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Phil Parsons Racing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Phil Parsons Racing, formerly named MSRP Motorsports, Prism Motorsports, and later HP Racing, was a NASCAR team that competed in the Sprint Cup Series and Nationwide Series. It was owned by former NASCAR driver Phil Parsons, and most recently fielded the No. 98 Ford for Josh Wise.

The team was formerly owned by Phil's wife Marcia as well as Randy and Stacey Humphrey (hence the original name MSRP: Marcia, Stacey, Randy, Phil). For the first few years of its Nationwide Series and Sprint Cup operations, the team was infamous for being a start and park organization, meaning that the team qualified a car for races, but eventually parked it after just a few laps to avoid the costs of running a full race, even though the car was perfectly able to continue on.[1] The bad publicity generated by the practice led to Phil Parsons`s refusal to answer questions about MSRP in 2008,[1] but subsequently Parsons justified the practice by saying that "we furnished a living for some families, so there was some good that came out of it."[2] In 2009, MSRP continued with two Nationwide Series teams and finally finished a race, while it also added a Sprint Cup team under the Prism Motorsports name that qualified for 30 races but only finished two. After the season, the entire team became known as Prism Motorsports.

In 2010, the team had two Sprint Cup teams, No. 55 and No. 66, led by drivers Michael McDowell and Dave Blaney, which fielded Toyota Camrys under a technical alliance with MWR. Three drivers rotated among the two Nationwide Series cars (90 and 91) in 2010: Danny O'Quinn Jr., David Gilliland, and Chase Miller.

Car No. 55 crew chief Zach McGowan tweeted on November 18 that the team would be shutting down after the 2010 season-ending race at Homestead,[3] but this was denied by team owner Randy Humphrey.[4] No information was available regarding PRISM's Nationwide teams. The team returned in 2011 as HP Racing with McDowell behind the wheel of the No. 66 Toyota with Gene Nead as crew chief. Unlike 2009, the team intended to run a limited schedule, running only a few full races but ended up running the full schedule. The team ran with Ford for 2012 and 2013 before switching to Chevrolet for the 2014 season.

The team and driver Josh Wise gained popularity in 2014 after an internet campaign with Dogecoin and Reddit, leading the No. 98 to be voted into the 2014 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
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    58 524
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  • Did Phil Parsons eyesight affect his career?
  • Phil Parsons talks about brother Benny Parsons
  • The Scene Vault Podcast -- Phil Parsons' 1994 Busch Series Win
  • Phil and Stefan Parsons Want North Wilkesboro to Return to the NASCAR Schedule
  • 1989 Pepsi 400

Transcription

Sprint Cup Series

Car No. 55 history

Michael McDowell in the No. 55 during the 2010 Coca-Cola 600

For 2010, Prism Motorsports added a second car provided by Michael Waltrip Racing, the No. 55, driven by former team driver Michael McDowell. The car number had previously been used by Michael Waltrip from 2007 to 2009. Randy Humphrey was listed as the car's official owner. At the start of the season, Prism had no sponsorship for this car.[5] McDowell succeeded in qualifying the No. 55 into the starting field for the 2010 Daytona 500. After qualifying, McDowell said that this was the "biggest race of the season" for Prism, as the guaranteed winnings would enable the team to stay on the track for several weeks.[6] McDowell qualified 29th, picked up sponsorship from South Carolina-based Firefly Vodka, and finished 33rd after a drive shaft issue. McDowell and teammate Dave Blaney swapped rides at Phoenix and Texas in an effort to get the team higher in owner points.

Michael Waltrip drove the No. 55 at Talladega with Aaron's sponsorship to a poor finish after getting caught up in a wreck, but was running up front and was at one point leading the race.[7] Mike Bliss drove the car after McDowell left the team. When Terry Labonte's car failed to qualify at Richmond, he took over as the driver of the No. 55, taking sponsor Gander Mountain with him. Terry Cook later attempted to qualify the car at Martinsville, but failed to do so. Waltrip would later return, along with sponsor Aaron's to the No. 55 at the fall Talladega race.

The No. 55 car did not enter the fall Texas race, possibly because of the large number of entries attempting to qualify. It was also absent on the entry list for Homestead.

Car No. 55 results

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series results
Year Driver No. Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Owners Pts
2010 Michael McDowell 55 Toyota DAY
33
CAL
42
LVS
42
ATL
42
MAR
43
RCH
DNQ
DAR
40
DOV
42
CLT
42
POC
39
NHA
41
DAY
DNQ
CHI
DNQ
IND
42
POC
43
GLN
42
MCH
42
BRI
43
43rd 1281
Michael Waltrip BRI
41
TAL
39
MCH
DNQ
SON
DNQ
TAL
28
TEX
Dave Blaney PHO
42
TEX
43
Mike Bliss ATL
42
RCH
QL
NHA
41
DOV
40
KAN
DNQ
CAL
DNQ
CLT
DNQ
PHO
39
HOM
Terry Labonte RCH
40
Terry Cook MAR
DNQ

Car No. 98 history

2009–2010: Prism Motorsports

The No. 66 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in 2009

The No. 98 car was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team that debuted in 2009 as the No. 66 under a technical alliance with MWR, which supplied the team's Toyota Camry, engines and technical support.[8] Terry Labonte ran the No. 66 for the 2009 Daytona 500, where he finished 24th. Dave Blaney ran the rest of the season, except for the Aarons 499 at Talladega as he was away with his family. Michael McDowell attempted to qualify for the event but failed to do so. According to Blaney, Prism had anticipated attempting to run all of the laps in "six or eight" Sprint Cup races in which the team was able to secure full sponsorship, which included Window World for the Daytona 500 and Aaron's for the Coca-Cola 600. The Denny Hamlin Foundation was on the car at Lowes Motor Speedway, Talladega and Texas, with Blaney only making the race at Talladega. Ultimately, the team qualified for 31 of the 36 Sprint Cup races in the 2009 season – 30 by Blaney and 1 by Labonte—but only ran two complete races (the Daytona 500 and the Coca-Cola 600). For the remainder of 2009, the No. 66 car was a start and park team, much like their Nationwide Series counterparts.[9]

Blaney returned to the No. 66 in 2010. Again, Prism struggled with sponsorship, as it was unable to find a sponsor for the team for even the 2010 Daytona 500, and Blaney subsequently failed to qualify for it.[5] Blaney made the team's first race of the year in the 2010 Auto Club 500, qualifying fifth,[10] leading four laps before finishing 41st. The 66 was later impounded by NASCAR. The team was able to rebound from the impound, and ran the whole entire race, finishing 29th at the Shelby American. Blaney left the team after Watkins Glen, and Scott Riggs took over the No. 66 for the next four races, qualifying only once at Bristol Motor Speedway, Likewise, Jason Leffler drove the No. 66 for four races, only qualifying at Auto Club Speedway. Johnny Sauter failed to make each of the three races he attempted with the team, and Mike Bliss drove the car at Texas and Homestead.

While the 66 team frequently start-and-parked, it occasionally showed competitive speed. Blaney qualified 8th, 4th, and 3rd at the 2009 Food City 500, the 2009 Sharpie 500, and the 2010 Food City 500, respectively (all at Bristol), as well as a 5th place start spot at the 2009 Auto Club 500, though the team finished 41st or worst in all four races.[11][12]

2011: HP Racing

For 2011, McDowell returned to the team, now renamed HP Racing. The team missed the 2011 Daytona 500, but started and parked the next three races. HP ran its first full race at Martinsville, where the team finished 32nd after a late wreck. KLOVE sponsored the team at Richmond and Darlington. Todd Bodine drove at both Pocono and Michigan in August, while Josh Wise took over the 66 at Texas while McDowell filled in for Kyle Busch, who was suspended for intentionally wrecking another driver during the Truck Series race.

2012–2015: PPR with Mike Curb

Josh Wise in the No. 98 at Sonoma Raceway in 2014

For 2012, McDowell returned to the team, renamed Phil Parsons Racing. The team also merged with Whitney Motorsports and partnered with entertainment icon Mike Curb. The team ran Fords with Roush Yates Engines and used the number 98 to honor the memory of Benny Parsons. Phil Parsons Racing planned to run the first 5 races in their entirety with the hope of cracking the top 35. The 98 raced their way into the Daytona 500, with sponsorship from Curb Records and Christian radio station KLOVE. McDowell finished 30th after starting 11th in the 2012 Daytona 500. McDowell ran all but six races during the season, failing to qualify for three of them.

The team opened the 2013 season with a ninth-place finish at the Daytona 500, the first top ten finish for the team and for McDowell.[13] Phil Parsons Racing withdrew from Phoenix after the team could not prepare the Generation 6 cars in time. They would later skip the road courses as well. Johnny Sauter raced 2 races because McDowell was not in the car. Mike Curb is listed as the owner of the 98. McDowell left after the 2013 season and Josh Wise took over as the team switched to Chevrolet for all but the superspeedway events, where they used Fords. In March 2014, Reddit users started a fundraiser to raise Dogecoin to sponsor the No. 98 at the Aaron's 499. On March 25, Reddit user Reddit_Racing announced that the fundraiser was a success, having met their $50,000 goal by accumulating 67 million Dogecoin.[14] Florida gubernatorial candidate and Democrat Charlie Crist was to sponsor the No. 98 for the July 5 Coke Zero 400 at Daytona,[15] the sponsorship provided by former owner James Finch, but was withdrawn by Parsons to respect his business partner Mike Curb, a Republican.[16]

Wise returned to PPR for the 2015 season.[17] Finch would once again provide sponsorship to the team in the Daytona 500, this time through his company Phoenix Construction. However, the car suffered a terminal mechanical failure before the green flag flew on their Budweiser Duel, and PPR ultimately missed the Daytona 500 for the first time since 2011. However, the team has been able to qualify for every race since then. Wise scored a top 10 in the 2015 GEICO 500 at Talladega.

Before the 2015 Coca-Cola 600, Parsons and Curb sold the team's assets and Wise's contract to Premium Motorsports and the team shut down.

Car No. 98 results

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series results
Year Driver No. Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Owners Pts
2009 Terry Labonte 66 Toyota DAY
24
42nd 1435
Dave Blaney CAL
42
LVS
DNQ
ATL
41
BRI
43
MAR
42
TEX
43
PHO
42
RCH
43
DAR
41
CLT
28
DOV
39
POC
40
MCH
40
SON
42
NHA
42
DAY
43
CHI
43
IND
42
POC
40
GLN
42
MCH
42
BRI
43
ATL
43
RCH
43
NHA
42
DOV
37
KAN
40
CAL
41
CLT
DNQ
MAR
40
TAL
41
TEX
DNQ
PHO
42
HOM
DNQ
Michael McDowell TAL
DNQ
2010 Dave Blaney DAY
DNQ
CAL
41
LVS
29
ATL
41
BRI
42
MAR
42
TAL
43
RCH
DNQ
DAR
42
DOV
41
CLT
43
POC
40
MCH
DNQ
SON
37
NHA
42
DAY
43
CHI
DNQ
IND
41
POC
42
GLN
DNQ
44th 1241
Michael McDowell PHO
43
TEX
41
Scott Riggs MCH
DNQ
BRI
42
ATL
DNQ
RCH
DNQ
Johnny Sauter NHA
DNQ
MAR
DNQ
TAL
DNQ
Ted Musgrave DOV
DNQ
Jason Leffler KAN
DNQ
CAL
43
CLT
DNQ
PHO
DNQ
Mike Bliss TEX
39
HOM
43
2011 Michael McDowell DAY
DNQ
PHO
41
LVS
41
BRI
43
CAL
43
MAR
32
TEX
40
TAL
DNQ
RCH
40
DAR
43
DOV
43
CLT
39
KAN
41
POC
41
MCH
43
SON
30
DAY
42
KEN
41
NHA
40
IND
37
GLN
41
BRI
39
ATL
41
RCH
39
CHI
43
NHA
37
DOV
40
KAN
39
CLT
39
TAL
40
MAR
39
PHO
40
HOM
43
41st 144
Todd Bodine POC
37
MCH
39
Josh Wise TEX
40
2012 Michael McDowell 98 Ford DAY
30
PHO
43
LVS
38
BRI
31
CAL
38
MAR
40
TEX
41
KAN
40
RCH
39
TAL
43
DAR
DNQ
CLT
36
DOV
42
POC
34
MCH
38
KEN
38
DAY
43
NHA
40
IND
DNQ
GLN
37
BRI
23
ATL
DNQ
RCH
41
CHI
43
NHA
37
DOV
38
TAL
31
CLT
31
KAN
43
MAR
39
TEX
38
PHO
38
HOM
41
39th 199
David Mayhew SON
40
Mike Skinner POC
41
MCH
39
2013 Michael McDowell DAY
9
PHO LVS
43
BRI
42
CAL
42
MAR
43
TEX
43
KAN
42
RCH
41
TAL
21
DAR
42
CLT
42
DOV
42
POC
40
MCH
42
SON KEN
38
DAY
42
NHA
42
IND
32
POC
40
GLN BRI
41
ATL
42
RCH
43
CHI
43
DOV
43
KAN
38
CLT
40
TAL
15
MAR
26
TEX
43
PHO
32
HOM
43
42nd 194
Johnny Sauter MCH
42
NHA
42
2014 Josh Wise DAY
24
TAL
20
POC
35
DAY
23
TAL
28
37th 405
Chevy PHO
DNQ
LVS
42
BRI
23
CAL
37
MAR
35
TEX
36
DAR
21
RCH
39
KAN
33
CLT
41
DOV
28
MCH
33
SON
40
KEN
29
NHA
29
IND
29
POC
24
GLN
38
MCH
28
BRI
29
ATL
33
RCH
32
CHI
33
NHA
33
DOV
42
KAN
38
CLT
41
MAR
25
TEX
41
PHO
41
HOM
32
2015 Ford DAY
DNQ
ATL
32
LVS
34
PHO
36
CAL
36
MAR
30
TEX
38
BRI
39
RCH
42
TAL
10
KAN
28
CLT
35
DOV
40
POC
29
MCH
34
DAY
31
KEN
43
39th 309
Chevy SON
28
Timmy Hill Ford NHA
38
IND
41
BRI
39
Chevy GLN
38
MCH
43
Reed Sorenson POC
34
Ford RCH
41
CHI
40
DOV
33
CLT
35
KAN
38
T. J. Bell DAR
37
Ryan Preece Chevy NHA
32
TEX
36
HOM
38
Ford MAR
42
PHO
37
Michael Waltrip Toyota TAL
13

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Rob Zeller, "The Quitting Game", Car and Driver, Feb. 2009, pp. 96–100.
  2. ^ Lee Montgomery (2009-02-04). "MSRP Motorsports to field two Nationwide teams". SceneDaily.com. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
  3. ^ PRISM might be gone? - Rubbin's Racin' Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine Nov. 18th, 2010: "Our team will be shutting down after this week. I hate it for our guys. I have enjoyed working everyone. We all made the best out of bad situation. Good luck to everyone." - Zach McGowan.
  4. ^ Prism Motorsports to shut down operations; maybe not? Archived 2010-05-14 at the Wayback Machine Jayski, Nov. 20, 2010.
  5. ^ a b Dave Rodman (2010-02-03). "Prism Motorsports will attempt two full schedules". NASCAR.
  6. ^ Associated Press (February 11, 2010). "Johnson, Kahne divide wins in Daytona qualifiers; Waltrip in". USA Today.
  7. ^ Associated Press (2010-03-12). "Michael Waltrip to enter Talladega race". Yahoo!. Retrieved 2010-03-12.
  8. ^ "Waltrip says alliance with Prism Motorsports helpful", NASCAR, 4 February 2009.
  9. ^ John Bassetti (2009-05-11). "Blaney blessed at squeezing a buck". Youngstown Vindicator. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  10. ^ "Jamie McMurray sits on pole in California week after winning Daytona 500". ESPN.com. 20 February 2010. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  11. ^ "Dave Blaney". racing-reference.info. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  12. ^ "Dave Blaney". racing-reference.info. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  13. ^ Wackerlin, Jeff (2013-02-25). "McDowell, Yeley Shine at Daytona". Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on 2013-04-01. Retrieved 2013-03-24.
  14. ^ Estrada, Chris (2014-03-26). "NASCAR fans on Reddit use DogeCoin to sponsor Josh Wise". NBC Sports. Retrieved 2014-03-26.
  15. ^ Smith, Adam. "Charlie NASCAR Crist". Miami Herald. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
  16. ^ Miller, Jake (2014-07-05). "NASCAR team pulls Charlie Crist sponsorship". CBS News. Retrieved 2014-07-06.
  17. ^ Aragon, Dominic (December 1, 2014). "Josh Wise to return to Phil Parsons Racing". The Racing Experts. Retrieved December 2, 2014.

External links

This page was last edited on 15 November 2023, at 16:06
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