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Stewart has chance to join elite list of title winners (cont'd)
Baker won four times with Babb as owner, and when the Automobile Manufacturers Association voted to pull the plug on factory support in June, the team was reorganized under Baker's leadership. He won six more times, including the season finale at Greensboro, to easily capture the crown. How dominant was Baker's 1957 season? In 40 races, he finished outside of the top 10 twice.




Jarrett added his name to the list when he won the 1961 title in a Chevrolet for B.G. Holloway and the 1965 championship driving Fords for Bondy Long. Jarrett won only once in 1961 -- on the dirt half-mile at Birmingham -- but he was amazingly consistent that season, recording 23 top-fives and 34 top-10s. Six wins the following season gave Jarrett a third-place finish in the points. He then moved on to Charles Robinson's Ford team for 1963.
Long took over the operation in 1964, and with James Hylton as crew chief, Jarrett's fortunes rose quickly. He won 14 times that season, finishing a distant second to Richard Petty. But the next season, Jarrett parlayed 13 victories into his second Cup championship. One year later, Jarrett walked away from the driver's seat at 33.
After fielding his own cars for much of the early portion of his career, Pearson first began driving Pontiacs for Cotton Owens midway through the 1962 season, and the following year, became the full-time driver when the team switched to Chrysler products. With eight wins, Pearson finished third in the 1964 standings, but his breakout season came two years later when he won 15 of 42 starts and the 1966 championship.
When Fred Lorenzen suddenly walked away from the sport early in 1967, Holman-Moody hired Pearson as his replacement. And starting in 1968, Pearson won 27 times over the next two seasons to capture consecutive Cup titles. Coincidentally, 1969 would be the last season in which Pearson would run what could be considered a full schedule.
One season after winning rookie of the year honors for Rod Osterlund, Earnhardt brought home the 1980 championship trophy by posting five wins and 24 top-10 finishes in a 31-race season.
When Osterlund sold his operation to J.D. Stacy in the middle of the 1981 season, Earnhardt went to Richard Childress, where he finished out the year. He then drove two seasons in Fords for Bud Moore before returning to Childress in 1984.
Earnhardt and Childress combined for championships in 1986, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993 and 1994.
Labonte's is the most recent driver to accomplish the feat, as his championships came 12 years apart in Chevrolets for two different teams.
In 1984, he won at Riverside and Bristol to capture the crown for Billy Hagan. In 1996, he won at North Wilkesboro and Charlotte in Rick Hendrick-owned equipment. In between, Labonte drove Fords for Junior Johnson, Oldsmobiles for Richard Jackson and returned to Hagan before settling down at Hendrick, beginning in 1994. Since then, Labonte has added Toyotas and Dodges to his impressive resume.
The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.