NASCAR's First Back-to-Back Champion

NASCAR's First Back-to-Back Champion

Named one of NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers in 1998, Buck Baker won 46 races and was the first back-to-back two-time champion in NASCAR's top division. He entered 636 races in his career, including NASCAR's first "strictly-stock" (now Sprint Cup) race at Charlotte in 1949.




He won the 1956 NASCAR championship while driving for Carl Kiekhaefer, one of the first multi-car owners in NASCAR history. In 1957, he drove for Bud Moore and won his second championship, becoming the first driver to win back-to-back NASCAR championships. He won many races in other series, including NASCAR's Grand American series, the short lived open-wheel NASCAR Speedway Division in 1953, and he won the first NASCAR road race at Watkins Glen in 1957. He was also a three-time winner of the Southern 500 at Darlington.

One of Baker's sons, Buddy Baker, followed his dad into NASCAR racing in the early 1960s and the elder Baker retired from driving in 1973, although he made a brief comeback attempt in 1976. In 1980, he founded the Buck Baker Racing School at the North Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, NC (now Rockingham Speedway) and operated the school until his death. The school is still in operation and uses the same curriculum and methods that Buck employed. It was at this school that Winston Cup Champion Jeff Gordon first drove a NASCAR stock car. The school later expanded its operation to the Atlanta Motor Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway, Dover International Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord Speedway, and Richmond International Raceway. Buck Baker was inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association's Hall of Fame in 1982, the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1990 and the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2013.

Angels G.

Auto Restoration at Angels Garage

6y

Great article and GREAT hearing you on EVER CAR HAS A STORY, like what you said about the new generation car lovers and yesteryear, awesome!

Tania Romanuk

Recareering and proud of it! Putting my heart and soul into my reinvention.

7y

Brian France needs to be reminded of the reasons and people his Grandfather "s dream served. Not sponsors and TV contracts.

Frannie Willis

Controller at Kluhsman Racing Components (KRC)

7y

Cool article. Thanks for memories.

Like
Reply

To view or add a comment, sign in

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics