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Jeff Gordon
Jeff Gordon transformed NASCAR from a regional American pastime into a global sports brand, a four-time Cup Series champion whose combination of extraordinary driving talent, marketable personality, and crossover appeal helped the sport achieve unprecedented mainstream popularity during the 1990s and 2000s. Born on August 4, 1971, in Vallejo, California, Gordon's journey to NASCAR stardom was unconventional, as he was one of the few drivers to emerge from outside the sport's traditional Southern strongholds.
Full profile →Dale Earnhardt
Dale Earnhardt remains one of the most iconic and beloved figures in American motorsport history, a fierce competitor whose aggressive driving style, seven Winston Cup championships, and tragic death at the 2001 Daytona 500 left an indelible mark on NASCAR and racing culture worldwide. Born on April 29, 1951, in Kannapolis, North Carolina, Earnhardt grew up in the heartland of stock car racing, the son of Ralph Earnhardt, himself a respected NASCAR driver who competed in the sport's early decades.
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