About: Boris Said   Sponge Permalink

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Boris Said (born September 18 1962) is an American race car driver from Carlsbad, California but grew up in Connecticut and New York City. He drove a part-time schedule in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series driving the #36 Chevrolet for MB Sutton Motorsports. He competed in his first cup race in 1999, and his first oval race in 2004 (at Homestead). His first Daytona 500 start was in 2005. He is commonly referred to as a "Road Course Ringer" along with Ron Fellows and Scott Pruett among the media and other drivers for his ability on the road courses at Infineon Raceway and Watkins Glen International.

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  • Boris Said
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  • Boris Said (born September 18 1962) is an American race car driver from Carlsbad, California but grew up in Connecticut and New York City. He drove a part-time schedule in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series driving the #36 Chevrolet for MB Sutton Motorsports. He competed in his first cup race in 1999, and his first oval race in 2004 (at Homestead). His first Daytona 500 start was in 2005. He is commonly referred to as a "Road Course Ringer" along with Ron Fellows and Scott Pruett among the media and other drivers for his ability on the road courses at Infineon Raceway and Watkins Glen International.
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  • Boris Said (born September 18 1962) is an American race car driver from Carlsbad, California but grew up in Connecticut and New York City. He drove a part-time schedule in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series driving the #36 Chevrolet for MB Sutton Motorsports. He competed in his first cup race in 1999, and his first oval race in 2004 (at Homestead). His first Daytona 500 start was in 2005. He is commonly referred to as a "Road Course Ringer" along with Ron Fellows and Scott Pruett among the media and other drivers for his ability on the road courses at Infineon Raceway and Watkins Glen International. He drove full-time in the 1997 and 1998 seasons in the Craftsman Truck Series. He won the 1998 race at Infineon Raceway. Said signed a contract with Evernham Motorsports to help the team's road course program in 2006. Said finished second in Mexico City as his closest finish of the year. In 2006, Boris Said and life-long friend Frank Stoddard announced the formation of No Fear Racing which bought equipment from Roush Racing. The team was sponsored by Pepsi, SoBe energy, and No Fear clothing. Said finished in 5th spot at Sonoma after leading a lap. In a big upset the next week, Said won the pole for the 2006 Pepsi 400, promising to reporter Dick Berggren that if he won he would shave his head. After a long race with 9 laps left, Said through a genius call by crew chief Frank Stoddard, took the lead. After leading with 2 1/2 laps left, Tony Stewart got by Boris to steal away the what would have been upset victory. Said finished in 4th spot, and emotionally said that his performance was the highlight of his racing career. From 2007-2008, No Fear's brand faded into history. Said raced part-time in the NNS in 2008 and 2009. In 2010, Said raced for Latitude 43 Racing, but was released after 5 races. Said also raced for TEAM Red Bull at Watkins Glen, but was crashed by Tony Stewart. Boris Said got his first NNS win at Montreal in a photo finish beating Italian driver Max Papis in a rubbing side-by-side battle.
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