By
Owen A. Kearns
NASCAR
Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Some
label Terry Labonte the NASCAR premier series’ least flamboyant champion.
Perhaps it just seemed that
way, when measuring Labonte alongside such colorful contemporaries as NASCAR
Hall of Famers Dale Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip.
His calm, quiet demeanor at
least partially explains why Labonte became known as “The Iceman.”
The Corpus Christi, Texas
driver may not have personified flash, but Labonte got the job done.
He won his first of two
championships in 1984 and figuratively fell off the radar for a dozen years
before resurfacing to claim a second title driving for Hendrick Motorsports. His
22 premier series victories don’t accurately measure the breadth of Labonte’s
career. Consistency is a much better measure: 17 different seasons among the
top 10 in the championship standings along with 361 top-10 finishes, the latter
ranking 10th all-time. Labonte also won in the NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World
Truck Series, as well as the International Race of Champions (IROC) and shared
the GTO class-winning entry in the 1984 24 Hours of Daytona.
Rick Hendrick believed Labonte’s
attitude – which often put others first – may have kept him from winning more
frequently.
“Terry could’ve
accomplished even more in his career had he been a little more selfish,”
Hendrick told The Associated Press in 2006. “But there’s not a selfish bone in
his body. He’s a great talent, but he’s just a great human being.
“He’ll always do what’s
best for the team, even if it puts him in an awkward spot.”
Labonte will be inducted
into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina on Jan. 22, along
with the other four members of the Class of 2016: Jerry Cook, Bobby Isaac, O.
Bruton Smith and Curtis Turner.
Born Nov. 16, 1956 and
raised in south Texas, Terrance Lee Labonte was introduced to racing by his
father, who worked on race cars for friends. He was a quarter-midget champion
by age nine and won stock car titles in Corpus Christi, Houston and San Antonio
from 1975 to 1977.
Labonte met Louisiana
oilman and sports car racer Billy Hagan, who fielded the NASCAR premier series
team that carried Skip Manning to the rookie of the year title in 1976. Labonte
joined the Stratagraph Racing team for the final five races of 1978 and became
Hagan’s permanent driver the following season in which he finished 10th but
lost rookie of the year honors to Earnhardt.
Labonte notched his first
premier series victory in the 1980 Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway. With
sponsorship from Piedmont Airlines, Labonte, Hagan and NASCAR Hall of Fame crew
chief Dale Inman captured the 1984 championship with victories at Bristol Motor
Speedway and the Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway road course.
Success, however, was
fleeting.
“We weren’t supposed to win
it and we didn’t know what to do with it,” said Inman, who left the team to
rejoin Richard Petty.
Labonte agreed, reminiscing
after his second title, “I thought it was a pretty neat deal and we’d win it
the next year. Next year took a long time coming.”
Labonte departed the Hagan
outfit for Junior Johnson’s Budweiser team, then went to Precision Performance
followed by a second stint with Stratagraph. He joined Hendrick Motorsports in
1994.
“I looked at his statistics
early in his career and I couldn’t believe how well he’d run with the equipment
he was in,” Hendrick later told The Associated Press.
Labonte responded by
winning the 1996 championship, edging Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon
by 37 points. His younger brother, Bobby, won the season-ending NAPA 500 at
Atlanta Motor Speedway and the two celebrated together. Bobby Labonte became a
NASCAR premier series champion himself in 2000, making the pair the first
brothers to win a title in the top division.
Terry Labonte continued
fulltime with the Hendrick team through the 2004 season, winning for the final
time at Darlington in 2003. He continued to race on a part-time basis, calling
it an 890-race career at Talladega Superspeedway on Oct. 19, 2014.
Labonte has said his two
favorite victories were those in his home state – at Texas Motor Speedway. But
he may be better-remembered for a pair of slam-bang races at Bristol battling
the late Earnhardt. In 1995, Labonte won a final-lap duel despite a shove by
Earnhardt that sent his car into the wall. Fast-forward to 1999, when Earnhardt
spun and wrecked Labonte on the final lap and famously said in Victory Lane, he
was “just trying to rattle his cage.”
The driver – and his fans –
were livid, but Labonte admitted 15 years later in a Popular Speed Magazine
interview that he was at least partially to blame for the ruckus.
“If I had gotten into the
corner at a better angle then he wouldn’t have got the chance to hit me. But I
was passing him low and couldn’t carry the speed into the corner and he took
advantage of it,” Labonte said. “I don’t think he really intended to wreck me.
He wanted to move me out of the way. That was his only shot. I had four new
tires and he didn’t.
“It was just one of those
deals.”
Limited
quantities of tickets are available for the NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction
Dinner and Ceremony. Individual ticket and ticket packages are available at
ticketmaster.com, the NASCAR Hall of Fame Box Office or by calling
800.745.3000.
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