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PEYTON SELLERS
WINS NASCAR DODGE WEEKLY SERIES NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
South Boston Speedway driver becomes NASCAR’s youngest
national champion
DAYTONA BEACH,
Fla. (Sept. 20, 2005)
– At age 21,
Peyton Sellers
has achieved a major milestone in his auto racing career
by winning one of NASCAR’s most prestigious annual
titles. Sellers, of Danville, Va., won the 2005 NASCAR
Dodge Weekly Series national championship after a
winning season in Late Model Stock Cars at South Boston
(Va.) Speedway and other area tracks.
Sellers
claimed the NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series Division I
championship by recording the highest point total, based
on his best 16 finishes of the year, in Division I. For
this honor, Sellers will receive a $25,000 bonus from
NASCAR and Dodge. Sellers’ point total (1,114) was also
the highest among the four NDWS divisional champions,
giving him the national crown and an additional $50,000
award – for a total of $75,000 in post-season prize
money.
Sellers will
be honored at the NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series awards
banquet, scheduled for Nov. 5 in Nashville. The gala
event, one of NASCAR’s largest post-season functions,
will be a triumphant return to Nashville for Sellers.
His father,
Bert Sellers,
was a crew member for 1988 NASCAR Busch Series champion
Tommy Ellis,
who was honored in a similar affair in Nashville.
Then-five-year-old Sellers attended the event and now,
17 years later, he takes center stage.
“At an early
age, when I started racing go karts, I remember going to
Nashville,” Sellers said. “To come back as a champion
feels pretty good.
“Really, this
was a breakout season for us. We won one 200-lapper last
year. We got to the point where we could be a good
top-five contender every week, everywhere we went. For
whatever reason – my experience level, my ability to
work with my crew chief, H.C., who is my brother – we
just couldn’t put a lot of wins on the board.”
Sellers’
family-run team stuck with their program in 2005 and
scored big under NASCAR’s new points format.
“This year,
we’ve had the same equipment and the same sponsors have
stuck with us,” Sellers said. “Now, we’re able to give
them a little bit more. The chemistry that’s there is a
little better and things have been going smoother this
year.”
Overall,
Sellers recorded 15 wins and 20 top-five finishes in 28
races this season – including 12 wins at his home track
in South Boston. His best 16 finishes netted him 1,114
points towards the Division I and national titles.
Sellers is the
youngest national champion in series history, surpassing
the age mark set by then-23-year-old
Robert Powell
in 1988. He is also the second Virginia driver to win
the title in the past three years.
Mark McFarland,
a native of Winchester, Va. who is scheduled to race
full-time in the NASCAR Busch Series in 2006, was the
Commonwealth’s first national champion in 2003.
The talented
young star began his driving career at the age of seven,
in go karts. By age 13, Sellers was racing in open wheel
mini sprints and he moved up to Super Stocks, at South
Boston, at age 15. By 2004, at the age of 20, Sellers
had advanced to Late Model Stock Cars and had also made
his debut in the Automobile Racing Club of America
(ARCA) RE/MAX Series. Sellers finished fifth in the
track championship point standings at South Boston in
2004.
This season,
under NASCAR’s re-vamped format for the NASCAR Dodge
Weekly Series, Sellers was able to branch out and
compete at other tracks in Division I. Drivers could
collect points towards their divisional title by racing
at other tracks in their Division. Sellers’ occasional
trips to Motor Mile Speedway, in Radford, Va., and
Caraway Speedway, in Asheboro, N.C., helped him pad his
points lead and win the title.
In addition to
his racing career, Sellers graduated from Danville
Community College in 2004 and currently attends Averett
University in Danville, where he studies business
management. Sellers also works as a heavy equipment
operator for his family’s business, Sellers Brothers
Inc., and is an active member of the Ringgold Baptist
Church.
2005 NASCAR
Dodge Weekly Series Champions
1. Peyton
Sellers, Danville, Va., South Boston Speedway (Division
I), 1,114 points
2. Chris
Spieker, Massena, Iowa, Adams County Speedway (Division
II), 1,088
3. Donny
Reuvers, Dundas, Minn., Elko Speedway (Division IV),
1,072
4. Kevin
Nuttleman, Bangor, Wis., LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway
(Division III), 1,068
Final NASCAR
Dodge Weekly Series Division I Leaders
…
(Driver, Home
Track, Track Location, Points)
1. Peyton
Sellers, South Boston Speedway (South Boston, Va.),
1,114
2. Tim
Karrick, Linn County Speedway (Pleasanton, Kan.), 1,092
3. Nick
Parker, Rocky Mountain Raceways (West Valley City,
Utah), 1,064
4. Tom
Charles, Lakeside Speedway (Kansas City, Kan.), 1,058
5. Philip
Morris, Motor Mile Speedway (Radford, Va.),1,056
6. Tommy
Cherry, Langley Speedway (Hampton, Va.), 1,052
7. Duane
Howard, Big Diamond Raceway (Minersville, Pa.), 1,012
8. Tim
Brown, Bowman Gray Stadium (Winston-Salem, N.C.), 944
9. Travis
Swaim, Caraway Speedway (Asheboro, N.C.), 936
10. Clay
Dale, Lanier National Speedway (Braselton, Ga.), 914
11. Robert
Turner, Ace Speedway (Altamahaw, N.C.), 902
12. Shane
Harding, Evergreen Speedway (Monroe, Wash.), 870
13. Blair
Addis, Greenville-Pickens Speedway (Greenville, S.C.),
818
14. Bobby
Babb Jr., Beech Ridge Motor Speedway (Scarborough,
Maine), 794
15. Ricky
Bilderback, Rockford Speedway (Rockford, Ill.), 788
16. Steve
Whitener, JAX Raceways (Jacksonville, Fla.), 200
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