(born
August 8 ,
1964 , in
Spring Lake, Michigan ) is a
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver. He drives the #60
Con-way Freight Toyota for
Wyler Racing . He has finished in the top-ten in the points standings almost every year he has raced in the trucks, and currently holds the series record for championships with three, in 1997, 1999, and 2001 while driving for
Hendrick Motorsports .
Sprague began street stock cars at local short tracks. After winning the track championships at
Thunderbird Raceway and later
Winston Raceway , Sprague began racing in the NASCAR
Winston Racing Series , in its
North Carolina Late Model Division competition. He won the Big Ten Championship at
Concord Motorsports Park , and won more than 30 Late Model Races. Eventually, he won te NASCAR Winston Racing Series championship at Concord Motorsports Park.
Sprague made his
Busch Series debut in 1989 at
Charlotte Motor Speedway . Driving the #78
Griffin Racing Chevrolet , he qualified 28th but finished 41st after suffering
Engine failure early in the race. After a fourtieth-place finish at the
Goody's 300 for Pucci & Associaties, Sprague moved up to drive the #34
Keystone Beer car for
Frank Cicci Racing in 1990. He competed in nineteen races and had a best finish of sixth at
Orange County Speedway . The following season, Sprague competed in seven races, driving the #48
Staff America Oldsmobile . He won his first career pole at Charlotte. He continued to drive the car in 1992, where he had a second-place finish at
New River Valley Speedway . He finished 24th in the final standings.
In 1993, Sprague signed to drive the #74
BACE Motorsports car. Despite four top-ten finishes, he was released with just a handful of races left in the year. He finished nineteenth in points. Sprague returned to the Winston Racing Series ranks in 1994, winning 21 of 22 races he entered.
Sprague began racing in the Trucks' first year of competition in 1995. He began the season in the #31
Chevrolet Silverado for Griffin Racing, winning the pole at
Lousiville Speedway . After the
Action Packed Racing Cards 150 , Sprague switched to the #25
Budweiser Chevy for Hendrick Motorsports. He ended the season with a pole at
Phoenix International Raceway , and had three fourth-place finishes. In 1996, he slid over to the #24
Quaker State truck owned by Hendrick, winning his first race at Phoenix, followed up by back-to-back victories at
Nazareth Speedway and
The Milwaukee Mile . With five wins total and two poles, Sprague lost the championship by 53 points. That season, he made his
Winston Cup debut, running a pair of races in the #52
Pedigree Petfoods Pontiac Grand Prix for
Ken Schrader . He led two laps and finished 23rd in his debut at Phoenix, but wrecked the following week at
Atlanta Motor Speedway .
The following season, Sprague won at Phoenix, Nazareth, and
Nashville Speedway USA , and won the championship. In addition, he returned to the Cup series, subbing for
Ricky Craven at
Bristol Motor Speedway , but finished 40th after a wreck. Despite winning the Truck Series championship, Quaker State did not return as Sprague's primary sponsor, forcing him to start the 1998 unsponsored. After a one-race deal with
Big Daddy's BBQ Sauce at
Portland Speedway , Sprague won
The No Fear Challenge in his debut for sponsor
GMAC , allowing them to join full-time as sponsor. He won five races total that season and finished second in points. He returned to the Busch Series to drive the #40
Channellock Chevy for
Doug Taylor at
Watkins Glen International , finishing sixth.
In 1999, Sprague won three races as well as the Craftsman Truck Series championship by eight points. He also drove at Watkins Glen in a
Terry Labonte -owned car, finishing twelfth, and attempted the
Exide NASCAR Select Batteries 400 for
Tyler Jet Motorsports , but failed to qualify. He won three more times in 2000, but crashes caused him to drop to fifth in the standings. In 2001,
NetZero became his primary sponsor, and he won seven poles and four races, and took home his third championship trophy.
After 2001, Sprague and teammate
Ricky Hendrick moved back to the Busch Series, with Sprague driving the #24 NetZero Chevy. He won his first career Busch race at
Nashville Superspeedway as well as leading the points during the season, before finishing fifth in the final standings. That same year, he ran the
IROC series, finishing in the top-ten in all four events. He returned to Winston Cup to run a handful of races for
Haas CNC Racing 's #60 entry. His best finish was a 30th at
Homestead-Miami Speedway . Haas switchd to Pontiac and the #0 with NetZero sponsorship for 2003, signing Sprague to compete for
Winston Cup Rookie Of The Year honors. Sprague's best finish that season was a fourteenth at the
Daytona 500 . After the
Tropicana 400 , Sprague was fired from the ride. He drove in two truck races that year for
Xpress Motorsports , finishing fifth in both events.
Sprague took over the 16 Xpress truck full-time in 2004, winning six poles and the
UAW/GM Ohio 250 . He finished seventh in points. The following season, he won at
Texas Motor Speedway , but late in the season, was released and took over at Wyler. Despite switching teams mid-season, he finished eighth in points.
Sprague finished the 2006 season fifth in points with two wins and two poles. He will return to the Con-Way Freight Tundra for the
2007 Season . Sprague started the 2007 season in the
Craftsman Truck Series with a win in the
Chevy Silverado HD 250 at the
Daytona International Speedway .