Kirk Shelmerdine
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| Born | March 8, 1958 |
|---|---|
| Hometown | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
| Awards | Four-time Winston Cup championship crew chief for Dale Earnhardt (1986, 1987, 1990, 1991 |
| 2005 Sprint Cup position | 84th |
| Best cup position | 47th - 2004 (NEXTEL Cup) |
| Statistics current as of February 25, 2006. | |
Kirk Shelmerdine (born March 8, 1958 in Philadelphia) is a NASCAR driver and former championship-winning crew chief for Dale Earnhardt.
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[edit] Crew Chief
In 1982 he joined Richard Childress Racing to become the crew chief for Dale Earnhardt. Earnhardt had 46 wins, 142 Top 5 finishes, and 246 Top 10 finishes enroute to four championships with Kirk. The pit crew won four consecutive Pit Crew Titles over the next eight years. His accomplishments include being the youngest crew chief to win a NASCAR race, and the youngest crew chief to win a Winston Cup Title. In 1992, he announced he was retiring from his crew chief duties, and embarked on a racing career on his own to pursue his dream of being a driver.
[edit] Driving Career Begins
He started running in the ARCA series in 1993 where he has three career wins. He has since run in all the top levels in NASCAR. Shelmerdine has run a total of two Craftsman Truck Series races with a best finish of 17th at Bristol in 1995. He has also run 12 Busch Series races with a best finish of 17th in 1994 at Daytona for Levin Racing.
[edit] Cup Driving Career
Shelmerdine's Nextel Cup career actually started in 1981 in a race at College Station (Texas World Speedway, where owner/driver James Hylton brought out a 2nd car (#8) for Shelmerdine to drive. After two laps, he quit and finished 33rd of the 34 cars. His next start would come at Talladega Speedway in 1994 for Jimmy Means. Shelmerdine finished 26th in the #52 Ford. He started his own Cup team in 2002 and ran races at Loudon and Pocono, but he was primarily a "field filler" driver (a driver filling up otherwise empty spots in the field).
2004 was a breakout year for Shelmerdine, as he attempted 32 races as a driver. As team owner he had other drivers fill in for him at selected tracks: Tom Hubert at Infineon and Watkins Glen, Brad Teague at the fall Bristol race, and Ted Christopher at the July Loudon race. Shelmerdine's best finish would be a 37th at Michigan. His car qualified 18 races but completed none of them.
2005 was a step back. The team qualified for only three races (Infineon with Hubert, Loudon with Christopher, and Pocono with Shelmerdine). Shelmerdine finished 42nd in the Pocono race with heating conditions ending his day 192 laps short of the finish.
He started out 2006 on a better note. He was rolling his car on to his hauler after failing to qualify high enough in his qualifying racefor the Daytona 500. NASCAR official stopped him, and informed him that he qualified for his first Daytona 500 by gaining the final spot with his qualifying speed. He finished in 20th place on the lead lap, the best finish of his Cup career. His performance gained media attention as he said if he did not qualify, he'd sell his race team because he was extremely low on money. He was using a motor from Richard Childress (in exchange for a displaying a sponsorship decal). His tires had been donated by a family of Dale Earnhardt fans. He had no full-time pit crew.
Kirk's plans for the rest of 2006 are limited. He plans on racing his best car, a superspeedway car, at Talladega in hopes of making the race and gaining for revenue for his struggling race team. His schedule has been dramatically cut back as to not waste money going to races that oddsof qualifying for a low. His next race is the Aaron's 499 at Talladega Superspeedway.
Shelmerdine currently resides in Welcome, North Carolina, and is the father of two children.
