YEAR-BY-YEAR NASCAR NEXTEL CUP SERIES RECAP
2006 Finished 27th in series points.
Recorded two top 10s, at Charlotte and Atlanta in October.
Experienced
three DNFs
2005 Finished 16th in series points.
Won pole at second Michigan race.
Had two top-five and nine top-10 finishes.
Best finish was a third place at Pocono in June.
2004 Finished 19th in series points.
Championship finish (19th) was the second-highest of his career.
Finished
the season with six top-10 finishes in the last 10 races.
Claimed back-to-back poles at Talladega and Kansas.
Swept the NASCAR Busch Series and NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series races during Kansas Speedway weekend.
2003 Finished 25th in series points.
Competed in the No. 25 entry for Hendrick Motorsports for the first 32 races of
the season before being released by the organization. Joined MB2 Motorsports for the final four races of the season in
the No. 01 entry and landed the ride full-time for 2004.
Recorded the third win of his career at Richmond in May
after starting second and leading a race-high 156 laps.
Finished the season with six top-10 finishes, including two
among the top five. One of those top-10 efforts came in his debut for MB2 Motorsports, when he finished 10th at Atlanta
in late October.
Reached a career milestone when he started his 300th career race at Pocono in June.
2002 Finished 34th in series points.
Season-best finish was second, which occurred at Atlanta (fall) and the season
finale at Homestead.
Two runner-up finishes doubled his previous career total (one in 2000).
Began the season
with Haas-Carter Motorsports, but was limited to only seven starts before the team ceased operation. Last start
for the team was California.
Started the next race at Richmond as a replacement for injured Johnny Benson and
finished 12th.
Starting with the next week, replaced injured Jerry Nadeau in the No. 25 Hendrick Motorsports entry
for the remainder of the season.
2001 Finished 28th in series points.
Second season with Andy Petree was not as strong in the championship as
the inaugural one, but he registered the second win of his career.
Triumph came in the November race at
Rockingham.
2000 Finished 15th in series points.
Departed from Felix Sabates operation after three seasons and joined Andy
Petree.
Relationship blossomed immediately as he recorded his best career finish in the final points, nine positions
better than his previous best of 26th in 1998.
Posted a career-best nine top-10 finishes, including three among the
top five. Season-best finish was second at New Hampshire.
Also earned a pole at Talladega.
1999 Finished 30th in series points.
Lowest finish in the championship standings since joining Felix Sabates, but
the season was highlighted by his first career victory. His win came Sept. 19 at New Hampshire, also the site of his
first start in 1993.
The victory came in his 180th career start.
Also earned three poles for the season, a singleseason
high. Poles came at Daytonas Pepsi 400, Martinsville and Talladega.
1998 Finished 26th in series points.
Posted four top-10 finishes in his second season with Felix Sabates.
Earned
his first top-five finish since 1995, finishing fourth at Texas.
1997 Finished 28th in series points.
After two seasons as an owner/driver, opted to focus solely on driving and run
for owner Felix Sabates.
Had only three top-10 finishes, but was impressive in qualifying with five front-row starts.
Recorded first two poles of his career, winning the inaugural one at California Speedway and following with his
second at Pocono.
First pole came in his 105th career start.
1996 Finished 34th in series points.
Second full season as an owner/driver.
Competed in 29 races and earned
two top-10 finishes.
1995 Finished 28th in series points.
Returned to being an owner/driver, competing in his own entry in 29 events.
Posted four top-10 finishes, including a season-best of fourth at Dover.
1994 Finished 27th in series points.
Enjoyed his first full season in the series, running for owner Larry Hedrick.
Competed in 29 races and recorded three top-10 finishes.
Also notched his first top-five performance, a third at
Pocono.
1993 Finished 44th in series points.
Following a NASCAR Busch Series championship in 1992, ventured into the
series for a limited five-race schedule. Ran three races under his own organization and another two with Morgan-
McClure.
First start came July 11 at New Hampshire, where he started 15th and finished 36th.
PREVIOUS RACING HISTORY
Nemechek is a former NASCAR Busch Series champion who continues to run in the series with his own team, NEMCO
Motorsports. He has made 253 career starts in the NASCAR Busch Series, winning 16 races and earning 17 poles. He
broke into the NASCAR Busch Series in 1990 and earned the Raybestos Rookie of the Year honors. Just two years later,
he captured the series championship, edging Bobby Labonte by three points in the closest margin in the history of
NASCARs three national series (NEXTEL Cup, Busch, Craftsman Truck).
Prior to the NASCAR Busch Series,
Nemechek enjoyed an immense amount of success in his rookie season in various series. He swept the drivers championship
and Rookie of the Year honors in three different series in three consecutive years. He accomplished the feat
in the Southeastern Mini-Stock Series in 1987; United Stock Car Alliance in 88; and the NASCAR All Pro Series in 89.
His racing career began in motocross in 1983 and he won more than 300 trophies over the course of his six-year
career in the sport.
NOTEWORTHY
Throughout his racing career, he has utilized the mechanical engineering knowledge he gained when he attended the
Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, Fla., before turning to racing fulltime.
Owns his own NASCAR Busch
Series team with wife, Andrea, called NEMCO Motorsports.