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Fairgrounds Speedway last hosted NASCAR in 2000 when the Busch and Truck series raced there.

Fairgrounds paved racing road for Marlin family tree

Nashville short track where Coo Coo, Sterling debuted

By Mark Aumann, NASCAR.COM
April 9, 2009
10:39 AM EDT
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NASCAR prides itself on its family connections. But there may not be another bond in the sport as strong as the one between the Marlin family and the Fairgrounds Speedway in Nashville. From almost the moment the track opened in 1958, the Marlins have made their presence known at the .625-mile paved, banked oval.

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Coo Coo Marlin

Nashville Cup stats
Year Start Finish Status
1966 8 8 running
1967 13 17 overheating
1969 7 7 running
1970 6 6 running
1971 22 25 crash
1972 3 26 crash
1973 6 6 running
1973 4 3 running
1974 16 14 running
1974 7 28 engine
1975 11 3 running
1975 6 26 crash
1976 19 8 running
1977 15 8 running
1977 22 11 running
1978 8 22 engine
Averages 10.8 13.3  

The track opened in the summer of 1958, and hosted its inaugural Cup race a couple of months later. A standing-room-only crowd of nearly 14,000 watched the field of 32 take the green, with pole-sitter Rex White leading until he crashed on Lap 118. Joe Weatherly assumed the lead for the final 82 laps, the race finishing under caution, for his first career victory and the $1,850 winner's purse.

Clifton "Coo Coo" Marlin made the weekly haul from Columbia -- sometimes with infant son Sterling in tow -- and took home the track championship in 1959, then added another in 1963. When the track switched from modifieds to late models, Marlin never missed a beat, becoming the first driver to score back-to-back track titles, beginning in 1965.

At 34, Marlin made his Cup debut at his home track in Henley Gray's No. 97 Ford. While Richard Petty went on to lead all 400 laps, Marlin made a nice accounting of himself, running strongly all afternoon and finishing eighth, 25 laps off the pace. However, there was no shame in losing to the King at Nashville. Petty won a total of nine races there, including five in a six-race stretch during the mid-'60s.

Not surprisingly, some of Marlin's most successful Cup runs came at Nashville, although he never led a lap in 16 starts. He was third in the 1973 Nashville 420, behind Buddy Baker and Petty. And he wound up third again in the 1975 Music City USA 420, trailing another Nashville track champion, Darrell Waltrip, and Benny Parsons. Waltrip won four consecutive races at Nashville from 1981 to 1983, and visited Victory Lane eight times.

It also shouldn't come as a surprise to know that Sterling's Cup debut would also come at Nashville. The 19-year-old filled in for his injured father in the No. 14 Chevrolet in the 1976 Music City USA 420, but was sidelined early in the race with a broken oil pump, finishing 30th. He would go on to win three consecutive track championships, beginning in 1980, something that would help land a full-time Cup ride in 1983. (Continued)

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