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December
2010
NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series
General
News
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Jeff Hensley will lead Ron Hornaday Jr.'s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team in 2011...
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Timothy Peters’ victory at Daytona was a huge upset...
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Former F1 driver Nelson Piquet Jr. is moving to NASCAR to race for Kevin Harvick Inc.
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Kyle Busch won in all three of NASCAR’s top series at Bristol...
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Toyota driver scored two Truck victories and finished second in series points…
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Veteran Todd Bodine won four times on the way to claiming the title with one race to spare.
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Famed director/producer Rob Cohen (The Fast & The Furious) to executive produce a pilot on the motorsports spectacle of Gymkhana...
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Johnny Sauter won one race in each of his first two full seasons in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and is looking forward to a challenge for the championship in 2011...
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Johnny Sauter doesn't mind change but he's come to appreciate familiarity, too. That's especially true this year as several new drivers, teams and driver-crew chief pairings are set to make their NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut.
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Camping World Truck Series veteran David Starr will return to the SS Green Light team this February in Daytona, rounding the track in his Zachry No. 81 Toyota Tundra. SS Green Light made a manufacturer switch to Toyota in 2010, as Starr joined the team for the final 10 races of the season, finishing with three top-10s and placing ninth in the final driver standings.
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Travis Kvapil will make his debut with Randy Moss Motorsports next month at Daytona International Speedway.
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With a strong crop of young talent, could the 2011 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season see its first under-30 champion in eight years? Or, will experience - in the form of Todd Bodine or Ron Hornaday Jr. - continue to reign? These and other questions will remain unanswered until Nov.18 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, but NASCAR media can once again cast their vote and choose who they think will take home the 2011 title in the annual pre-season poll.
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After a series of troubles in the Sprint Cup Series, so it was that Todd Bodine found himself harnessed into that oddest of NASCAR vehicles – a pickup truck – to start the 2005 season, and it was there he found his calling. A championship followed in 2006, and he stormed to a second title last season in relatively easy fashion.
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The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will have a fresh look for 2011, at least on the track. There are myriad new team combinations this season, which should make for some compelling storylines and the usual great racing that’s made the Truck Series a fan favorite. The 2011 NCWTS season kicks off live on SPEED with the running of the Feb. 18 NextEra Energy Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway. Coverage starts live at 7 p.m. ET with “The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Setup,” followed by the race at 7:30 p.m.
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Johnny Sauter and Matt Crafton had very good 2010 seasons in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. In 2011, the ThorSport Racing teammates want and expect to have a great season. Last year, Sauter and Crafton finished third and fourth in Truck Series points, respectively. This year, nothing less than a championship will suffice.
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Kevin Harvick made national headlines last year with a breakout season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. But the California native and his wife DeLana are quietly emerging as up-and-comers in the NASCAR team ownership ranks as well. While Kevin has repeatedly insisted that he’s happy driving for Richard Childress Racing in the Cup Series and has no plans to be a car owner in NASCAR’s top division, Kevin Harvick Inc., the team he and DeLana own, this year will field its deepest and most impressive lineup to date in the NASCAR Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series.
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