Remembering Those the NASCAR Community Lost in 2025

DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: A general view of sun setting over the grandstands during the NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on February 16, 2025 in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

What’s Happening?

As 2025 comes to a close, we ask you to take a moment with us to remember those in the NASCAR family who passed away during the past calendar year.

Media Members

Ed Hinton

Born: 1948 | Died: February 6, 2025

Hinton was a long-time motorsports and sports writer for several publications during his lengthy career, including Sports Illustrated and ESPN.

Al Pearce

Born: 1942 | Died: April 9, 2025

Pearce was a long-time staple of NASCAR media known for his time with Autoweek, where he recently served as the brand’s NASCAR editor. During his career, he covered 56 consecutive Daytona 500s, including the race’s 67th edition earlier this year.

Keith Waltz

Born: 1960 | Died: September 27, 2025

Waltz served in many roles, both as a journalist and as a PR representative in the sport. During his time in the sport, Waltz worked for publications like Speed Sport and NASCAR Pole Position Magazine, and as a member of the communications team at Charlotte Motor Speedway. In 2025, prior to his passing, Waltz tied Ted Schmidt for the Jim Hunter Writer of the Year award at the 52nd Annual Eastern Motorsport Press Association.

Crew Members

Steve ‘Birdie’ Bird

Born: 1955 | Died: September 6, 2025

During his NASCAR career, Bird only called the shots for one NASCAR Cup Series race, as his true success would be found in the NASCAR Busch Series. Across his ten seasons in the series, Bird, atop the box for drivers like Rob Moroso, Kenny Wallace, Johnny Benson Jr., and Randy LaJoie, won 18 total races and three series championships.

Zachary Yager

Born: 1990 | Died: August 23, 2025

Yager was well known around the NASCAR garage area for his time with many teams across the sport’s National Series. In recent seasons, Yager found himself with teams like Team Penske and JTG Daugherty Racing, winning the Daytona 500 as a member of JTG’s No. 47 crew in 2023, and was serving as a member of ThorSport Racing’s No. 88 team at the time of his passing.

Owners

Shigeaki “Shige” Hattori

Born: 1963 | Died: April 5, 2025

Hattori, a racer in his own right, went on to own one of the more fan-favorite operations in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series of the past decade after hanging up his helmet. From 2013 to 2024, Hattori Racing Enterprises fielded the likes of Brett Moffitt and Ryan Truex, among others, to 14 wins and the 2018 series championship alongside entries in the ARCA Menards and NASCAR Xfinity Series. He was 61.

Bill Baumgardner

Born: 1947 | Died: January 13, 2025

Baumgardner was a long-time owner of the NASCAR Busch Series team BACE Motorsports, with his drivers, including but not limited to Johnny Benson Jr, Randy LaJoie, and Tony Raines, entering 389 races from 1993 to 2004, collecting 16 wins and three series championships along the way.

Travis Carter

Born: 1949 | Died: June 10, 2025

Carter served as a Crew Chief for many of NASCAR’s top drivers in the 1970s and 1980s, including an eight-year run calling the shots for Harry Gant, where the pair won nine total races. However, after his days atop the pit box came to a close, the NASCAR Cup Series Champion moved to ownership,

Charlie Henderson

Born: 1937 | Died: June 14, 2025

Henderson fielded entries across NASCAR’s National Series for many years. However, his true impact on the sport would come with Henderson Motorsports’ run in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, which began in 2013. Since their first season in the Truck Series, Henderson’s team has served as one of the most competitive part-time underdogs in the sport, winning two races, including a third that NASCAR disqualified in the 2025 season opener.

Larry McClure

Born: 1944 | Died: June 25, 2025

McClure owned one of the most iconic cars in NASCAR history, with his team, Morgan McClure Motorsports, co-owned by Tim Morgan, fielding the No. 4 car in the NASCAR Cup Series from 1987 to 2007, with sponsor Kodak gracing the car’s hood for the majority of that run. In total, the team won an impressive 14 races with the likes of Ernie Irvan, Sterling Marlin, and Bobby Hamilton, including three Daytona 500s between Irvan and Marlin.

Bill Davis

Born: 1951 | Died: September 7, 2025

Davis was one of the most influential owners of the late 1990s and early 2000s in the NASCAR Cup Series, with his team giving many drivers, like Bobby Labonte, Ward Burton, and Dave Blaney, their first real shot at the sport’s highest division. Over his 16 years racing in the highest level of NASCAR, the team won five races, including the 2002 Daytona 500 with Sterling Marlin.

Drivers

Martin Truex Sr.

Born: 1958 | Died: January 17, 2025

Truex Sr. was a true racing legend of the northeastern racing scene, making over 135 starts in the former NASCAR Busch North Series, now known as the ARCA Menards Series West. His legacy continued into NASCAR, where his sons Martin Truex Jr. and Ryan Truex have won races and championships across the sport’s three national series.

Wayne Andrews

Born: 1937 | Died: February 2, 2025

Andrews was a long-time racer who made many starts in the NASCAR Cup and the now-defunct Grand National East Series and NASCAR Grand American Series, winning the 1972 series title in the latter of the two.

Mike Chase

Born: 1952 | Died: April 18, 2025

During his time in NASCAR, Chase was one of the stars of the sport’s grassroots levels, though he would make the occasional start in the National Series. In his efforts racing in lower divisions of the sport, Chase won 19 races and a 1997 series championship in the NASCAR Southwest Tour, and 10 races, and the 1994 series championship in the NASCAR Winston West Series.

Rex White

Born: 1929 | Died: July 18, 2025

White was one of the sport’s greatest drivers during the early days of NASCAR. From 1956 to 1964, White won 28 races and scored 163 top ten finishes in 233 career starts. In 1960, the future NASCAR Hall of Famer scored six wins, 25 top fives, and 35 top tens en route to his first and only NASCAR Cup Series Championship.

Phil Barkdoll

Born: 1937 | Died: September 2, 2025

Though he only made 23 career starts in the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR fans remember Barkdoll as a true underdog of the sport, with his Barkdoll Racing No. 73 serving as an early iteration of what modern fans would now call an “open car.”

Michael Annett

Born: 1986 | Died: December 2, 2025

Annett played the role of a journeyman driver during his NASCAR career, racing across the three National Series from 2008 to 2016, before finally settling down in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, where he raced for JR Motorsports from 2017 to 2021. During his time with JRM, Annett found his groove, making the playoffs three times and finally winning his first career race at Daytona in 2019. He retired from racing after the 2021 season.

Greg Biffle

Born: 1969 | Died: December 18, 2025

Throughout his NASCAR career, Biffle proved himself to be a true wheelman, winning in everything he got behind the wheel of, including 17 wins and a series championship in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, 20 wins and a series championship in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, and 19 wins in the NASCAR Cup Series. One of the most impressive moments of his racing career came at Texas Motor Speedway in 2019, when he won in his first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series start since 2004, and his first race since retiring from full-time action in 2016.

Biffle and his family, alongside three others, lost their lives in a plane crash in Statesville, North Carolina, on December 18.

Industry Professionals

Jon Edwards

Born: 1972 | Died: April 10, 2025

Edwards was a long-time PR representative for Jeff Gordon throughout the driver’s lengthy NASCAR career. Eventually, Edwards would be elevated to Director of Racing Communications at Hendrick Motorsports while also working with Kyle Larson. The week of his death, Larson and HMS would find their way to an emotional victory at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Dr. Jerry Petty

Born: 1935 | Died: April 20, 2025

Petty, a neurosurgeon, was one of the most important figures in the medical side of motorsports, being honored for his many contributions to NASCAR drivers by winning the 2006 Bill France NASCAR Award of Excellence. In a statement following his passing, NASCAR said Petty “was a constant and caring figure within the NASCAR garage, lending his immense medical knowledge and skills to treat competitors every single week.”

H.A. “Humpy” Wheeler

Born: 1938 | Died: August 20, 2025

Wheeler is often cited as the sport’s greatest track promoter, known for pulling every string possible to make race fans feel that they must be at the track on raceday. His legendary run at Charlotte Motor Speedway includes many spectacles and stunts, and groundbreaking innovations, such as the 1992 NASCAR All-Star Race, which was the first time the race was held “under the lights.” Wheeler was chosen as the recipient of the 2026 Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR prior to his passing.

Grant Lynch

Born: 1953 | Died: October 2, 2025

Lynch helped make Talladega Superspeedway into the icon it is today during his long tenure as the track’s president and chairman. During his time at Talladega, which began in 1994 and concluded upon his retirement in 2019, the superspeedway saw many changes to its look, but continued to be one of, if not the sport’s most feared venue.

These members of the NASCAR family, among many others, were remembered throughout the year through many online notes, posts, and tributes.

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