Sneha Girap (Editor)

Jeff Hammond (NASCAR)

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Nationality
  
American

Spouse
  
Sharon Hammond (m. 1981)

Role
  
Commentator

Name
  
Jeff Hammond

Known for
  
Former crew chief


Jeff Hammond (NASCAR) 972f805e4b5815f82e6f903de9172f27jpg

Born
  
September 9, 1956 (age 67) (
1956-09-09
)

Occupation
  
Television sportscaster for Fox Sports 1 on NASCAR Race Hub

Nominations
  
Sports Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Personality - Studio Analyst

TV shows
  
Fox NASCAR, NASCAR Race Hub, NASCAR RaceDay, Impact Wrestling, NASCAR Victory Lane



Similar
  
Travis Carter, Derrike Cope, Angela Harkness

Profiles

Jeffrey "Jeff" Hammond (born September 9, 1956) is an American NASCAR personality. Currently, he is a commentator for NASCAR's coverage on Fox Sports, as well as a partial owner of Red Horse Racing, a Camping World Truck Series racing team based in Mooresville, North Carolina that is co-owned by him and business executive Tom DeLoach. He is also referred to as Hollywood Hammond by his Fox colleague Darrell Waltrip. He is an alumnus of East Carolina University.

Contents

Jeff Hammond (NASCAR) jeffhammondnascarpng

Background

Jeff Hammond (NASCAR) Join NASCAR Driver Jeff Hammond in Celebrating National

While attending high school at North Mecklenburg High School in Charlotte, North Carolina, he was named a 1973-74 High School Prep Football All-American as a cornerback. He played college football at East Carolina University for Pat Dye until he suffered a career-ending injury in 1975.

Racing career

Jeff Hammond (NASCAR) httpsfoxsportswordpresswwwprsupportsprods3

Hammond's NASCAR career began in 1974 as a tire changer for Walter Ballard, but soon moved to the jackman position. He served on the crew for three championship seasons between Cale Yarborough and Darrell Waltrip. In 1982, Hammond was promoted to the crew chief position at Junior Johnson Motorsports for Darrell Waltrip and Waltrip won his second consecutive championship. He and Waltrip became the top driver-crew chief combination in NASCAR, winning 43 races during the 1980s including the 1985 Winston Cup championship. Hammond followed Waltrip to Hendrick Motorsports, where they won the 1989 Daytona 500.

In 1991, Waltrip and Hammond formed Darrell Waltrip Motorsports, where the combination clicked again, but in mid-1992, Hammond left after a win at Pocono Raceway when car owner Felix Sabates named him to work with Kenny Wallace for the 1993 season. Hammond teamed up again with Waltrip in 1996, but the two were unable to recapture the magic of the 1980s. In 1998, Hammond joined Roush Racing as crew chief for Chad Little. The combination was an immediate success. Despite failing to qualify for the spring race at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Little finished second at the Texas 500 and had a career high 15th place in the championship standings. Hammond stayed with Roush Racing until the end of the 2000 season; this included a stint where he was crew chief for Kurt Busch for the first six races, before leaving after he was hired to work at Fox Sports.

Hammond has worked with four NASCAR champions in his career—Cale Yarborough (a mechanic), Darrell Waltrip (a crew chief for two of the three), Terry Labonte (1987 for a few races), and Kurt Busch (2000 in his first races).

Broadcasting career

In 2001, Hammond and Waltrip were reunited, this time as broadcasters for Fox Sports' coverage of NASCAR. Hammond works for Fox Sports 1 as an analyst for NASCAR Race Hub.

Hammond served as an analyst for Fox NASCAR Sunday, the network's prerace show, alongside Chris Myers and Darrell Waltrip from 2001 to 2013. In 2014, he covered stories on pit road as they developed throughout the race for FOX NASCAR, becoming the first former crew chief to serve in that capacity for network television's NASCAR coverage. In addition, Hammond offered his expertise for years as an analyst for FOX Sports 1's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series practice and qualifying coverage. He also co-hosted the Budweiser duel at Daytona and the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race several times for FOX Sports 1.

When Fox unveiled a new mobile studio for NASCAR pre-race broadcasts, Darrell Waltrip remarked "There's Hollywood Hammond inside the Hollywood Hotel," and the nickname stuck with the broadcast studio where he and Chris Myers broadcast the pre-race shows until 2012 when he was replaced by Michael Waltrip. In 2005, he became an owner of Red Horse Racing's Craftsman Truck program, where they have won fifteen races.

Hammond has also broadcast wrestling events for TNA Wrestling, where during the organization's it was broadcast on Fox Sports Net. Hammond hosted an interview segment known as the "Six Points of Impact!" He has also wrestled in TNA.

Online column

Hammond contributes a regular online column on Foxsports.com where fans can post write-in questions, one of which he will answer in every column.

References

Jeff Hammond (NASCAR) Wikipedia