Johnny Sauter | |||||||
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Born | Jonathan Joseph Sauter May 1, 1978 Necedah, Wisconsin | ||||||
Achievements | 2016 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Champion 2017 Oktoberfest winner 2001 ASA National Tour Champion | ||||||
Awards | 2009 Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year 2001 ASA National Tour Rookie of the Year | ||||||
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career | |||||||
85 races run over 11 years | |||||||
2015 position | 61st | ||||||
Best finish | 30th (2007) | ||||||
First race | 2003 Tropicana 400 (Chicago) | ||||||
Last race | 2015 Daytona 500 (Daytona) | ||||||
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NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series career | |||||||
222 races run over 15 years | |||||||
Truck no., team | No. 21 (GMS Racing) | ||||||
2017 position | 2nd | ||||||
Best finish | 1st (2016) | ||||||
First race | 2003 O'Reilly 200 (Bristol) | ||||||
Last race | 2020 CarShield 200 (Gateway) | ||||||
First win | 2009 Las Vegas 350 (Las Vegas) | ||||||
Last win | 2018 NextEra Energy Resources 250 (Daytona) | ||||||
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Statistics current as of November 17, 2017. |
Jonathan Joseph "Johnny" Sauter is an American racecar driver. He currently drives in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series, driving the No. 98 Ford F-150 for ThorSport Racing. Sauter won the 2016 Camping World Truck Series championship.
Sauter gained national attention in 2001, when he won the ASA national Tour championship, when he won ten races.[1] That same year, he ran a partial NASCAR Busch Series schedule for Richard Childress Racing.[2] The following year, he ran a full season and earned his first win at Chicagoland Speedway.[3] Sauter was also involved in one of the biggest crashes in NASCAR history, a thirty-plus car accident at Talladega Superspeedway.[4] In 2003, Sauter split time between RCR and the Curb Agajanian team, driving 15 races for Curb and the other 19 for RCR.[5] He also raced in his first five Winston Cup Series races with Morgan-McClure Motorsports.[6]
In between the 2003 and 2004 seasons, Sauter signed with RCR to run the full Cup schedule and also with Brewco Motorsports to run the full Busch Series schedule.[7] He joined teammates Kevin Harvick and Robby Gordon and crew chief Kevin Hamlin at RCR.[8] Sauter ran the full Busch schedule, performing well on short tracks.[9] However, he was released after thirteen Cup races.[10]
After moving from ThorSport Racing to GMS Racing before 2016,[11] Sauter won the 2016 Truck championship.[12] During the 2017 season, he was the first driver to test a standard engine for the Truck Series.[13]
On the day of the last race of 2017, Sauter said that he would return to GMS in 2018.[14]
Sauter is married with kids.[1] He was born and raised in Necedah, Wisconsin[15] and is a lifelong Catholic.[16]