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Marty Houston

Marty Houston
Born (1968-01-07) January 7, 1968 (age 49)
Hickory, North Carolina
Achievements 1997 HMS Track Champion
NASCAR Xfinity Series career
19 races run over 2 years
Best finish 37th (2001)
First race 2000 Sam's Club 200 (Rockingham)
Last race 2001 Outback Steakhouse 300 (Kentucky)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 0 0
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career
44 races run over 3 years
Best finish 12th (2000)
First race 1999 NAPA 300K (Pikes Peak)
Last race 2003 Ford 200 (Homestead)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 11 0
Statistics current as of July 10, 2012.

Marty Houston (born January 7, 1968 in Hickory, North Carolina), is a former driver in NASCAR. His younger brother, Andy and father Tommy Houston have driven in NASCAR as well.

Marty Houston made his debut seven races into the 1999 Craftsman Truck Series season, replacing Lonnie Rush in the famed #75 Spears Motorsports Chevy. His first race was at Pikes Peak, where Marty easily made it into the race with a 13th place starting effort, but his engine blew up and finished 29th midway into the race. Houston could only manage one top-10 in 1999, a 6th at Nazareth, although he did have ten top-20s in nineteen starts.

Despite the struggles in 1999, Houston was invited back for 2000, and Houston made the most of it. Houston came out of the gates leading two laps at the season opener at Daytona and was running in the top-10 when he got caught up in "The Big One." Yet, Houston finished tenth the next race, which proved to be one of ten times in 2000 he would finish in the top-10. The best was his eventual career best 4th at Kentucky, where he also earned his best career start of 3rd. (He also started 3rd at Phoenix) Perhaps most impressively was his average finish of 14.4. His worst position in 2000 was a pair of 25th-place runs, and finished 12th in points. Houston was noticed by Armando Fitz and got a new ride in the Busch Series for 2001, leaving the #75.

Houston did eventually make one more start in 2003, but that was clouded in controversy. Driving a fifth Ultra Motorsports Dodge in the season ending Ford 200, Houston started 18th and was running on the lead lap when he got loose in Turn 4 on Lap 100. He came down and slammed Brendan Gaughan, who was leading the points standings going into the race and who could've been overtaken by Houston's teammate Ted Musgrave for the championship. The wreck cost Gaughan the series championship and many Gaughan fans felt that Houston had intentionally wrecked Gaughan, though the team emphatically denied it. Gaughan himself was not happy about the wreck, specifically criticizing the fact that Houston was in the race and that Ultra Motorsports had fielded so many trucks in the race.


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