September 2020.
  44. ^"2018 Go Bowling 250".Racing Reference.
  45. ^McFadin, Daniel (20 October 2018)."John Hunter Nemechek earns first Xfinity Series win".NBC Sports.
  46. ^Roselund, Christian (May 28, 2019)."DC Solar gets liquidated".pv magazine USA.Archived from the original on December 7, 2019. RetrievedDecember 7, 2019.
  47. ^Bonkowski, Jerry (February 2019)."Stewart Haas Racing names Mike Shiplett as Cole Custer's crew chief".NBC Sports.
  48. ^"Cole Custer Second at Homestead, Second in Championship".Speedway Digest.
  49. ^"2019 Ford EcoBoost 300".Racing Reference.
  50. ^Albert, Zack."Stewart-Haas Racing reveals crew chief lineup for 2020 NASCAR Cup Series teams".NASCAR.com.
  51. ^Graves, Gary (21 April 2021)."NASCAR Cup rookie Cole Custer wins in upset at Kentucky".AP.
  52. ^Sturniolo, Zach (20 September 2020)."William Byron, Cole Custer, Matt DiBenedetto, Ryan Blaney Eliminated From Playoffs".Frontstretch.
  53. ^Wackerlin, Jeff."Cole Custer 2020 season in review".NASCAR.com.
  54. ^Haas, Jared (9 March 2021)."Cole Custer's Crew Chief Mike Shiplett Suspended for 1 Race".Frontstretch.
  55. ^"NASCAR penalizes Custer, No. 41 SHR team after Charlotte playoff race".NASCAR.com. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. October 11, 2022. RetrievedOctober 12, 2022.
  56. ^"(Twitter post)".Twitter.Bob Pockrass. October 11, 2022. RetrievedOctober 12, 2022.Stewart-Haas Racing will appeal the penalty issued to Custer (50 points, $100K fine) and to Shiplett ($100K fine and indefinite suspension).
  57. ^Long, Dustin (October 27, 2022)."Appeals panel upholds penalties to Cole Custer, No. 41 team".NBC Sports. RetrievedOctober 28, 2022.
  58. ^"Charlotte Penalties Announced; Mike Shiplett Suspended UPDATES".Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media. January 10, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2023.
  59. ^"Richard Childress Racing enhances Xfinity program with leadership promotions".Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media. January 10, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2023.
  60. ^Schramm III, Dewey (October 25, 2024)."Bret Holmes Racing Shuts Down, Will Not Compete in NCTS in 2025".TobyChristie.com. RetrievedNovember 4, 2024.
  61. ^"(Twitter post)".Twitter.Niece Motorsports. October 21, 2024. RetrievedNovember 4, 2024.

External links

[edit]
Personnel
  • Al Niece
  • Cody Efaw
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
Drivers
Crew chiefs
  • (41) TBA
  • (42) TBA
  • (44) TBA
  • (45) Phil Gould
Former drivers
Former personnel
  • Tom Ackerman
  • Cody Efaw
  • Mike Hillman Jr.
  • Jon Leonard
  • Wally Rogers
  • Mike Shiplett
Partnerships and affiliations
Years active
2016–2024
Personnel
Former drivers
Former personnel
ARCA Menards Series Championships
Partnerships and affiliations
Buyouts and mergers
Headquarters:Welcome,North Carolina
Personnel
NASCAR Cup Series
Drivers
Crew chiefs
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Drivers
Crew chiefs
  • (2) Danny Stockman
  • (21) Chad Haney
  • (33) TBA
NASCAR Hall of Fame
Former drivers
Winners
Other drivers
Former personnel
NASCAR Cup Series Championships
NASCAR Xfinity Series Championships
Drivers' Championship
Owners' Championship
Regular Season Championship
NASCAR Truck Series Championships
ARCA Menards Series Championships
Daytona 500 wins
Brickyard 400 wins
Coca-Cola 600 wins
Southern 500 wins
Winston 500 wins
All-Star Race wins
Busch Light Clash wins
Partnerships and affiliations
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mike_Shiplett&oldid=1277171327"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp