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BACK TO GALLERIES

Memorable drivers of the No. 21 through the years

By Zack Albert | Published: September 10, 2019 23
ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images
BACK TO GALLERIES

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Getty Images

Matt DiBenedetto will drive the iconic Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 Ford next year. The list of drivers who have piloted this car is long, one full of NASCAR Hall of Famers and larger-than-life figures. Read on to see the company DiBenedetto will join.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Even in the earliest days of Glen Wood's driving career in NASCAR's Modified Division, the number 21 has been near synonymous with the team's success.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Wood kicks up sand during the 1957 race for the former NASCAR Convertible Division on the old beach-road course at Daytona International Speedway.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Jimmy Massey wheels the No. 21 to the high side of Buck Baker (87) with Dick Joslin in pursuit during a qualifying race at Daytona in 1960.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Tiny Lund (left) and Wood stand alongside the No. 21 Ford Galaxie that Lund drove to victory in the 1963 Daytona 500. Lund substituted for the injured Marvin Panch, scoring the first of five premier series wins in his career.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Panch was back for the 1964 season in this No. 21 Ford entry. Eight of his 17 victories carried the No. 21.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Cale Yarborough poses with the 1969 Mercury Cyclone out of the Wood Brothers' stables before the Firecracker 400 at Daytona. Yarborough scored 13 of his 83 career wins driving the No. 21.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Donnie Allison crouches near his Wood Brothers Mercury at Rockingham in 1971. Allison won 10 times in NASCAR's top division, but just once in the No. 21.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Occasional NASCAR entrant A.J. Foyt wheeled this No. 21 Mercury to victory in the 1972 Daytona 500. Of Foyt's seven NASCAR wins, four came driving the Wood Brothers' No. 21.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

David Pearson with the Purolator Mercury he would drive to victory in the 1976 Daytona 500. Pearson won 105 times in NASCAR's premier series, notching 43 of those during his tenure with the Wood Brothers.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Neil Bonnett and his winning Wood Brothers team at the 1981 pit crew competition in Rockingham, North Carolina. Bonnett won nine times for the Wood Brothers from 1979-82.

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Racing Photo Archives | Getty Images

Buddy Baker's No. 21 Ford Thunderbird battles with Dale Earnhardt's No. 3 during the 1984 Talladega 500. Baker spent two seasons with the Wood Brothers (1983-84), scoring his lone win in the No. 21 at Daytona in July 1983.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Kyle Petty charges the No. 21 Ford inside of Lake Speed's No. 83 Oldsmobile in the 1988 season. Petty scored two of his eight career wins with the Wood Brothers -- his first in a car carrying No. 7, the other in the famed No. 21.

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ISC Images and Archives via Getty Images

Dale Jarrett piloted the No. 21 Thunderbird for the Wood Brothers from 1990-91. His first Cup Series win came with the legendary team at Michigan International Speedway.

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David Taylor | Getty Images Sport

Morgan Shepherd made his final ride for the Wood Brothers at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the 1995 finale. His car carried dual sponsorship, with the James Bond film "Goldeneye" on board.

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David Taylor | Getty Images Sport

Michael Waltrip drove for the Wood Brothers from 1996-98. Here he campaigns the new Taurus model, introduced for the 1998 NASCAR season.

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Robert Laberge | Getty Images Sport

The Taurus received some front-end tweaks during its run in NASCAR, and Elliott Sadler puts the new-look car through its paces in the 2000 season. Sadler has three victories in NASCAR's top series, his first coming with the Wood Brothers in 2001.

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Robert Laberge | Getty Images Sport

Ricky Rudd drove for several legendary car owners during his career, and that list includes the Wood Brothers from 2003-05.

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Robert Laberge | Getty Images Sport

The U.S. Air Force joined the Wood Brothers' sponsorship lineup in the 2000s, with a new look for the Ken Schrader entry in 2006. That year also marked the debut of the Ford Fusion, which continues as the automaker's model for NASCAR to this day.

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Rusty Jarrett | Getty Images for NASCAR

Bill Elliott competed part time for the Wood Brothers in the twilight of his career. Here, he makes a pit stop at Michigan in 2010, when he made 12 starts in the team's No. 21.

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Matthew Stockman | Getty Images

Trevor Bayne's No. 21 Ford Fusion heads through the garage at Daytona ahead of the 2011 season opener. The Daytona 500 that year marked a breakthrough for Bayne, who was with the No. 21 team until the 2014 season.

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Jerry Markland | Getty Images

Ford's new Generation-6 Fusion proved to be a capable entry in NASCAR, and Ryan Blaney was a master in scoring his first victory on June 11, 2017, at Pocono Raceway. Blaney joined the team in 2015, and the Wood Brothers returned to a full-time schedule the next year.

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Sean Gardner | Getty Images

In his second season with Wood Brothers Racing, Paul Menard currently pilots the famed No. 21 after moving from Richard Childress Racing in 2018. He will retire from full-time competition after the 2019 season.
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