AK Racing

Auto-racing company


title: "AK Racing" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1982-establishments-in-north-carolina", "1993-disestablishments-in-north-carolina", "american-auto-racing-teams", "defunct-nascar-teams"] description: "Auto-racing company" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK_Racing" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Auto-racing company ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox former NASCAR team"]

FieldValue
nameAK Racing
logoAK_Racing_logo.png
ownersBill Terry, Alan Kulwicki
seriesWinston Cup, Busch Series
drivers_champ1
wins5
driversAlan Kulwicki
manufacturerFord
baseConcord, North Carolina
opened1982
closed1993
::

| name = AK Racing | logo = AK_Racing_logo.png | owners = Bill Terry, Alan Kulwicki | series = Winston Cup, Busch Series | drivers_champ = 1 | wins = 5 | drivers = Alan Kulwicki | manufacturer = Ford | base = Concord, North Carolina | opened = 1982 | closed = 1993 ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/01/AlanKulwickiMemoryLaneMuseum.jpg" caption="Kulwicki's 1988 car, the car he used for his [[Polish Victory Lap"] ::

AK Racing was a championship-winning NASCAR Winston Cup Series team. It was originally owned by Bill Terry before he sold it to rookie driver Alan Kulwicki, who controlled and raced for the team until his death in 1993. Kulwicki won five races as an owner-driver. Until Tony Stewart won the championship in 2011, he was the last owner-driver to win a Cup Series championship, which he won in 1992.

History

Bill Terry era

The team debuted at the 1982 Cracker Barrel Country Store 420 at Nashville Speedway USA with Bob Jarvis driving it as the No. 32 Clinomint Buick, finishing 28th out of 30 cars. Two races later, the No. 32 ran again at the World 600, with Bosco Lowe qualifying 40th and finishing 16th. Lowe drove the car in the Daytona 500 the following season, finishing 39th after a crash. Tommy Ellis drove their next race, bringing the Big Daddy's Buick to a 15th-place finish at Charlotte. Butch Lindley drove the final race of the 1983 season for the team at Martinsville Speedway, finishing 25th after suffering rear end problems.

Alan Kulwicki era

The team was inactive until 1986, when it fielded a full-time car driven by rookie Alan Kulwicki. The car was now the No. 35 Quincy's Steak House Ford. After 14 starts, Terry sold the team to Kulwicki. After winning Rookie of the Year honors, Kulwicki changed the number of the car to No. 7 and got sponsorship from Zerex. Kulwicki won three pole positions and finished 15th in points. In 1988, Kulwicki won his first career race at Phoenix International Raceway. In celebration, he drove the now-famous Polish Victory Lap. He won once more in 1990, but lost his Zerex sponsorship. After beginning 1991 with no sponsor, he got a one-race deal with Hooters after their regular driver, Mark Stahl, failed to qualify. Hooters then signed up to sponsor the No. 7 full-time and Kulwicki won three races over the next two seasons. The peak of the team's success was 1992, when Kulwicki became the first owner-driver since Richard Petty did so in 1979 to win a Winston Cup championship. Entering the Hooters 500 (coincidentally, Petty's final race) as one of six drivers with a chance, Kulwicki finished second behind race winner Bill Elliott and led the most laps, enabling him to win the Cup by 10 points over Elliott. The car that won the championship carried the "Underbird" branding, which Kulwicki was able to do after obtaining permission from Ford to do so.

Kulwicki died in a plane crash five races into the 1993 season while flying back from a sponsor event. Under his ownership, the team won five races and recorded 75 top ten finishes with the last victory coming at Pocono Raceway the year before.

After Kulwicki's death

Kulwicki left a will which his team was left to his father but he was unwilling to run the team himself, he made the decision with his attorney to appoint Felix Sabates as administer, with Jimmy Hensley and Tommy Kendall driving until midway through 1993, when Bud Moore Engineering driver Geoff Bodine purchased the team's assets and ran it as Geoff Bodine Racing. In 1999, Bodine sold his portion of the team to Jim Mattei and John Porter and moved to drive for owner Joe Bessey, and the team began running Chevrolets. The next year the renamed Mattei Motorsports was bought midseason by Jim Smith, owner of Ultra Motorsports, and brought the No. 7 car into that team's fold. The last member of AK Racing who was still with the No. 7 team, Rich Wolski, was released in July 2000. Smith continued to run the team until 2004, during which time the team switched back to Ford and later fielded Dodges as part of a short-lived alliance with Ray Evernham's team. In 2005, Ultra's Cup Series assets were sold to driver Robby Gordon, who renamed the team Robby Gordon Motorsports and kept Smith as a part owner. Gordon continued to run the team until 2012, when he ran only a partial season and then shut down due to lack of sponsorship and funding. Smith left the team following the 2006 season after he shut down Ultra Motorsports. In 2013 driver / crew chief / owner Tommy Baldwin Jr. started a second team with the 7 number to run with Dave Blaney. Michael Annett, Alex Bowman, and Regan Smith drove the 7 in respective years after until the team became part time in 2017.

As of the end of the 2023 NASCAR season, the #7 car is run by Spire Motorsports. In 2021, the team moved its headquarters to Kulwicki's former race shop in Concord, North Carolina.

Car No. 7 results

::data[format=table]

YearDriverNo.Make123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930NWCCPts1982Bob Jarvis32BuickBosco Lowe1983Tommy EllisButch Lindley1985Alan Kulwicki32Ford381986323519877198817th3176198916th3236199010th3599199114th335419921st4078199322nd2403Jimmy HensleyTommy Kendall
DAYRCHBRIATLCARDARNWS
DNQMARTALNSV
28DOV
CLT
16POCRSDMCHDAYNSVPOCTALMCHBRIDARRCHDOVNWSCLTMARCARATLRSD
DAY
39RCHCARATLDARNWSMARTALNSVDOVBRICLT
CLT
15RSDPOCMCHDAYNSVPOCTALMCHBRIDARRCHDOV
MAR
25NWSCLTCARATLRSD
DAYRCHCARATLBRIDARNWSMARTALDOVCLTRSDPOCMCHDAYPOCTALMCHBRIDARRCH
19DOV
21MARNWS
CLT
13CAR
27ATL
22RSD
DAY
DNQRCH
DNQCAR
15
ATL
14BRI
15DAR
11NWS
18MAR
4TAL
DNQDOV
23CLT
27RSDPOCMCH
16DAY
10POC
22TAL
32GLNMCH
14BRI
10
DAR
12RCH
15DOV
7MAR
13NWS
17CLT
14CAR
12ATL
18RSD
24
DAY
15CAR
25RCH
6ATL
33DAR
14NWS
4BRI
5MAR
28TAL
34CLT
27DOV
15POC
30RSD
28MCH
31DAY
32POC
2TAL
23GLN
6MCH
6BRI
11DAR
40RCH
23DOV
14MAR
6NWS
7CLT
29CAR
18RSD
11ATL
6
DAY
32RCH
21CAR
4ATL
39DAR
2BRI
19NWS
15MAR
20TAL
22CLT
3DOV
6RSD
38POC
27MCH
21DAY
40POC
8TAL
19GLN
19MCH
36BRI
5DAR
15RCH
5DOV
31MAR
2CLT
25NWS
29CAR
26PHO
1ATL
25
DAY
7CAR
2ATL
16RCH
2DAR
7BRI
20NWS
2MAR
22TAL
13CLT
23*DOV
25SON
36POC
34MCH
36DAY
5POC
39TAL
30GLN
39MCH
10BRI
2DAR
32RCH
15DOV
32MAR
26CLT
28NWS
11CAR
9PHO
11*ATL
13
DAY
35RCH
24CAR
27ATL
8DAR
23BRI
31NWS
11MAR
25TAL
13CLT
6DOV
24SON
11POC
34MCH
6DAY
2POC
17TAL
4GLN
11MCH
11BRI
6DAR
3RCH
26DOV
29MAR
6NWS
9CLT
5CAR
1PHO
6ATL
8
DAY
8RCH
5CAR
17ATL
8DAR
34BRI
26NWS
29MAR
9TAL
27CLT
35DOV
14SON
17POC
16MCH
24DAY
14POC
16TAL
16GLN
23MCH
8BRI
1DAR
35RCH
6DOV
24MAR
22NWS
10CLT
3CAR
33PHO
4ATL
9
DAY
4CAR
31RCH
2ATL
7DAR
18BRI
1*NWS
7*MAR
16*TAL
6CLT
7DOV
12SON
14POC
1*MCH
3DAY
30POC
3TAL
25GLN
7MCH
14BRI
8DAR
8RCH
15DOV
34MAR
5NWS
12CLT
2CAR
12PHO
4ATL
2*
DAY
26CAR
4RCH
3ATL
36DAR
6BRI
Wth
NWS
12MAR
13TAL
9CLT
15DOV
22POC
17MCH
23DAY
34NHA
11POC
39TAL
28MCH
15BRI
6DAR
23RCH
21DOVMARNWSCLTCARPHOATL
SON
22GLN
25
::

References

References

  1. (July 3, 2009). "NASCAR's stars align at season's halfway mark to Homestead-Miami Speedway for Ford Championship Weekend". [[Homestead-Miami Speedway]].

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1982-establishments-in-north-carolina1993-disestablishments-in-north-carolinaamerican-auto-racing-teamsdefunct-nascar-teams