Jeff Fultz: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|American racing driver (born 1968)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2022}}
{{short description|American auto racing driver}}
{{infobox NASCAR driver
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1968|12|14}}
| birth_place = [[Blue Ash, Ohio]], U.S.
| achievements = 2002, 2004, 2005 [[NASCAR Southeast Series]] Champion
| Total_Busch_Races = 7
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In 2002, Fultz would win his first Southeast Series title with three wins at [[Myrtle Beach Speedway|Myrtle Beach]], [[Nashville Superspeedway|Nashville]] and [[Memphis International Raceway|Memphis]]. He would also win his first ARCA race that year at [[Lowe's Motor Speedway|Charlotte]], as well as making three Busch Series races that year with a best finish of 26th at Nashville. Although Fultz would win the most races in the Southeast season in 2003, he would ultimately finish second in the standings behind [[Charlie Bradberry]]. He would run four races in the ARCA Series, three races in the Busch Series, and would attempt two Winston Cup races, failing to qualify at both [[Atlanta Motor Speedway|Atlanta]] and [[Lowe's Motor Speedway|Charlotte]].
 
Fultz would win the Southeast championship again in 2004 ahead of [[J. R. Norris]] with five wins and two poles. He would also oneattempted again attempt to make his debut in the now [[Nextel Cup Series]] at [[Lowe's Motor Speedway|Charlotte]] for the [[2004 Coca-Cola 600|Coca-Cola 600]], driving the No. 78 [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]] for [[Harrah Racing]], failing to qualify for the event. In 2005, he would win the Southeast championship again ahead of [[Jason Hogan]] with four wins. He would run one more race in the series the following year before the series folded at the end of the year. He also ran in the [[Hooters Pro Cup Series]] that year, running in 14 races with a pole at [[USA International Speedway|Lakeland]] and a best finish of fifth at Myrtle Beach.
 
Since the folding of the Southeast Series, he would compete sporadically in various late-model events like the [[Snowball Derby]], the [[Winchester 400]] and in various other late-model and modified series. He also acts as the driver and owner of his late-model team Jeff Fultz Racing, which has fielded drivers such as [[Jordan Anderson (racing driver)|Jordan Anderson]], Kodie Conner, and [[William Byron (racing driver)|William Byron]].
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| [[MBNA Platinum 400|DOV]]
| [[Kmart 400|MCH]]
| [[Pocono 500Organics CBD 325|POC]]
| [[Save Mart/Kragen 350|SON]]
| [[2001 Pepsi 400|DAY]]
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| [[Coca-Cola 600|CLT]]
| [[MBNA Armed Forces Family 400|DOV]]
| [[Pocono 500Organics CBD 325|POC]]
| [[Sirius 400|MCH]]
| [[Dodge/Save Mart 350|SON]]
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! Ref
|-
! rowspan=2| [[2000 ARCA ReBondo/MaxMar-Hyde Series|2000]]
! [[Harrah Racing]]
! rowspan=2| 55
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{{Reflist|2}}
 
==External links==
* {{Racing-Reference driver|Jeff_Fultz}}
 
{{Authority control}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fultz, Jeff}}
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:1968 births]]
[[Category:NASCAR drivers]]
[[Category:ARCA Menards Series drivers]]
[[Category:Racing drivers from Ohio]]
[[Category:People from Blue Ash, Ohio]]