Tim Bender Explained

Tim Bender
Birth Date:19 August 1957
Birth Place:Colden, New York
Achievements:4-time Formula III winner at World Championship Snowmobile Derby (1985–1988)
Total Busch Races:19
Years In Busch:7
Best Busch Pos:49th (1997)
First Busch Race:1990 AC-Delco 200 (Rockingham)
Last Busch Race:1997 Coca-Cola 300 (Texas)
Busch Wins:0
Busch Top Tens:0
Busch Poles:1

Tim Bender (born August 19, 1957) is an American former snowmobile and NASCAR Busch Series race car driver from Colden, New York. He raced snowmobiles in the 1970s to 1990s and was inducted in the Snowmobile Hall of Fame. He had spot starts in the Busch Series from 1990 to 1996. He joined the tour full-time in 1997 before suffering a career-ending injury after the eighth race.

Snowmobile racing

Career

Bender began racing snowmobiles in 1974.[1] He raced on ovals and snocross, peaking in the modified classes at United States Snowmobile Association (USSA) and Ontario Snowmobile Racing Federation (OSRF) events. Some of Bender's big wins were a championship at the Kawartha Cup in 1985 and two Formula I wins at the Adirondack Cup racing in 1990-91. He swept the Formula III division at the World Championship Snowmobile Derby at Eagle River from 1985 to 1988. In 1999 he was inducted into the Snowmobile Hall of Fame. During his snowmobile racing career, Bender was known for his association with Yamaha; he won a total of eleven snowmobiling championships.[2] In the 1980s, he designed several limited-production racing sleds that he used in competition.

Other snowmobile activities

Bender formed and ran Bender Racing, a snowmobile performance parts company. He sold the company in 1997 to go NASCAR racing and the company continues to carry his name. As of 2011, he was the Team Manager for the Hentges Racing Polaris team. As of 2014, Bender is on the Board of Directors for the Snowmobile Hill Climb Racing Association (SHCRA).[3]

Stock car racing

Bender raced selected events on the K&N Pro Series East tour between 1988 and 1991 with one Top 10 finish.[4] He raced in selected NASCAR Sportsman Division events from 1990 until 1996. He began racing full-time for the newly retired Robbie Reiser in 1997.[5] Bender won his only career NASCAR pole position of 179.835mph at the Stihl Outdoor Power Tools 300 (Atlanta Motor Speedway).[2] After the eighth race, he suffered a career-ending back injury.[6] Reiser selected Matt Kenseth to replace Bender,[7] and the team would go on to finish second in the following season's Busch Series championship.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Snowmobile Hall of Fame induction. Snowmobile Hall of Fame. August 9, 2014.
  2. News: Snowmobile veteran captures Busch pole. March 7, 1997. Spartanburg Herald-Journal. B2. 2014-08-12. Spartanburg, SC.
  3. Web site: SHCRA - Snowmobile Hill Climb Racing Association . 2014-08-09 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131208111055/http://shcra.com/about_shcra.php . December 8, 2013 . mdy-all . Snowmobile Hill Climb Racing Association
  4. Web site: Career statistics. Racing Reference. August 9, 2014.
  5. News: NASCAR doesn't pass up shot at parity. Kallmann. Dave. February 13, 1997. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 4C. 2014-08-12. Milwaukee, WI.
  6. Staff writer; no by-line. . Tim Bender Interview, Part II . SnowGoer magazine . December 14, 2011 . August 9, 2014.
  7. News: Kenseth to stay with Reiser team. Kallmann. Dave. April 28, 1997. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 8C. 2014-08-12. Milwaukee, WI.