William "Roy" Tyner | |||||||
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A rare photo of Roy Tyner in a white T-shirt posing in front of the grandstand of an American speedway.
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Born |
Red Springs, North Carolina |
January 3, 1934||||||
Died | February 23, 1989 | (aged 55)||||||
Cause of death | Homicide | ||||||
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career | |||||||
311 races run over 13 years | |||||||
Best finish | 10th – 1968 Grand National season | ||||||
First race | 1957 untitled race (Coastal Speedway) | ||||||
Last race | 1970 Tidewater 300 (Langley Field Speedway) | ||||||
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William Leroy "Roy" Tyner (January 3, 1934 – February 23, 1989) was a Native American NASCAR Grand National driver from Red Springs, North Carolina, USA.
Tyner participated in the 1968 Fireball 300 in addition to the 1959 Daytona 500; his total contribution to his career statistics includes making fourteen finishes in the top five, and seventy-one finishes in the top ten. Additional statistics included a total career earnings of $83902 ($512,436.27 when adjusted for inflation), 45420 laps completed, an average start of 23rd place, an average finish of 19th place, and 30,896.6 miles (49,723.3 km) of stock car racing experience. Tyner has competed in 311 races in his thirteen-year career from the time that he was 23 years old (in the 1957 season) to the time that he was 36 years old (in the 1970 season).
Tyner's nicknames were The Flying Indian and The Wild Indian. His choice of automobiles were the Pontiac, the Ford, and the Dodge; with only Pontiac being a defunct brand name as of 2010. The most famous sponsor associated with him was Pepsi which he was seen drinking between races and which continued to be his beverage of choice throughout his life. For reasons unknown, Tyner chose to take a sabbatical from the 1962 NASCAR Grand National Season. Art Brady would take over for Tyner in 1962; finishing 21st at the 1962 Southern 500 along with Cale Yarborough (25th at Charlotte) and T.C. Hunt (19th at Chattanooga).