Nord Krauskopf

Nord Krauskopf (January 26, 1922 1994) was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series race car owner whose career spanned from 1966 to 1977.[2] He was the owner of K&K Insurance and a part of the business since its foundation in 1952.[3] This was a position that he kept in the corporate world while having a second career in the motorsports industry as a car owner. This dual role lasted until the 1970s when he left the NASCAR circuit to focus on running his insurance company.[4] His team would field mostly Dodge Chargers and Dodge Daytonas to the Cup Series races.[5]

Nord Krauskopf
Mr. and Mrs. Nord Krauskopf at the K&K Insurance offices. They managed and marketed a benevolent fund for NASCAR drivers before, during, and after his ownership career.
BornJanuary 26, 1922 (1922-01-26)
Died1994 (aged 7172)
Nationality United States
OccupationNASCAR team owner/businessman
Known forOne of the first NASCAR Cup Series owners to become a millionaire
Spouse(s)Theodora[1]

Career

He was known for employing veteran NASCAR drivers like Bobby Allison, Charlie Glotzbach, Bobby Isaac, Sam McQuagg, and Dave Marcis.[2] Krauskopf has seen his drivers participate in 345 races with 43 victories (first victory at the 1968 Columbia 200 – last victory at the 1976 Dixie 500), 171 finishes in the "top five," and 214 finishes in the "top ten.[2]" These drivers also managed to lead 15,705 laps out of 90,001 while finishing 12th place on average.[2] Krauskopf also become one of the first millionaires in NASCAR history by collecting a grand total of $1,225,994 in his 12-year career ($5,172,604.01 when adjusted for inflation) while his employees drove 91,890.6 miles (147,883.6 km) of racing action.[2] He would also see his drivers go to the pole position 69 times.[2] A major part of Krauskopf's career would be Bobby Isaac's championship victory during the 1970 NASCAR Winston Cup Season.[6]

The constant changes of NASCAR in the 1970s would render Krauskopf's team uncompetitive, and mid-way through the 1976 race season he put his racing team and its assets (shops, cars, etc.) on the market and then sold it to coal mining magnate Jim Stacy.[7] As a result, he would constantly be at odds with NASCAR officials.[7] Krauskopf would eventually sell his ownership share in the original company during the early 1990s.[7] He died in 1994.[7]

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gollark: I'm also getting a 128GB micro-SD card so I can save a copy of Wikipedia in case I get bored and don't have an internet connection.
gollark: See, I've been at home for basically three months so my laptop and occasionally bad 2015 tablet work for most stuff, *but* next week we're apparently going to "Beadnel" so I need a usable phone for that.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: I haven't really needed it and I can chat with most friends on signal/discord anyway.

References

  1. "Nord Krauskopf career information". Racing Reference. Retrieved 2011-07-20.
  2. "Career of Nord Krauskopf (1966–67)". Freewebs. Archived from the original on 2012-10-24. Retrieved 2011-07-21.
  3. "Company history - K&K Insurance". K&K Insurance. Retrieved 2011-07-25.
  4. "Bobby Isaac and the K&K Insurance NASCAR Chargers". Street Legal TV. Retrieved 2011-07-25.
  5. "Legends of NASCAR (Bobby Isaac in 1970)". Legends of NASCAR. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
  6. "The End of Nord Krauskopf's Career and his Death". Freewebs. Archived from the original on 2012-10-24. Retrieved 2011-07-21.
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