Shane Hall | |||||||
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Born |
Simpsonville, South Carolina, United States |
August 25, 1969 ||||||
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career | |||||||
1 race run over 1 year | |||||||
Best finish | 65th (1995) | ||||||
First race | 1995 AC Delco 400 (Rockingham) | ||||||
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NASCAR Xfinity Series career | |||||||
190 races run over 13 years | |||||||
Best finish | 19th (1998) | ||||||
First race | 1995 Opryland USA 320 (Nashville) | ||||||
Last race | 2008 Federated Auto Parts 300 (Nashville) | ||||||
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Statistics current as of June 4, 2012. |
Shane Hall (born August 25, 1969 in Simpsonville, South Carolina), is a former Driver in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. He last drove the #49 Chevrolet for Jay Robinson Racing. Hall is featured as an unlockable driver in the 2002 video game NASCAR Thunder 2003, and the 2001 game NASCAR Thunder 2002.
Hall has one career Cup Series Start. Driving the #40 Kendall Oil Pontiac for Dick Brooks at the fall Rockingham race in 1995, he started last. With a crash about two-thirds through the race, Hall backed the #40 into the wall, and finished 36th.
Hall made his Busch debut in 1995 driving for Stegell Motorsports. Driving the #85 Lube America Chevy, Hall qualified 38th at Nashville Speedway USA and finished 26th, nine laps down. He made another start that year in Rockingham, finishing 22nd.
The Stegall team decided to run part-time in 1996, competing in 14 of the 26 races. His best run was once again at Rockingham, where he had a 12th-place finish and garnered his first career lead-lap finish. Hall gained his first-career top-ten start when he qualified 9th at Bristol, matching it two races later Nazareth.
Hall and Stegall ran full-time 1997. Despite not making two races, Hall earned his first career top-ten with a tenth-place finish at Watkins Glen International, while also winning his first career pole at South Boston.
In 1998, Hall scored three top-tens and a pole at Gateway.
For 1999, Hall switched over to the #43 team Owned by Mike Curb, but struggled severely, as he did not qualify for 6 of the 31 races. Despite that, Hall scored his first-career top-five at Myrtle Beach with a fourth-place effort. Yet once again, Hall struggled with 9 DNFs. He was released at the end of the year.