carl edwards
Carl Michael Edwards, II (born August 15, 1979) is an American NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and Nationwide Series driver for Roush Fenway Racing. In the Sprint Cup Series, Edwards drives the #99 Aflac Ford Fusion with Scotts-Miracle Gro for 6 races, Subway for 3 races, and Kellogg's and Cheez-It each for one race. In the Nationwide Series he drives the #60 Copart/Fastenal Ford Fusion/Ford Mustang with some sponsorship from Citigroup, Vitaminwater, Valvoline, and Aflac.
Contents |
Career
NASCAR
Edwards' big break came in 2001, when he competed in 7 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series events for MB Motorsports. His best finish in the seven races was 8th at Kansas Speedway. He also ran one Busch Series race for Bost Motorsports, finishing 38th at Gateway International Raceway. However, it was enough to impress Jack Roush, and Edwards became a full-time Truck Series competitor in 2003, driving the #99 Ford F-150 sponsored by Superchips. He won Rookie-of-the-Year honors in addition, to three race wins, eventually finishing 8th in the points standings at the end of the season. In 2004, he notched three more race wins, including the season-opening Florida Dodge Dealers 250 at the Daytona International Speedway. At season's end, Edwards finished 4th in the points. In August 2004, he made his NEXTEL Cup Series debut, replacing Jeff Burton, who left the team, in the No. 99 Ford Taurus for Roush Racing, at the Michigan International Speedway. He finished 10th. He drove the #99 Ford for the remainder of the 2004 NEXTEL Cup. He also once again ran one Busch Series race; this time for Bobby Benton's RAB Racing team at Bristol Motor Speedway with sponsorship from Mac Tools.
2005
In 2005, Edwards became a full-time driver in both the NEXTEL Cup and Busch Series. He has already won races in each, and he made history in the process of winning. On March 19, 2005, Edwards won the Aaron's 312 at the Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia, recording his first Busch Series win. The next day, he beat Jimmie Johnson by 2-hundredths of a second to win the Golden Corral 500 at the same track for his first NEXTEL Cup Series win. Until this took place, no driver had ever won both the Busch and NEXTEL Cup Series races in the same weekend at Atlanta, although the feat had been pulled off numerous times before at other tracks by other drivers. Also, Edwards became the first driver in NASCAR history to pick up his first career Busch and NEXTEL Cup Series wins in the same weekend, and became the eleventh driver in NASCAR history to win races in all three of the organization's major racing series.
On June 12, 2005, Edwards picked up his second NEXTEL Cup win by taking the checkered flag at the Pocono 500 at the Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. The weekend was somewhat bittersweet for Edwards, as the Busch Series race at the Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tennessee had been rained out the night before, and rescheduled for the same day. Even worse, qualifying for that race had been rained out, too, and in NASCAR, when qualifying is rained out, the starting grid is set by owner points. Through this process, Edwards was awarded pole, but Hank Parker Jr. ended up driving the car to a 20th place finish. Since Edwards did not start the race he was not awarded any points, and as such lost a 74 point lead in Busch Series points and dropped to fourth in the standings; Edwards never recovered from the missed race and finished the season third in points, well behind eventual series champion Martin Truex, Jr..
Edwards got his third win of 2005 on October 30 in the Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
Edwards got his fourth win at Texas and became the tenth different driver to win at that track, and the fifth to win there for Roush Racing. By finishing the remainder of the 2004 season in the NEXTEL #99 car, he was not eligible to compete for the 2005 Rookie of the Year in NEXTEL Cup, but did win the 2005 Busch Series Rookie of the Year.
2006
In 2006, Carl Edwards' and Roush Racing struggled to keep up with the competition. Edwards did not win a race in 2006. His best finish was at Michigan Speedway where he finished 2nd.
2007
On May 18, 2007, Edwards won the pole for the 2007 NEXTEL Open, and while he lead almost the entire 40 lap race, he faded to third in the last few laps, just missing the feature event. On June 17, 2007 Carl Edwards broke his 52 race winless streak in the Nextel Cup by winning the Citizens Bank 400. Shortly thereafter, on July 23, he dislocated his thumb in an eleven car pileup at a late model race at Nebraska Raceway Park (formerly I-80 Speedway) near Lincoln, Nebraska. Carl won his second race of the 2007 season, and sixth career Cup race, at the Sharpie 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway on August 25. During the post-race interview on Victory Lane, Edwards commented on the race, saying, "This is the biggest win of my career". At the conclusion of the first 26 races, the 2007 "regular season", Edwards ranked 6th in overall standings, with 3372 points, 477 points behind overall points leader Jeff Gordon. Edwards entered the 2007 Chase for the Nextel Cup in 4th place, with 5020 points, based on his two wins in the 2007 season, clinching a spot in the Chase after his win at the Sharpie 500 at Bristol.
Edwards struggled through the Chase despite winning at Dover during the Chase. The Hendrick duo of Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon dominated the Chase for the Championship winning six of the 10 races and finishing #1 and #2 in the final 2007 standings. Edwards finished ninth in the final 2007 standings.
On November 3, 2007, Edwards clinched his first NASCAR Busch Series Championship by finishing 11th at the O'Reilly Challenge. This came despite struggling in the second half of the Busch Series season. Edwards became the 19th different Busch Series Champion in the 26 years of the modern-era series.
2008
2008 was Carl Edwards strongest year for Edwards finishing second to Jimmie Johnson in the NASCARSprint Cup Series Edwards won the 2008 Auto Club 500 his 1st Sprint Cup win of the year. The following week, Edwards won the UAW-Dodge 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, his first back to back victories since 2005 when he won back to back in Atlanta and Texas. These victories would put Edwards at the top of the point standings for the first time in his career.
Following the Las Vegas win, on March 5, 2008, NASCAR penalized Edwards, owner Jack Roush, and crew chief Bob Osborne for violations found in post-race inspection. The #99 car driven by Edwards was found to be in violation of Sections 12-4-A, 12-4-Q, and 20-2.1J of the 2008 NASCAR rulebook, specifically the cover was off the oil tank. The violations were found during post-race inspection at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 2. The following penalties were levied by NASCAR: Edwards was fined 100 driver points and stripped his 10 bonus points for the Las Vegas win which would be used to seat him in the Chase for Championship (should he make The Chase). Roush was fined 100 owner points and Osborne was suspended for six races and fined $100,000. Edwards was leading the Kobalt Tools 500 looking for his 3rd consecutive victory, but on lap 274 his car began to smoke and his crew diagnosed the problem as a broken transmission. Edwards went on to finish 42nd. On April 7, he won the Samsung 500 at Texas Motor Speedway for his third win of the season.
On May 2, Edwards announced that he had signed a multi-year contract to remain with Roush Fenway Racing.[1] It was announced that Aflac will be the full time sponsor of the 99 car in 2009. This was the largest sponsorship contract that Roush Fenway Racing has ever signed. On August 3, Carl got his fourth NASCAR Sprint Cup victory of the season, surviving a rain delay and fuel shortage to win at Pocono. On August 17, Carl Edwards dominated the 3M Performance 400 at Michigan International Speedway capturing his fifth win of the season and surpassing his career high season win total of four in 2005. On August 24, Carl Edwards earned another victory by winning the Sharpie 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway. The win was his second consecutive and sixth of the season. He did a bump and run Kyle Busch in the closing laps to take the win from the dominant driver of the night. Busch showed his displeasure with Edwards after the race by driving into the side of Edwards' car, to which he returned the favor by spinning Kyle out. On October 26, Edwards earned his 7th victory of the season with a win in the Pep Boys Auto 500 at Atlanta. On November 2, Edwards tied Kyle Busch for the series wins lead by winning his second Dickies 500 at Texas, his eighth win of the season. He reduced his deficit in the points to 106 behind Jimmie Johnson. On November 9 at Phoenix, Edwards finished fourth behind race winner Johnson, who by virtue of the win and the 10 bonus points he earned for leading one lap and the most laps took a 141-point lead over Edwards. Edwards won the season finale at Homestead to take over the series wins lead for the season, extending his career high win total to nine. However, he did not finish far ahead enough of Johnson to take the Sprint Cup championship, as Johnson finished fifteenth and led at least one lap to win the championship by 69 points over Edwards.
2009
Heading into the 2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Season, Carl Edwards will be sponsored by Aflac, Subway for three races, and Claritin for one race. The Office Depot sponsorship heads over to Tony Stewart and his Stewart-Haas team. Many media analysts expected Edwards to challenge Johnson for the championship.
In the #99 Claritin car, on the final lap of the April 26, 2009 Talledega race (Aarons 499) Edwards survived one of the most violent crashes in NASCAR history. Heading into the tri-oval with the lead, Edwards attempted a double block of Brad Keselowski and unintentionally wrecked himself. Edwards bounced off Ryan Newman, and flipped airborne into the catchfence. Edwards emerged from the car unharmed and sprinted on foot over the start/finish line to the cheers of the crowd. Eight fans were injured, the worst being a woman with a broken jaw. The woman was airlifted to a nearby hospital.[2] Edwards experienced another winless season in 2009 as his best finish was 2nd at Pocono Raceway.
Although Kyle Busch won the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Edwards finished 2nd place in the series and scored 5 wins, finishing 210 pts. behind the leader.
2010
Edwards won the first Nationwide Series race at Road America in late June. He is currently second in Nationwide Series Standings to Brad Keselowski by 231 points. He is currently 10th in Sprint Cup Standings, 400 points behind leader Kevin Harvick and 74 points ahead of 13th place Dale Earnhardt Jr.. Edwards has the only two wins in any of NASCAR's top series for Ford this season. On August 7 Edwards scored his 5th career pole at Watkins Glen.
Other Racing
On June 6, 2007, Carl won the 2007 NEXTEL Prelude to the Dream at the Eldora Speedway. The Prelude is a dirt late model race organized in part by Tony Stewart, owner of Eldora, to benefit the Victory Junction Gang Camp and other worthy causes. Over 20 NEXTEL Cup drivers participated in the heat races and 30-lap feature, along with other drivers from different forms of motorsports. Edwards started second in the feature and held off Kyle Busch and Jeff Gordon to win.
Edwards participated in the 2008 Race of Champions, partnered by Tanner Foust. While in the individual event Edwards faced 7-time Formula One Champion Michael Schumacher and defeated him. In the next round, however, Edwards was defeated by eventual runner-up David Coulthard.
Personal life
Edwards is a first cousin once removed to fellow NASCAR driver Ken Schrader, who furiously told Edwards early in his racing career to get dirt track experience before going to Cup; he would later take the advice. In light of this relationship, Edwards is often referred to as "Cousin Carl." Edwards would give a business card to other teams for his services before getting a ride with Roush Racing.
Off the track, Carl has been busy promoting his new record label, Back40 Records, a company he started with a high school friend back in Columbia, Missouri.[3]
During the week of the Auto Club 500, Edwards participated in taping of the Fox television series 24, where he played Homeland Security Agent Jim Hill.
It has been rumored that he is the cousin of Buffalo Bills Quarterback Trent Edwards. During an interview with Dave Hollander of AOL Sports [4], Hollander asked if Carl's cousin Trent Edwards had the same allergies as he did. After Carl replied that, "My old cousin Trent...he probably has the same kind of stuff I do," Roush Fenway Racing Senior Account Manager Randy Fuller said he didn't know that Trent Edwards was Carl's cousin. In response to Fuller, Edwards said, "He's not. I’m just rollin’ with it."
Edwards also appeared on The Price Is Right, where he presented both Showcases on the November 10, 2009 episode. The Showcases were NASCAR-themed, with a trip to the Coca-Cola 600 and a Camping World trailer featured in one Showcase, while the other featured the debut of a new garage door prop for the "ultimate garage" Showcase that featured tools and a hybrid version of his Ford Fusion racer.
Edwards is a known fan of professional wrestling, specifically WWE, and wrestler John Cena is one of his closest friends. He guest hosted on WWE Monday Night RAW on February 8, 2010.
On Wednesday, February 24, 2010, Edwards' wife gave birth to their first child, Anne Katherine Edwards, at 12:44 pm CT in Columbia, MO. She was 8 lbs 4 oz [5].
Athleticism
Edwards has appeared on the covers of ESPN The Magazine and Men's Health shirtless, displaying his muscular body. He appeared in an Under Armour commercial during Super Bowl XLII. For a NASCAR driver, Edwards spends a lot of time developing his body, as photos of his abdominal and pectoral muscles have shown. Edwards made an appearance on the February 22, 2006 episode of The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. Ferguson produced the cover of the February issue of ESPN The Magazine which featured a bare-chested photo of Edwards. Joking that Edwards' nipples seemed far apart, Ferguson suggested this was due to the high rates of speed at which Edwards often traveled.
Edwards is popular among fans for celebrating his wins by doing a backflip off his car (or truck), a style of celebration he took from sprint car driver Tyler Walker. Seizing on the popularity of Edwards' trademark celebrations, Ford has recently run several "Overactive Adrenaline Disorder" commercials featuring a "young Carl" performing backflips in his baby crib, off of a couch, and off a doctors exam table. Edwards also performed his signature backflip not once, but twice in a recent This Is Sportscenter commercial when he tried to cheer up anchor Neil Everett following a bad show. He has recently appeared in Aflac Commercials with the Aflac duck driving the #99 car and doing Carl's trademark backflip which causes Carl Edwards to utter "I taught him that!". After his win in Milwaukee in the Nationwide Series in 2008, Edwards opted out of his typical backflip. NHRA racer Scott Kalitta was killed earlier that day and Edwards felt his backflip was inappropriate. He also didn't perform his backflip following his win at the 2009 Virginia College Savings 250 because of a broken right foot while playing frisbee two weeks before. The backflip returned during the WWE Raw episode he hosted, as his opening ring entrance included a backflip off the top rope.
Edwards played in the annual Taco Bell All-Star Legends and Celebrity Softball Game in 2009 at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. During the game he sported a Boston Red Sox cap because of the affiliation his race team Roush Fenway Racing has to the owners of the Boston Red Sox.
Aviation
According the Federal Aviation Administration registry, Edwards has an Airline Transport Pilot License with a multi engine rating.[6] He is authorized to pilot Cessna Citation jets, and also holds a Private Pilot License for single engine aircraft.
Filmography
Appeared as an extra in an episode of the fifth season of 24. He portrayed Homeland Security agent Jim Hill.
Races won
Sprint Cup
2008
- Auto Club 500 at California Speedway - February 25, 2008
- UAW-Dodge 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway - March 2, 2008
- Samsung 500 at Texas Motor Speedway - April 6, 2008
- Pennsylvania 500 at Pocono Raceway - August 3, 2008
- 3M Performance 400 Presented by Bondo at Michigan International Speedway - August 17, 2008
- Sharpie 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway - August 23, 2008
- Pep Boys Auto 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway - October 26, 2008
- Dickies 500 at Texas Motor Speedway - November 2, 2008
- Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway - November 16, 2008
2007
- Citizens Bank 400 at Michigan International Speedway - June 17, 2007
- Sharpie 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway - August 25, 2007
- Dodge Dealers 400 at Dover International Speedway - September 23, 2007
2005
- Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway - March 20, 2005
- Pocono 500 at Pocono Raceway - June 12, 2005
- Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway - October 30, 2005
- Dickies 500 at Texas Motor Speedway - November 6, 2005
Nationwide Series
2010
- Bucyrus 200 Presented by Menards at Road America - June 19, 2010
- Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250 at Gateway International Raceway - July 17, 2010
2009
- NorthernTool.com 250 at The Milwaukee Mile - June 20, 2009
- Kroger 200 at Indianapolis Raceway Park - July 25, 2009
- NAPA Auto Parts 200 Presented By Dodge at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve - August 30, 2009
- Virginia 529 College Savings 250 at Richmond International Raceway - September 11, 2009
- Able Body Labor 200 at Phoenix International Raceway - November 14, 2009
2008
- Camping World RV Rental 250 at The Milwaukee Mile - June 21, 2008
- Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250 at Gateway International Raceway - July 19, 2008
- Carfax 250 at Michigan International Speedway - August 16, 2008
- Emerson Radio 250 at Richmond International Raceway - September 7, 2008
- Kroger On Track For The Cure 250 at Memphis Motorsports Park - October 25, 2008
- Hefty Odor Block 200 at Phoenix International Raceway - November 8, 2008
- Ford 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway - November 15, 2008
2007
- Sharpie Mini 300 at Bristol Motor Speedway - March 24, 2007
- Pepsi 300 at Nashville Superspeedway - April 7, 2007
- Dover 200 at Dover International Speedway - June 2, 2007
- Federated Auto Parts 300 Presented by Dollar General at Nashville Superspeedway - June 9, 2007
2006
- Carquest Auto Parts 300 - at Lowe's Motor Speedway - May 27, 2006
- Federated Auto Parts 300 - at Nashville Superspeedway - June 10, 2006
- New England 200 - at New Hampshire International Speedway - July 15, 2006
- Busch Silver Celebration 250 Presented by Shop 'n Save - at Gateway International Raceway - July 29, 2006
2005
- Aaron's 312 - at Atlanta Motor Speedway - March 19, 2005
- Funai 250 - at Richmond International Raceway - May 13, 2005
- Meijer 300 presented by Oreo - at Kentucky Speedway - June 18, 2005
- Ameriquest 300 - at California Speedway - September 3, 2005
- Arizona 200 Presented by Walk the Line - at Phoenix International Raceway - November 12, 2005
Camping World Truck Series
2004
- Florida Dodge Dealers 250 at Daytona International Speedway - February 13, 2004
- O'Reilly Auto Parts 250 at Kansas Speedway - July 3, 2004
- O'Reilly 200 presented by Valvoline Maxlife at Bristol Motor Speedway - August 25, 2004
2003
- Built Ford Tough 225 at Kentucky Speedway - July 12, 2003
- Power Stroke Diesel 200 at Indianapolis Raceway Park - August 1, 2003
- Federated Auto Parts 200 at Nashville Superspeedway - August 8, 2003
Career NASCAR Sprint Cup statistics
| Year | Races | Wins | Poles | Top 5 | Top 10 | DNF | Avg. Finish | Avg. Start | Winnings | Season Rank | Team(s) | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | 13 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 5 | 2 | 18.6 | 19.8 | $1,454,380 | 37th | Roush Racing | |||||||||||
| 2005 | 36 | 4 | 2 | 13 | 18 | 1 | 14.0 | 18.9 | $6,893,157 | 3rd | Roush Racing | |||||||||||
| 2006 | 36 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 20 | 3 | 15.2 | 19.3 | $5,353,629 | 12th | Roush Racing | |||||||||||
| 2007 | 36 | 3 | 1 | 11 | 15 | 4 | 13.9 | 16.8 | $6,011,044 | 9th | Roush Fenway Racing | |||||||||||
| 2008 | 36 | 9 | 1 | 19 | 27 | 2 | 9.5 | 12.3 | $11,364,210 | 2nd | Roush Fenway Racing | |||||||||||
| 2009 | 36 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 14 | 1 | 14.4 | 18.4 | $6,710,870 | 11th | Roush Fenway Racing | |||||||||||
| 2010 | 22 | 0 | 1 | 5 | 12 | 0 | 11.0 | 29.0 | $3,300,914 | 7th | Roush Fenway Racing | |||||||||||
| Totals | 205 | 16 | 5 | 66 | 111 | 13 | 13.8 | 19.2 | $33,862,314 | (Avg.) 12th | ||||||||||||
(Data as of February 25, 2010) [7][8]
References
Jayski's NASCAR Silly Season Site
- ^ NASCAR.com - Multi-year contract keeps Edwards at Roush Fenway
- ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/rpm/nascar/cup/news/story?id=4103113
- ^ NASCAR driver Carl Edwards stays in tune off the track The York Dispatch 12/11/2006 ELLEN SISKA
- ^ http://sports.aol.com/nascar/story/_a/enter-the-mind-of-edwards/20080322042909990001
- ^ Announcement of birth on Roush Fenway Racing website
- ^ https://amsrvs.registry.faa.gov/airmeninquiry/Detail.aspx?uniqid=A3943503&certNum=1
- ^ NASCAR Official Point Standings
- ^ Carl Edwards on NASCAR.COM
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Carl Edwards |
- Aflac Racing website
- Carl Edwards' Official Website
- Carl Edwards Diehards Home Page
- Edwards' profile on NASCAR
- Carl Edwards Video on FoxSports Video Archive
- Edwards' Bio, Team Information and Stats
- Coca-Cola Racing Family's Carl Edwards profile
- Carl Edwards at the Internet Movie Database
- Driver's stats at racing-reference.info
- Back40 Records
- NASCAR Nationwide Series official site
- Nationwide Series page on nationwide.com
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| Roush Fenway Racing | |
|---|---|
| Sprint Cup drivers | David Ragan (#6) | Greg Biffle (#16) | Matt Kenseth (#17) | Carl Edwards (#99) |
| Nationwide Series drivers | Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. (#6) | Colin Braun (#16) | Carl Edwards (#60) | Paul Menard (#98) |
| Primary Sponsors | UPS (#6-Sprint) | 3M (#16-Sprint) | Crown Royal (#17-Sprint) | Aflac (#99) | Citigroup (#6-Nationwide) | Con-way (#16-Nationwide) | Copart/Fastenal (#60) | Menards (#98) |
| Crew Chiefs | Donnie Wingo (#6-Sprint) | Greg Erwin (#16-Sprint) | Jimmy Fennig (#17-Sprint) | Bob Osbourne (#99) Mike Kelley (#6-Nationwide) | Ricky Viers (#16-Nationwide) | Drew Blickensderfer (#60) | Matt Puccia (#98) |
| Partnerships and affiliations | Baker Curb Racing | Circle Bar Racing | Front Row Motorsports | Latitude 43 Motorsports | RAB Racing | Richard Petty Motorsports | Wood Brothers Racing |
| Management/Related Info | Jack Roush | John W. Henry | Fenway Sports Group | Mike Beam | Sam Belnavis | Mark Martin | Robbie Reiser | Roush Performance | Roush Racing: Driver X | Roush-Yates Engines |
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