FOLLOW ON: Twitter Facebook RSS
Superstore
AUCTIONS
Joe Robbins/Getty Images
Joe Ruttman has five wins for Bobby Hamilton Racing.

Ruttman excited to be back behind the wheel at Kansas

Oldest NCTS race winner racing for first time since 2002

By Bill Kimm, NASCAR.COM
April 27, 2007
10:17 AM EDT
type size: + -

As the Craftsman Truck Series gets back into action Saturday in the O'Reilly Auto Parts 250 (5:30 p.m. ET, SPEED), a gone but not forgotten face will return and get behind the wheel for the first time since 2002.

Joe Ruttman was with the Craftsman Truck Series from the beginning. In NASCAR since 1963, when the Truck Series began in 1995 he proved his racing career was far from over. Two wins at Bristol and Martinsville, 10 top-fives and 18 top-10s in 20 races, Ruttman finished second in the points standings behind inaugural series champion Mike Skinner.

skinner.193.jpg

By the Numbers

The 2007 season has been one non-stop party for Mike Skinner. In Kansas he looks to do something no one in the Truck Series has done before, win four consecutive races.

In eight seasons in the Truck Series, Ruttman racked up 13 wins, 68 top-fives and 111 top-10s in 168 races. He finished no worse than sixth in the points standings six of his eight seasons. On top of all that, he's the oldest driver to win a Truck Series race when he took the checkered flag at Pikes Peak at the age of 56 in May 2001.

Now at the age of 62, Ruttman is back in the No. 18 Dodge for Bobby Hamilton Racing, racing in seven events this season, and he can't wait to get behind the wheel again, especially for his old friend.

"The employees at BHR have made it a point to make sure that Bobby Sr.'s wishes be fulfilled," Ruttman said. "He worked his tail off his whole racing career to build this really, really good race team and he wanted to continue it. He didn't want to say, 'OK, I'm checking out, the heck with everybody else.'

"He was so loyal to all the employees, especially those who had been with him since day one. That place was his life and I'm honored to be with them again."

Ruttman spent his last three full seasons with Bobby Hamilton Racing from 1999-2001. Although some of the faces have changed since the last time he was there, Ruttman was there when the team was successful, and he looks to bring some of that success back to BHR again.

"I'm at the shop every day, kidding with the guys about all the races we had in the past," Ruttman said. "Why we lost the ones we did, why we won particular races and what it's going to take for us to get back to the same level again when Bobby won the championship and we won races.

Page 1
Page 2

"It's a real exciting time for all of us. He's still here, especially when you go in the shop. I still feel his presence. I know Bobby's still guiding us, which is cool."

He may have been out of the public eye for a few years, but don't think Ruttman has slowed down, in fact he says it's just the opposite.

"I know it's a really good story for everyone to print that I have been sitting back with nothing to do the past five years. The reality is that I have not been sitting at home twiddling my thumbs."

Joe Ruttman

"I know it's a really good story for everyone to print that I have been sitting back with nothing to do the past five years and now I get a second chance at racing," Ruttman said. "The reality is that I have not been sitting at home twiddling my thumbs. I have been in some type of racing vehicle testing for numerous owners and manufacturers. I have had a lot of seat time and have learned so much."

That learning has come from different forms of testing and Ruttman says he's actually a smarter driver now then he was before.

"Testing all the time has made me a better driver," Ruttman said. "It not only provided me with more laps on the track, but it provided me with the time to think about what we were doing and why.

"I am a much smarter racecar driver this time around. I have a better knowledge now on what the truck is doing and the adjustments we need to make."

Heading to Kansas Speedway where the 62-year-old has just one start, a 24th-place finish after alternator problems diminished a sixth-place start, Ruttman says his competitive fire still burns and he feels this BHR team has the people in place to be on top once again.

"I have the utmost confidence in [crew chief] Jeff [White] and his ability to interpret what I am feeling and making the right adjustments on the truck," Ruttman said. "I was a good racecar driver before, but now I am more knowledgeable and more determined than ever.

"I realize everyone's looking at me going, 'You know, you've been out of the sport. You're getting older. Your reflexes, your eyesight, your ...,' but that just gives me more incentive to prove everyone wrong. I think we all at BHR have something left to prove."

The End

Also

POPULAR ALERTS
or Create Your Own

Joe Ruttman

Truck Series statistics
Year No. W T-5 T-10 Poles Rank
1995 20 2 10 18 1 2
1996 24 0 7 16 0 4
1997 26 5 13 17 2 3
1998 27 1 14 19 2 1
1999 19 0 3 9 0 21
2000 24 3 10 11 8 6
2001 24 2 10 20 4 3
2002 4 0 1 1 0 --
Totals 168 13 68 111 17  
• Joe Ruttman: Complete statistics

Truck Series

All-time wins
Pos. Driver Wins
1. Ron Hornaday Jr. 29
2. Jack Sprague 28
3. Mike Skinner 21
4. Greg Biffle 16
  Ted Musgrave 16
  Dennis Setzer 16
7. Joe Ruttman 13
  Mike Bliss 13
9. Todd Bodine 10
  Bobby Hamilton 10

Remember To Check Out

All External sites will open in a new browser window. NASCAR.COM does not endorse external sites.
© 2001-2012 NASCAR | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
NASCAR.COM is part of Turner Sports Digital, part of the Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital Network.