Terrance Lee Labonte (born
November 16, 1956,
in Corpus Christi,
Texas
) is a retired NASCAR driver
who occasionally drives in the Sprint
Cup Series when called upon. Labonte was introduced to
the sport through his father, who had worked on race cars as a
hobby for his friends. He is the older brother of 2000 NASCAR
Winston Cup champion
Bobby Labonte,
and the father of former
Nationwide
Series driver
Justin Labonte.
Beginnings
Terry Labonte started racing quarter-midgets when he was 7 and won
a national championship at nine before moving onto the local short
tracks in a stock car as a teenager.
Driving on both dirt
and asphalt, he won track championships in his hometown, in
Houston
, and in
San
Antonio
from 1975 to 1977. During this time he
also met Louisiana
businessman Billy
Hagan.
1978-1985
Labonte’s
first NASCAR start came in 1978 at Darlington Raceway
. He qualified nineteenth in the #92
Duck Industries Chevrolet and finished
fourth that weekend. He ran four more races that season and had an
additional two top-ten finishes. In 1979, he competed for
NASCAR Winston Cup Rookie
of the Year along with
Dale
Earnhardt,
Harry Gant, and
Joe Millikan while driving the #44
Stratagraph Chevrolet for Hagan. Although
Labonte failed to win the top rookie award, he was one of three
rookies to finish in the top 10 in points. He ended the season with
thirteen top-ten finishes. The following year, he won his first
career Winston Cup race on
Labor Day
weekend at Darlington. He won $222,501 in prize money for the year
and finished sixth in the final points.

1983 racecar

1985 racecar
Labonte failed to return to victory lane over the next two years
but did not finish outside the top-five in the final standings. He
won his second career race in 1983 in the
Budweiser Chevrolet.
His team received
sponsorship from Piedmont
Airlines the following season, and he won races at Riverside
International Raceway
and Bristol Motor Speedway
, clinching his first Winston Cup
championship. He dropped to seventh in the final points in
1985.
During that same season, he made his Busch
Series debut at Charlotte
in the #17 Pontiac owned by
Darrell Waltrip and won the 400-mile
race, the longest in Busch Series history. Waltrip asked
Labonte to drive after deciding to focus his driving his priorities
solely to Winston Cup racing during the middle of what would be
Waltrip's 307-point gain over
Bill
Elliott in the final eight races of the 1985 season.
1986-1993

1989 #11 car
Labonte fell back to twelfth in the standings in 1986. Before
season's end, he announced he was leaving Hagan's team to drive the
#11 Budweiser Chevrolet for
Junior
Johnson's team the next year. In his first season with his new
team, he earned four pole-position starts and won the
Holly Farms 400, leaping up to third in the
final standings. He followed that up with a fourth-place points
finish in 1988, including a win in Sprint All-Star Race IV. In
1989, the team switched to
Ford
Thunderbirds. Despite two wins during the season, he fell back
to tenth in the championship.
In 1990 He signed with the #1
Skoal Classic
Oldsmobile team for
Precision Products Racing. He had four top-fives
and nine top-tens but finished 15th in the points standings. He
returned to Billy Hagan's team to drive his #94
Sunoco Oldsmobile in 1991, winning his first pole
since 1988. He began 1992 with finishes inside the top 8 in each of
the first eight races. He had a total of four top-five finishes and
sixteen top-tens, ending the season eighth in points. The following
season, the team switched to the #14
Kellogg's Chevrolet. While he had ten top-tens,
for the first time in his career, Labonte failed to finish a race
in the top-five and he dropped to eighteenth in points.
1994-2002

1997 racecar
In 1994, Labonte joined
Hendrick
Motorsports, racing the #5 Kellogg's Chevrolet and responded by
notching 3 wins in each of his first two years there. In 1996, he
broke
Richard Petty’s streak for
consecutive races after winning at North Wilkesboro. Despite only
two victories, Labonte went on to win the championship that year as
well, a record-setting twelve years after his first.
Driving with a broken
hand during the last two races of the season, Labonte and his
younger brother Bobby were able to
perform a dual victory lap at Atlanta Motor Speedway
in the last race of the year; Bobby won the race
and Terry the championship on the final day of the season, the only
time a driver and his sibling won the race and the championship at
the same time.
Labonte
posted twenty top-ten finishes in 1997 and notched his only win of
the year at the fall race at Talladega Superspeedway
. In 1998, Labonte was able to win the
Pontiac Excitement 400 and
finished ninth in points.
Despite a win at his home track at Texas Motor
Speedway
and Sprint All-Star
Race XV in 1999, Labonte finished 12th in the championship
points, the first time he had finished outside the top-ten since
1993. The year 2000 saw Labonte's consecutive start streak
broken at 655 after he suffered
inner ear
injuries at the
Pepsi 400 and was forced
to miss the
Brickyard 400 and the
Global Crossing @ The
Glen. He began 2001 with two top-six finishes in the first
seven races but finished 23rd in the final point standings. He
dropped back to 24th in 2002.
2003–2004 and Retirement
In 2003,
Labonte won his first pole since 2000 at Richmond
and won the Mountain Dew Southern 500 (where
23 years earlier he won his first race) at Darlington
Raceway
after leading the last 33 laps. It was only
his second win in a major (the first being in the Florentine
classic in 1980). That helped lead him to a tenth place spot in the
final standings. 2004 was much more of a struggle for Terry
Labonte, and Hendrick Motorsports even announced
Kyle Busch as Labonte's replacement when he
retired. Late in the 2004 season, Labonte announced that 2004 would
be his final full-time year on the circuit and would run part-time
schedules for the next two years. The part time schedule was
nicknamed, "Shifting Gears: Lone Star Syle"
2005-2008
Labonte began his semi-retirement in 2005. He borrowed the number
44, his former number, from
Petty
Enterprises and ran Hendrick's #44
research and development car with
sponsorship from Kellogg's,
Pizza Hut, and
GMAC.
His best finish in 2005 for Hendrick
Motorsports came at Pocono Raceway
, where he finished 12th. He also drove a few
races in the #11
Fedex Chevrolet for
Joe Gibbs Racing following the release of
Jason Leffler, with a top finish of
9th at Richmond.
Labonte
began the 2006 season driving the #96 Texas Instruments
/DLP HDTV Chevrolet Monte Carlo car for Hall of Fame Racing, a new team started
by former Dallas Cowboys quarterbacks
Roger Staubach and Troy Aikman. Labonte's past-champion's
provisional guaranteed the team a starting spot in the first five
races. Labonte's finishes in those races left the team in 30th
place in points, sealing a spot for the team in each race as long
as they remained in the top 35.
Tony Raines took
over the driving duties for the #96 car and ran the rest of the
season's races, with the exception of the road-course races at
Infineon
Raceway
, in Sonoma, California, and Watkins Glen
International
, in Watkins Glen, New York. Labonte's best
finish of 2006 came at Infineon, where he finished 3rd due to a
fuel mileage gamble by the crew chief of the #96 DLP/Texas
Instruments Chevrolet, Philippe Lopez. Labonte also ran ten races
with Hendrick Motorsports research and development car in
2006.
During the 2007 season, Labonte drove three races for Michael
Waltrip Racing, both road course events, and the Allstate 400 at
the Brickyard, in the 55 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota Camry.
On May 11, 2008, it was announced that Labonte would drive the #45
car of Petty Enterprises for six races in the middle of the 2008
Sprint Cup season, replacing
Kyle Petty
on a temporary basis. Labonte was reunited with brother Bobby, who
was the regular driver of the #43 for Petty. Labonte posted two
solid top-twenty runs in the six-race tenure, a 16th at Daytona and
a 17th at Infineon, both the best finishes for the 45 car this
season. It was later announced that Terry would drive for Petty
again in the
Brickyard 400 and would
also drive in place of
Patrick
Carpentier in the The American Red Cross
Pennsylvania 500.
Terry Labonte was
back in the # 45 car for Petty Enterprises when the Sprint Cup Series went to the Michigan
International Speedway
for the 3M
Performance 400 on August 17, 2008. Terry Labonte would
be back in the # 45 car again for the AMP
Energy 500 at the Talladega Superspeedway
for the final time in the 2008 Sprint Cup Season. He would go on to post
a 17th-place finish, even after sustaining severe damage in one of
the multi-car accidents. Labonte's results in 2008 proved far
better on average than the previous three seasons, while driving
also part-time.
2009
It was reported first on January 23, 2009, that Labonte would
attempt to make the
Daytona 500 for
MSRP Motorsports. On January 26, it
was announced that MSRP has changed its name to
Prism Motorsports, and Labonte would drive
their car for the Daytona 500. The car was sponsored by Window
World. The team announced they planed to race full-time with
Dave Blaney after Daytona. Terry started
43rd in the Great American Race, and went a lap down. He managed to
get his lap back and fought up to finish 24th in the rain-shortened
event.
Starting at Indianapolis in 2009, Terry will be driving the #08
Toyota for Carter / Simo Racing.
Sprint Cup statistics
| Year |
Starts |
Wins |
Top Fives |
Top Tens |
Poles |
Rank |
|
| 2009 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
52 |
|
| Totals |
865 |
22 |
182 |
361 |
27 |
- |
Last Updated: As of Fall Richmond '09
NASCAR official duties
On
June 12,2007, Labonte
tested for Richard Childress
Racing at the Montreal's Circuit Gilles Villeneuve
track in an official NASCAR compatibility test for
the August 4 NAPA Auto Parts 200
presented by Dodge Busch Series event at Circuit
Gilles Villeneuve
.
NASCAR wanted a driver they were assured would not race in the NAPA
Auto Parts 200, and were concerned Childress drivers Jeff Burton or
Kevin Harvick would race in the event.
Honors
In 1998, the senior Labonte was named as one of
NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers. A
park was renamed for the Labonte brothers in their hometown of
Corpus Christi in 2001, and they were chosen for entry into the
Texas Sports Hall of Fame in 2002. Labonte supports a variety of
charities and due to his efforts, the
Ronald McDonald House in Corpus
Christi, the
Victory Junction
Gang Camp near Randleman, North Carolina, and the Hendrick
Marrow Program all have benefited.
Personal life
Labonte
has lived in the Thomasville, North Carolina
, area for most of his career. Terry and Kim
Labonte married in May 1978 during his first year with Billy
Hagan's team after meeting at the car dealership where both worked
while in high school in Texas. They have two children who have
grown up around racing just as Labonte did years ago.
Justin Labonte, born in 1981, was a late
model track champion at Caraway Speedway in North Carolina in 2003
and raced a limited Busch Series schedule in 2004 (including a win
at Chicagoland
Speedway
in July) with sponsorship from the United States Coast Guard.
That sponsorship expanded to allow a full schedule in 2005. Kristy,
born in 1983, graduated with a business marketing major from
High Point University. Terry
enjoys hunting and fishing, as he is an all out outdoorsman.
Labonte
was the Sports Marshal for the 80th Annual Shenandoah Apple Blossom
Festival in Winchester, Virginia
from May 1 to May 8, 2007.
Terry became a grandfather for the first time on June 2, 2009 when
daughter Kristy and son-in-law Matt Garrett had a baby boy. Asher
Franklin Garrett.
Competition in other series
In addition to his 22 wins in Sprint Cup, Labonte has won 11 races
in the
Nationwide Series and 1 in
the
Craftsman Truck Series.
He has been the champion of the
24
Hours of Daytona and
12 Hours of
Sebring as well as three all-star races: the
Busch Clash (now known as the
Budweiser Shootout) in 1985 and
The Winston (now the
Sprint All-Star Challenge) in 1988
and 1999. He also won the
IROC championship in 1989.
Including his two championship seasons, he has finished in the top
10 in the year-end standings 17 times, and his top-five and top-ten
totals approach 25 percent and 50 percent, respectively, of his
total races.
Trivia
- Except for the 1989 season driving for Junior Johnson a scant few races during the
1990s, and his most recent sub roles, Terry Labonte has only driven
a GM car throughout his Winston Cup
career.
- He is known as The IceMan, for his cool demeanor under
pressure, and his calm and collective driving style, as he would
normally strike near the end of a race when the time was
right.
- His daughter Kristy dated fellow driver Kasey Kahne for a period of time.
- Terry
Labonte made an appearance to meet and sign autographs for fans at
the 2007 Carl Casper's Custom Auto Show at Freedom Hall
in Louisville, Ky
. on February 25, 2007.
References
External links