Car No. 7 history On November 16, 2001, Ultra Motorsports announced they had entered into a joint venture with Evernham Motorsports where the team would switch to
Dodge Intrepids from Ford.
Casey Atwood, who had been driving Evernham's No. 19 and needed a ride once
Jeremy Mayfield became the team's second driver, would take over the 7 car for the
2002 season. The venture was known as
Ultra-Evernham Motorsports, with Ultra owner Jim Smith handling day-to-day operations and Evernham handling technical and competition aspects of the team. Ray Evernham described it as "doing two and a half teams." In January 2002,
Sirius Satellite Radio was named as the sponsor for the 7 car. In his sophomore season, Atwood struggled severely, with a 29.4 average finish for the year and a best finish of 11th. The poor performance was attributed to a lack of competitive equipment (with the team using second-hand Evernham machines), and a lack of effort on driver Atwood's part. The partnership was dissolved after Smith decided to remove Atwood from the car with two races left in the season. Ultra Motorsports Truck Series driver
Jason Leffler was named the interim driver.
Jimmy Spencer would take over the car in 2003 for the once again independent Ultra Motorsports Dodge. Elliott won the pole for the
Daytona 500 and finished fifth. He marked the season with his first win in seven years at
Homestead–Miami Speedway and finished 15th in points. Elliott would score two wins and finish 13th in points in 2002. He scored his final career win at
North Carolina in fall 2003. After a ninth-place finish in the points that season, Elliott announced that due to the pressures of a full Nextel Cup schedule, he would step down from his full-time ride and would race the team's
research and development car. ;Kasey Kahne (2004–2008) 's 9 car in his rookie season of 2004. Elliott was replaced by rookie driver
Kasey Kahne, a successful open-wheel racer just starting to gain respect in the
Busch Series, who left a
development contract with
Ford to sign with Evernham's Dodge team for the 2004 season.
Tommy Baldwin Jr. would serve as crew chief for the No. 9 team. Kahne would have the strongest performance out of all the young drivers, earning three second-place finishes through the first eleven races and five on the season, including two close finishes with
Matt Kenseth and
Elliott Sadler. Kahne earned four poles and 14 Top 10 finishes to score a 13th-place finish in points, winning the
Rookie of the Year honors by over 100 points. As a result, Kahne received most of what was Mayfield's team from 2005. In 2006, Kahne won six races, including the prestigious
Coca-Cola 600 at
Lowe's Motor Speedway in May. He also made his first
Chase for the Nextel Cup, finishing eighth in the standings at the end of the season. His six wins were a series high in 2006 and he also tied for the most pole awards with
Kurt Busch at six. On September 18, 2007, it was announced that
Budweiser would sponsor the No. 9 car beginning in 2008, after
Dodge Dealers/
Mopar/
UAW had sponsored the team since 2001. In his first year with the Budweiser sponsorship, Kahne had two wins and finished 14th in points.
Car No. 9 results Car No. 10 history drove the 10 for Evernham from 2006 to 2007. ;Scott Riggs (2006–2007) in 2007. In 2006,
Scott Riggs and his
Valvoline sponsorship moved over from struggling
MB2 Motorsports. In addition to sponsoring 22 races in 2006, Valvoline also maintained an ownership stake in the team through Senior Vice President James Rocco (like with MBV), called
Valvoline-Evernham Motorsports (also written as Valvoline-Evernham Racing). The team nearly won on several occasions including Charlotte, Talladega, and Texas — where he crashed out in second place with two laps to go. He finished 20th in the final standings despite missing the Daytona 500. Going into 2007 with high hopes, Evernham's performance suffered; Riggs failed to qualify for six races and had five DNF's with only one Top 10 finish all season. He was released with two races remaining in favor of former
Champ car driver
Patrick Carpentier, who had also replaced him at
Watkins Glen. ;Patrick Carpentier (2007–2008) at
Daytona in 2008. Carpentier, who was 36 years old at the time, became the full-time driver for 2008, part of a unique rookie class stacked with open wheel veterans all trying to emulate the success found by
Juan Pablo Montoya the previous year. This included
IndyCar Series Champions
Dario Franchitti and
Sam Hornish Jr., and
CART and
Formula One champion
Jacques Villeneuve, as well as
DEI development drivers
Regan Smith and
Aric Almirola. With
Valvoline taking a backseat role in 2008 and
Stanley Tools moving to the No. 19 car, GEM signed
LifeLock for eight races, an identity security company making a large entrance investment into
NASCAR.
Charter Communications and Auto Value/Bumper to Bumper also sponsored several races. Carpentier won the pole at
Loudon but otherwise struggled, as did his fellow open-wheel counterparts. He had no Top 10s, missed five races — including the
Daytona 500 — and was out of the Top 35 in points when he was released after
Kansas. Second-year driver
A. J. Allmendinger replaced Carpentier, after being released from
Red Bull Racing in favor of
Scott Speed. In his five races for GEM, Allmendinger was impressive, posting three Top 15s and often outrunning his teammates. Allmendinger was initially rewarded with a full-time ride in the No. 19 car, replacing
Elliott Sadler. This was derailed when Sadler intended to sue the team and Allmendinger to keep his job, The abbreviated season was capped off by Atwood's tenth-place finish at Homestead that year. For Evernham's full-time debut in 2001, Atwood was named as the driver of the 19 car, teammate to
Bill Elliott in the No. 9. The team was part of
Dodge's return into NASCAR, with Dodge Dealers sponsoring the entire season. The year was off to a sluggish start when Atwood failed to qualify at the spring
Atlanta race, but picked up steam towards the end of the year, winning the pole at
Phoenix International Raceway, and almost winning the Homestead race before relinquishing the lead to teammate Elliott late in the race. Atwood barely missed wrestling the rookie of the year crown away from
Kevin Harvick, despite Harvick finishing much higher in the points (ninth) and winning twice. ;Jeremy Mayfield (2002–2006) Evernham decided to make a driver change prior to the start of the 2002 season. He replaced Atwood with three-time Cup Series race winner
Jeremy Mayfield, who had been fired from his ride at
Team Penske before the end of the 2001 season. ;Elliott Sadler (2006–2008) On August 16,
Elliott Sadler, after leaving
Robert Yates Racing, was officially named the driver of the No. 19 car for the remainder of the 2006 season, as well as being named the driver for the 2007 season. In May, Sadler reached a two-year contract extension with the team. On January 3, 2009, Sadler's attorney announced that he would be seeking a breach of contract lawsuit against GEM for the dismissal.
Car No. 19 results R&D car history ;2002–2007 The 98 car started as the 91 car in 2002. Three drivers drove the No. 91:
Dick Trickle at
Talladega Superspeedway (failing to qualify);
Hank Parker Jr. at
Rockingham Speedway with sponsorship from
USG Corporation; and
Casey Atwood at
Homestead–Miami Speedway with a sponsorship from
Mountain Dew (after being released from the No. 7 car). In 2004,
Bill Elliott relinquished his full-time duties to drive the No. 91 in a part-time deal at Las Vegas, Texas, and Indianapolis. He returned to drive the 91 in a part-time deal in 2005 in nine races held at Fontana, Atlanta, Texas, Charlotte, Michigan, Indianapolis, Michigan, Fontana, and Texas. Elliott had sponsorships from
UAW,
Coca-Cola,
McDonald's,
Stanley Tools, Auto Value / Bumper to Bumper, and
Visteon.
Car No. 91 results ==Nationwide Series==