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Raymond Scott Russell

Grand Prix motorcycle racing career Nationality United States Active years 1995 - 1996 Teams Grands Prix 19
Championships 0 Wins 0 Podium finishes 2 Career points 176
Pole positions 0 Fastest laps 1 First Grand Prix 1995 500cc Italian
Grand Prix Last Grand Prix 1996 500cc Australian Grand Prix
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Raymond Scott Russell (born October 28,
1964), aka Mr. Daytona, is an American sports car racer and former championship
motorcycle road racer, born in East Point, Georgia. He is a former World
Superbike and AMA Superbike Champion, has won the Daytona 200 a record five
times, and won the Suzuka 8 Hours in 1993. Russell is the all-time leader in
750cc AMA Supersport wins.
After racing motocross as a child, Russell
raced in WERA events before reaching AMA in 1987. In 1988 he was runner-up in
the 750cc Supersport class and also had some successes in Superbike and 600cc
Supersport. He was Superbike runner-up in 1989, before winning the 750cc
Supersport title three years in a row from 1990 to 1992 and winning every race
in 1991. In 1992, Russell claimed the AMA Superbike championship. In the 1995
Daytona 200 he crashed on the first lap, but got back on the bike and won,
finishing ahead of Carl Fogarty.
Having previously scored a handful of
World Superbike podiums, he became the Superbike world champion riding for
Muzzy Kawasaki in 1993, and was runner-up in 1994. He left the series after a
poor start to 1995, replacing the retired Kevin Schwantz at Suzuki in the 500cc
Grand Prix world championship. Staying with Suzuki in 1996 he finished sixth
overall.
Russell returned to World Superbikes with Yamaha in 1997,
coming sixth overall with a pole and two podiums. In 1998, he came in tenth
overall but rarely ran near the front. His season is most remembered for the
Laguna Seca round, in which he made a blatant jump start and ignored the
instruction to come in for a stop-go penalty, eventually falling off, almost
causing team-mate Noriyuki Haga to crash. Russell had an unsuccessful spell
racing Harley-Davidson bikes in the AMA Superbike championship during the
following two years. His final year in AMA Superbike ended at the first race of
2001 at Daytona after a move to the HMC Ducati team. Ducati had high hopes that
"Mr. Daytona" would help them achieve their first ever 200 win. However, during
the start, Russell's bike stalled and was hit from behind after trying to move
out of the way to the side of the track. Russell suffered severe injuries which
ultimately ended his two-wheeled career.
In 2005, Russell was inducted
into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame. Scott returned to the highbanks of
Daytona in 2008 on a Jamie James prepared Yamaha R1. Russell began serving as
lead motorcycle road racing analyst for SPEED TV in May 2009, replacing Freddie
Spencer whose European scheduling conflicts led to the change.
In
2008, Russell made the switch professionally to four wheels, racing in the
Grand American Road Racing Association in both the Rolex Sports Car Series and
Koni Challenge (now Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge) series. In the 2010
season, he won Round 11 at Montreal along with co-driver Paul Edwards.


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