Brett Bodine
Brett Elias Bodine III is an American former stock car racing driver, former driver of the pace car in Cup Series events, and current NASCAR employee. He is the younger brother of 1986 Daytona 500 winner Geoff Bodine and the older brother of 2006 and 2010 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion Todd Bodine. He was born in Chemung, New York. Bodine has been named one of the 50 greatest NASCAR modified drivers of all time, was the runner-up for the 1986 Busch Series championship, and collected a total of five Xfinity Series wins and sixteen pole positions. Bodine made 480 Cup series starts with one win and five pole positions. He has led over one-thousand career laps in both the NASCAR Cup Series and the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series.
Early life
Bodine attended Alfred State College and received an associate's degree in mechanical engineering before he became a professional race car driver. He began in hobby stock races at the Chemung Speedrome in 1977. In 1979, he started racing a part-time schedule in the NASCAR Modified Nation Championship series, placing 35th in the final standings. In 1980, Bodine moved up to 24th in the final standings with a best finish of third at Stafford Motor Speedway, still driving a part time schedule. In 1983, Bodine picked up his first national championship win at Stafford Motor Speedway while placing 7th in the final standings. He also placed fifth in the Northeast Region of the NASCAR Winston Weekly Racing series with six wins in 54 starts. In 1984 Brett picked up another National Championship win, this time at Oxford Maine. He also placed twelfth in the Northeast Region of the NASCAR Winston Weekly Racing series with three wins in 37 starts. Between June 1983 and August 1984, he won seven feature races at Stafford and helped his car-owner secure the 1984 Stafford Motor Speedway track championship. At the conclusion of the 1984 season, Bodine moved south to go to work for Rick Hendrick, whom his brother Geoff was driving for at the time.NASCAR beginnings
While working for Hendrick, Bodine found time to make a handful of modified starts in 1985 and won the most prestigious event of the season, the Race of Champions at Pocono. The 1985 season also saw Bodine make his debut in the NASCAR Busch Series in the No. 15 Pontiac at Bristol. The small team did not have a pit crew and had to do the whole race on a single set of tires but he managed to qualify seventh and finish twelfth in his debut race. Bodine's breakout race in NASCAR came when rain forced a scheduling conflict between the Busch Series race at Martinsville and the Cup Series race. Geoff Bodine was scheduled to drive in the Busch Series race and Bodine got the chance to drive Rick Hendrick's No. 5 Pontiac as a last minute fill-in. Bodine started second and won the race in only his second career start. This was the first win for Hendrick with the Levi Garrett sponsorship and resulted in Bodine getting funding from Levi Garrett to run eleven additional races that season. His under the lights win at Bristol win was the first Xfinity series race to be televised live in prime time. By the end of the 1985 season, Bodine had made thirteen starts with three poles, three wins, seven top-fives, and ten top-tens.Bodine's success in the part-time Busch Series ride in 1985 lead to a full time opportunity in 1986, driving the No. 00 Thomas Brothers Old Country Ham Oldsmobile for Howard Thomas. Hendrick was not interested in fielding a full-time Busch Series team but helped Bodine bring an associate sponsorship from Exxon over to the 00 team. He picked up his first pole of 1986 in the second race of the season at Rockingham, leading eghteen laps before falling out with mechanical trouble. Bodine picked up his second pole of the season at Martinsville and lead the first 21 laps before getting hit by Kyle Petty while working lapped traffic and then taken out in a second incident later in the race. Three DNFs in the season's first five races left Bodine fourteenth in points. Bodine then recorded nine straight top-ten finishes and another pole at Dover to move to second in the points standings. This streak was followed by back to back DNFs at IRP and South Boston and dropped Bodine to seventh in points after the season's sixteenth race. Bodine rallied to finish the season with fifteen straight top-ten finishes including wins at Bristol and the season finale at Martinsville. After Jack Ingram was suspended for two races for driving backwards on track, the championship came down to a battle between Bodine and Larry Pearson. Bodine briefly lead the standings after the season's 28th race, and with three races to go trailed by twelve points. Bodine qualified on the pole at Hickory but the race was cancelled because, allegedly, the promoter did not want to pay the purse and intentionally damaged the track which cost Bodine the chance to gain ground on Pearson. At the season finale, Bodine qualified on pole and won the race but ended up placing second to Pearson by just seven points in the final standings while totaling sixteen top-fives and 24 top-tens to go along with his series-best eight pole positions. Bodine was voted the series most popular driver at the conclusion of the season. In addition to his full time Xfinity Series schedule, He made four modified starts in 1986, winning two, both of which were NASCAR Modified National Championship events held at Martinsville. Bodine also made his NASCAR Winston Cup Series debut in 1986, driving the No. 2 Exxon Chevy in the Coca-Cola 600. Bodine started 32nd and finished eighteenth in the Rick Hendrick owned entry, earning the bonus money for being the highest finishing rookie driver.
Bodine again drove the full Busch series schedule in the No. 00 Oldsmobile in 1987. Although he failed to find victory lane, he accumulated five poles, eight top-fives, seventeen top-tens, and finished third in the championship. In May for the seventh Cup Series race of the season at North Wilksboro, Bodine was chosen to replace the injured Terry Labonte on the pace lap in Junior Johnson's No. 11 Budweiser Chevy. Despite starting from the rear of the field after the driver change, he managed to finish in eighth place. Bodine also replaced Labonte on the pace laps the next week at Bristol. Again starting from the rear of the field, Bodine ran as high as second and finished in ninth place. While Labonte is credited with the finishes due to the NASCAR rules regarding driver changes at the time, Bodine's success as a fill-in driver lead to a ride for fourteen Cup races in Hoss Ellington's part time No. 1 Bulls-Eye Barbecue Sauce Chevy. In Bodine's first event with the Ellington team, he qualified on pole for the Winston Open and placed sixth. He returned to Charlotte the next weekend and qualified ninth for the 600 and led seventeen laps but was collected in a wreck while running in the top-ten and eventually fell out of the race with an engine issue. At Daytona, Bodine qualified seventh, lead a lap, and finished a season-best eleventh, the first lead lap finish of his Cup career. For the season, he had five top-ten qualifying efforts in the No. 1 car and five top-twenty finishes.
Moving up
In 1988, Bodine moved to the Cup Series full-time for Bud Moore Engineering driving the No. 15 Crisco Thunderbird. In the fourth race of the season at Atlanta, he qualified fifth and finished ninth, recording his first top-ten finish. In the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, Bodine led the race five times for a total of 96 laps collecting both the half way leader bonus and the hard charger bonus money. His car dropped a cylinder late in the race and he held on to finish fourth. In the Oakwood Homes 500, also at Charlotte, Bodine led the race three times for a total of fifty laps before getting passed for the lead by race winner Rusty Wallace with twelve laps to go and ultimately finishing third. The team was plagued by engine issues all season, falling out of races seven times while fighting through engine issues in others. For the season Bodine posted five top-ten finishes and finished twentieth in points. He was not eligible for the Rookie of the Year award in 1988 as he had run too many races as a part-time driver in 1987.Bodine returned to Bud Moore's team in 1989 driving the No. 15 Motorcraft Ford. He recorded a top-five finish at Michigan and a total of six top-tens, moving up one spot to finish the season nineteenth in points. He also placed second in the Winston Open, just missing out on making the All-Star Race. Overall, Bodine's performance improved in his sophomore campaign as his average finished improved by three spots. Late in the 1989 season, Bodine made the decision to leave Bud Moore's team due to that team's sponsorship uncertainty for the 1990 season. He also had disagreements with Bud Moore on the type of chassis that the team was using.
Bodine's breakout season came in 1990 driving the No. 26 Quaker State Buick Regal for champion drag racer Kenny Bernstein and crew chief Larry McReynolds. Bodine won his first Cup Series race in the 7th race of the season at North Wilkesboro Speedway, which came under some controversy as some felt that Darrell Waltrip was robbed of the win. Brett had led 63 laps in the middle of the race and then re-took the lead on lap 318 after short pitting on a round of green flag pit stops. When the caution came out on lap 321, the pace car mistakenly picked up Dale Earnhardt as the race leader, putting Bodine almost a full lap in front of the entire field. During the ensuing confusion of a seventeen lap caution flag Bodine was able to make a pit stop for fresh tires without losing any positions. When NASCAR reset the lineup with Bodine as the leader, he led the final 83 laps of the race to take the victory. "We messed up," said Chip Williams, NASCAR's public relations director. "By throwing the caution on the second-place car, it kept Bodine in the lead. He slipped into the pits and came out without losing the lead because the pace car was keeping the second-place car back. We messed up by picking up the wrong car. It was a judgment call, and you can't overrule a judgment call." Despite the controversy, the win stood and would prove to be Bodine's only career Cup series win, the final Cup Series win for Buick, the final win for Bernstein's team, the first oval win for Larry McReynolds, and the only oval track victory for Bernstein's team. From Dover in 1989 through Talladega in 1990, Bodine was running at the finish of sixteen consecutive races, the longest streak in the Cup Series at the time. Bodine made his first appearance in the All-Star race in 1990 and won his first pole position at the fall event at Charlotte Motor Speedway. At the conclusion of 1990, Bodine was a career-best twelfth in the championship standings with five top-five finishes and a total of nine top-ten finishes.
After having improved his average finish in each of his Cup seasons to date Brett returned to the King Racing No. 26 car in 1991 with high hopes. Unfortunately, crew chief McReynolds left the team after the season's fourth race at Atlanta to join Davey Alison at Robert Yates Racing. McReynolds was replaced by Clyde Booth. In the season's seventh race, Bodine had a strong run in his attempt to win back to back First Union 400s at North Wilksboro. He started from the pole position and lead 103 of the race's first 218 laps. On lap 219, as the race leader, Bodine was wrecked by the lapped car of Ricky Rudd on a restart, ending his day. Even with the crew chief change and the wreck at Wilksboro, Bodine was fifteenth in points after placing eleventh in the ninth race of the season. However, the 26 team struggled with reliability issues for the remainder of 1991, falling out of ten of the season's final twenty races due to engine failures. Bodine managed a strong run at the fall Martinsville race, leading a total of 59 laps from the second starting position before getting passed for the lead by race winner Harry Gant with 47 laps to go and finishing second. Bodine made his second consecutive appearance in the All-Star race in 1991. For the season Brett had two top-five and six top-ten finishes but the reliability issues pushed the team down to nineteenth in the championship standings.
For 1992, the No. 26 team switched from Buick to Ford and Donnie Richeson, Brett's brother in law at the time, came on as the team's crew chief. Bodine won the poll at Dover and recorded top five finishes at Darlington and Martinsville. In the spring race at Martinsville, he qualified third and took the race lead with 36 laps remaining but a broken rear axle with 27 laps remaining dropped him to eighth place, two laps down, at the finish. In the fall race at Martinsville, Bodine led a total of 65 laps before getting passed for the lead by race winner Geoff Bodine with 43 laps to go and finishing third. From Sonoma through Phoenix in 1992, he was running at the finish of seventeen consecutive races, tied for the longest streak in the Cup Series at the time. Brett also qualified on pole and finished sixth in the Winston Open. For the season, Bodine totaled a career-best thirteen top-ten finishes, a career best average start of 8.1, and a career best average finish of 15.4 en route to fifteenth place in the overall standings.
1993 saw Bodine register pole positions at Wilksboro and Michigan, a runner-up finish in the Southern 500 at Darlington, additional top five finishes at Pocono and Richmond, and a total of nine top-ten finishes. He also finished third in the Winston Open to qualify for the All Star Race for the third time and placed a career-best tenth in that race. Bodine crashed in qualifying for Dover and was forced to miss the race due to a broken wrist and a small brain bruise. He returned to race again the next week at Martinsville and placed twentieth in the championship standings.
In 1994 Bodine finished 2nd in the season opening Busch Clash. Bodine had his best race of the season in the inaugural Brickyard 400 running in the top-five throughout the race, leading ten laps, and placing second after infamously tangling with brother Geoff while battling for the lead in the second half of the race. For the season Brett recorded a total of six top-ten finishes, and ended up nineteenth in the championship standings. In his five seasons driving the No. 26 Quaker State car, Bodine posted a total of five poles, one win, thirteen top-fives, and 43 top-tens while finishing no worse than twentieth in the final standings.
For 1995, he signed with Junior Johnson piloting the Lowe's Ford Thunderbird with crew chief Mike Beam. The team had been dominate on the restrictor plate tracks in past years and the No. 11 car was again fast in Daytona 500 practice. Things took a bad turn when the team was found with an illegal engine manifold during pre-qualifying inspection at Daytona, resulting in a then-record $45,100 fine. The revised engine was not nearly as fast and the team needed a provisional to make the race. Amid rumors of Johnson selling his team, Mike Beam left following the tenth race of the season and took all but two crew members with him. Bodine continued on as the driver with Dean Combs coming on as crew chief, managing top-ten finishes at Wilksboro and Pocono, and finished twentieth in points. 1995 would be Bodine's eighth consecutive top-twenty season in the Cup Series. Bodine easily bested the performance of his Junior Johnson Racing teammate, the No. 27 car driven primarily by Elton Sawyer, which placed 37th in points with five DNQs and no top-tens in 1995.