Everything about Boris Said totally explained
Boris Said (born
September 18,
1962) is an
American race car driver from
Carlsbad,
California but considers his hometown to be
Stamford,
Connecticut. His father,
Bob Said, was a
Formula One race driver and
US Olympic bobsled driver in
1968 and
1972. He currently drives the #60
SoBe No Fear Energy Drink Ford Fusion. Although he's now making the move to full-time
NASCAR competition as co-owner of his
SoBe No Fear team alongside crew chief
Frank Stoddard and a third partner,
Mark Simo, his NASCAR career began in 1995 as a "
Road Course Ringer" primarily due to his extensive road-racing experience.
Racing career
Said's early interest was in motorcycle racing. He saw his first automobile race in 1985, the
Detroit Grand Prix. He didn't begin racing automobiles until the age of 25, very late compared to the usual 16-19 years of age that most professionals start.
He first began racing in 1987 when he began racing in the
SCCA. He got his big break with a ride in the
SCCA World Challenge series in 1991 driving for Baer Racing, later to become
Baer Brake Systems. Upon Baer's withdrawal from the series to focus on the manufacture of brakes in 1992, Boris got another big ride driving in the
IMSA series in 1993 driving a
BMW M3. He won the 1997 and 1998
24 Hours of Daytona and 1998
12 Hours of Sebring in IMSA. He also became the first American to win the
24 Hours Nürburgring in 2005 driving a
BMW Motorsport-entered
BMW M3 GTR with co-drivers
Pedro Lamy,
Duncan Huisman and
Andy Priaulx.
Boris has also been invited as an "At-Large" Rally Car Racing entry for the ESPN X Games 13 at the Home Depot Center in Los Angeles CA, on Sunday August 5th, 2007. Boris will be driving a 2007 Subaru WRX STI prepared by Vermont Sports Car, who run the Subaru Rally Team USA. He will be joined by American rally car racing legend John Buffum, as his co-driver.
NASCAR career
Said made his
NASCAR debut in
1995 in the
Craftsman Truck Series at
Sears Point International Raceway, driving the #4
Ford F-150 for
Irvan-Simo Racing. He started 25th but finished 24th out of a 26-truck field due to overheating problems. He made three starts the following year driving Irvan's #28
1-800-Collect Ford, his best finish a thirteenth at
I-70 Speedway.
Said moved up to trucks full-time in
1997 in the #44
Federated Auto Parts Ford. While his amateur season didn't yield any wins, he finished second at the
Pronto Auto Parts 400K and finished sixteenth in the final standings. The following year, he won his first career truck series race at Sears Point, in addition to his first truck pole at
Heartland Park Topeka. He also made his
Busch Series debut at
Watkins Glen International Raceway, starting on the pole but finishing 40th in the #12
Zippo Ford owned by
Jimmy Spencer.
In 1999, Said scaled back on his Truck Series schedule, running only six events. He won poles at
Portland and Topeka for Irvan-Simo, as well as driving for
Team Racing and
Bobby Rahal. He made his
Winston Cup debut at Watkins Glen, qualifying on the outside pole and leading nine laps before his #14 Ford suffered engine problems. He also drove at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, finishing 34th.
In 2000, he made what would be his final Truck series start for five years at Portland, finishing fifteenth. After a 30th place run at
California Speedway, he returned to Cup, driving the #23 for Jimmy Spencer, and finished 42nd at Sears Point. He also attempted the Cup race at Watkins Glen, but failed to qualify due to a lack of owner's points. He saw limited action in 2001, finishing fourth in a Busch Series race at Watkins Glen in a
Robbie Reiser-owned car, and drove a pair of races for
Jasper Motorsports, finishing eighth at the Glen. After running with Jasper again in
2002, Said served as a fill-in driver for
Jerry Nadeau at
MB2/MBV Motorsports. He won the pole and finished sixth at Sears Point.
Said signed onto drive a limited schedule for the team in
2004, running the #36
Centrix Financial Chevrolet, and finished sixth once again at Sears Point. The team expanded to run more races for
2005, where his best finish in nine starts was a third at Watkins Glen. During that season, he returned to the Truck series finishing 35th at
Kentucky Speedway while filling for an injured
Rick Crawford. He also ran two races in the Busch Series for
Phoenix Racing, and had a fifth-place finish at
Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.
Said joined
Evernham Motorsports to help the team's road course program in 2006. He won the pole at Mexico City, and finished second, as well as driving the #4
Geico Dodge Charger for
Biagi-DenBeste Racing at
Lowe's Motor Speedway, starting 40th and finished 31st. In
May 2006, Said and his crew chief
Frank Stoddard and
Mark Simo announced the creation
No Fear Racing, which will use equipment from
Roush Fenway Racing. The team's slogan is "Sell more cases, run more races." They ran four Cup races starting with the
Dodge/Save Mart 350 at
Infineon Raceway. He won the pole at the
Pepsi 400, his first
NEXTEL Cup pole on an oval. Following his pole win, he promised a pit reporter that if he won the race or the race at
Watkins Glen International, that he'd shave his head. He was leading the race with three laps to go, and finished fourth, his highest career NASCAR finish on an oval track. In a post-race interview Boris said his performance in the Pepsi 400 was "the highlight of my career". Boris qualified and ran in the
2007 Daytona 500. Although he wasn't in the top 35 teams from the 2006 owner's points, Said posted the fastest qualifying time among non-locked teams and the 6th fastest qualifying time overall. Starting in 23rd position, Boris dropped back to last place near the beginning of the race. However, he managed to avoid the massive carnage at the finish and cross the line at 14th place.
Said failed to qualify for the
2008 Daytona 500.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Boris Said'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://boris_said.totallyexplained.com">Boris Said Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |