SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement  Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities and Exchange Act of
1934

Filed by Registrant  [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant  [ ]

Check the Appropriate Box:

[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ] Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
    14-6(e)(2))
[X] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Materials Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c) or Section 240.14a-12


                            COVENANT TRANSPORT, INC.
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

                 The Covenant Transport, Inc. Board of Directors
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the Appropriate Box):

[X] No fee required
[ ] Fee  computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

    (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:      N/A
    (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:         N/A
    (3) Price per unit or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:                                  N/A
    (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:                     N/A
    (5) Total Fee paid:                                                      N/A

[ ] Fee paid previously with  preliminary  materials.                        N/A
[ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
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    paid previously. Identify the  previous  filing by  registration  statement
    number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

    (1) Amount previously paid:                                              N/A
    (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:                        N/A
    (3) Filing Party:                                                        N/A
    (4) Date Filed:                                                          N/A



                            COVENANT TRANSPORT, INC.
                             400 Birmingham Highway
                          Chattanooga, Tennessee 37419


                           NOTICE AND PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD ON MAY 17, 2001


To Our Stockholders:

         The 2001 Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  (the  "Annual  Meeting")  of
Covenant Transport, Inc., a Nevada corporation (the "Company"),  will be held at
the Company, 400 Birmingham Highway, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37419, at 10:00 a.m.
Eastern Time, on Thursday, May 17, 2001, for the following purposes:

         1. To consider and act upon a proposal to elect seven (7)  directors of
            the Company;

         2. To  consider  and act upon a  proposal  to ratify the  selection  of
            PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as independent public accountants for the
            Company for 2001;

         3. To  consider  and act  upon a  proposal  to  reserve  an  additional
            1,003,034  shares of the Company's Class A Common Stock for issuance
            under the Company's  Incentive  Stock Plan, and adopt an amended and
            restated plan; and

         4. To consider  and act upon such other  matters as may  properly  come
            before the meeting and any adjournment thereof.

         The  foregoing  matters are more fully  described  in the  accompanying
Proxy Statement.

         The Board of  Directors  has fixed the close of  business  on March 26,
2001,  as the record  date for the  determination  of  Stockholders  entitled to
receive notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting or any adjournment  thereof.
Shares of Common Stock may be voted at the Annual  Meeting only if the holder is
present  at the  Annual  Meeting  in  person  or by valid  proxy.  YOUR  VOTE IS
IMPORTANT.  TO  ENSURE  YOUR  REPRESENTATION  AT THE  ANNUAL  MEETING,  YOU  ARE
REQUESTED  TO PROMPTLY  DATE,  SIGN,  AND RETURN THE  ACCOMPANYING  PROXY IN THE
ENCLOSED  ENVELOPE.  Returning your proxy now will not interfere with your right
to attend the Annual  Meeting or to vote your  shares  personally  at the Annual
Meeting,  if you wish to do so.  The  prompt  return of your  proxy may save the
Company additional expenses of solicitation.

         All Stockholders are cordially invited to attend the Annual Meeting.

                                            By Order of the Board of Directors


                                            /s/ David R. Parker
                                            David R. Parker
                                            Chairman of the Board

Chattanooga, Tennessee 37419
April 9, 2001




                            COVENANT TRANSPORT, INC.
                             400 Birmingham Highway
                          Chattanooga, Tennessee 37419


                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD MAY 17, 2001


         This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection  with the  solicitation
of proxies by the Board of  Directors  of  Covenant  Transport,  Inc.,  a Nevada
corporation  (the  "Company"),  to  be  used  at  the  2001  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders  of the Company (the "Annual  Meeting"),  which will be held at the
Company, 400 Birmingham Highway,  Chattanooga,  Tennessee 37419 on Thursday, May
17, 2001, at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time, and any adjournment  thereof. All costs of
the solicitation  will be borne by the Company.  The approximate date of mailing
this Proxy Statement and the enclosed form of proxy is April 9, 2001.

         The enclosed  copy of the  Company's  annual report for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2000, is not  incorporated  into this Proxy  Statement and is
not to be deemed a part of the proxy solicitation material.

                               PROXIES AND VOTING

         Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on March 26, 2001
("Stockholders"),  are entitled to vote,  either in person or by valid proxy, at
the Annual Meeting. Holders of Class A Common Stock are entitled to one vote for
each share held.  Holders of Class B Common  Stock are entitled to two votes for
each share held. On March 26, 2001, there were issued and outstanding 11,600,166
shares of Class A Common Stock,  par value one cent ($.01),  entitled to cast an
aggregate  11,600,166  votes  on all  matters  subject  to a vote at the  Annual
Meeting,  and  2,350,000  shares  of Class B Common  Stock,  par  value one cent
($.01),  entitled to cast an aggregate 4,700,000 votes on all matters subject to
a vote at the Annual  Meeting.  The Company has a total of 13,950,166  shares of
Common Stock outstanding,  entitled to cast an aggregate 16,300,166 votes on all
matters  subject  to a vote at the  Annual  Meeting.  The  number of issued  and
outstanding  shares excludes  approximately  1,589,884  shares of Class A Common
Stock reserved for issuance under the Company's incentive stock plans, and other
arrangements.  Holders of  unexercised  options are not  entitled to vote at the
Annual  Meeting.   The  Company  has  no  other  class  of  stock   outstanding.
Stockholders are not entitled to cumulative voting in the election of directors.

         All proxies  that are  properly  executed  and  received by the Company
prior  to the  Annual  Meeting  will be  voted in  accordance  with the  choices
indicated. Any Stockholder may be represented and may vote at the Annual Meeting
by a proxy or proxies  appointed by an instrument in writing.  In the event that
any such instrument in writing shall designate two (2) or more persons to act as
proxies,  a majority of such  persons  present at the  meeting,  or, if only one
shall be present,  then that one shall have and may  exercise  all of the powers
conferred  by such  written  instrument  upon all of the  persons so  designated
unless the  instrument  shall  otherwise  provide.  No such proxy shall be valid
after the  expiration of six (6) months from the date of its  execution,  unless
coupled with an interest or unless the person executing it specifies therein the
length of time for which it is to  continue  in  force,  which in no case  shall
exceed seven (7) years from the date of its execution.  Any Stockholder giving a
proxy may revoke it at any time prior to its use at the Annual Meeting by filing
with the  Secretary of the Company a revocation  of the proxy,  by delivering to
the Company a duly  executed  proxy  bearing a later date,  or by attending  the
meeting and voting in person.

         Other than the election of Directors, which requires a plurality of the
votes  cast,  each  matter to be  submitted  to the  Stockholders  requires  the
affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast at the meeting. For purposes of
determining the number of votes cast with respect to a particular  matter,  only
those cast "For" or "Against" are included.  Proxies marked "Abstain" and broker
non-votes  are  counted  only for  purposes of  determining  whether a quorum is
present at the meeting.  If no direction  is specified by the  Stockholder,  the
proxy will be voted "For" the  proposals as specified in this notice and, at the
discretion  of the proxy  holder,  upon such other  matters as may properly come
before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

                                   PROPOSAL 1
                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         At the Annual Meeting,  the Stockholders  will elect seven directors to
serve  as  the  Board  of  Directors  until  the  2002  Annual  Meeting  of  the
Stockholders of the Company or until their successors are elected and qualified.
The Company currently has seven directors:  David R. Parker,  Michael W. Miller,
R.H. Lovin, Jr., William T. Alt, Robert E. Bosworth, Hugh O. Maclellan, Jr., and
Mark A.  Scudder.  In the absence of contrary  instructions,  each proxy will be
voted for the election of the existing directors.



Information Concerning Directors and Executive Officers

         Information  concerning  the names,  ages,  positions with the Company,
tenure as a director, and business experience of the Company's current directors
and other  executive  officers is set forth below.  All references to experience
with the Company  include  positions  with the Company's  operating  subsidiary,
Covenant Transport,  Inc., a Tennessee  corporation.  All executive officers are
elected annually by the Board of Directors.




------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------

                NAME                   AGE                     POSITION                         DIRECTOR SINCE
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
                                                                                  
David R. Parker                         43    Chairman of the Board, President, Chief                1985
                                              Executive Officer
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
Michael W. Miller                       43    Executive Vice President, Chief Operating
                                              Officer, Director                                      1995
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
R. H. Lovin, Jr.                        49    Vice President - Administration, Secretary,
                                              Director                                               1994
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
Joey B. Hogan                           39    Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer                   NA
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
Ronald B. Pope                          56    Senior Vice President - Sales and
                                              Marketing                                               NA
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
William T. Alt(1)(2)                    64    Director                                               1994
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
Robert E. Bosworth(1)(2)                53    Director                                               1998
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
Hugh O. Maclellan, Jr.(1)(2)            61    Director                                               1994
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------
Mark A. Scudder(2)                      38    Director                                               1994
------------------------------------- ------- -------------------------------------------- -------------------------

-----------------------------


(1)      Member of the Audit Committee.
(2)      Member of the Compensation Committee.

         David R. Parker has served as President  since  founding the Company in
1985 and as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer since 1994. He has
guided the  Company's  growth from $7.7  million in 1986 to over $552 million in
2000.  Mr.  Parker  was  elected  to the  Board of  Directors  of the  Truckload
Carriers' Association in 1994.

         Michael W. Miller has served as the Company's  Executive Vice President
and Chief  Operating  Officer since 1997. He previously  served as the Company's
Vice  President - Operations  from 1993 to 1997 and in various  other  positions
with the Company  from 1987 to 1993.  Prior to joining the Company,  Mr.  Miller
operated his own cartage company from 1982 to 1986, served as a terminal manager
for  Interstate  Systems  from 1979 to 1982,  and held the  position  of traffic
manager for Jackson Manufacturing from 1975 to 1979.

         R.  H.  Lovin,  Jr.  has  served  as the  Company's  Vice  President  -
Administration  since May 1994 and Corporate  Secretary  since August 1995.  Mr.
Lovin  previously  served as the Company's Chief Financial  Officer from 1986 to
1994. Before joining the Company,  Mr. Lovin served as a  comptroller/accountant
for Perry Smith Company and Olin Chemical Co.

         Joey B. Hogan,  the Company's  Treasurer and Chief  Financial  Officer,
joined  Covenant  in those  capacities  in August  1997.  Prior to  joining  the
Company,  Mr. Hogan served as Chief Financial Officer of The McKenzie  Companies
in Cleveland,  Tennessee,  a group of  privately-owned  companies.  From 1986 to
1996, Mr. Hogan served in various capacities,  including three years as Director
of Finance,  with  Chattem,  Inc., a  publicly-held  company,  headquartered  in
Chattanooga,   Tennessee,   involved  in  the  manufacturing  and  marketing  of
over-the-counter pharmaceuticals and toiletries products.

         Ronald B. Pope has served as Covenant's  Senior Vice  President - Sales
and  Marketing  since  1998 and was the  Company's  Vice  President  - Sales and
Marketing since 1993,  having  previously served as Covenant's sales manager for
the western  region since December 1990. Mr. Pope has over 25 years of sales and
marketing experience in the trucking industry.

         William T. Alt has  engaged in the  private  practice of law since 1962
and has served as outside counsel to the Company since 1986.

         Robert E.  Bosworth has served as a director of the Company since 1998.
He is the Vice  President of Corporate  Finance for the  Livingston  Company,  a
merchant  bank.  From  February 1998 until  February  2001,  Mr.  Bosworth was a
business and management  consultant to various  corporations  in the Chattanooga
area.  Prior to February 1998, Mr.  Bosworth  served for more than five years as
Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Financial  Officer of  Chattem,  Inc.,  a
publicly-held

                                       2



company, headquartered in Chattanooga,  Tennessee, involved in the manufacturing
and marketing of over-the-counter  pharmaceuticals and toiletries products.  Mr.
Bosworth is a director of Chattem, Inc.

         Hugh O. Maclellan,  Jr. is President of the Maclellan Foundation,  Inc.
and  serves on the  Boards  of  UnumProvident  Corporation  and  SunTrust  Bank,
Chattanooga, N.A.

         Mark A.  Scudder  has been an  attorney  for more than seven years with
Scudder  Law Firm,  P.C.,  L.L.O.,  Lincoln,  Nebraska,  the  Company's  outside
corporate  and  securities  counsel.  Mr.  Scudder  is a  director  of UMB  Bank
Nebraska,  N.A., a national  bank  subsidiary of UMB  Financial  Corporation,  a
publicly-traded  bank holding company.  Mr. Scudder is also a director of Knight
Transportation, Inc., a truckload carrier with common stock traded on the Nasdaq
National Market. Another principal of Scudder Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O. serves as a
director of Swift  Transportation Co., Inc., a nationwide truckload carrier with
common stock traded on the Nasdaq National Market.

Meetings and Compensation

         Board of  Directors.  The Board of  Directors  of the Company held four
regularly  scheduled  meetings and three special meetings during the fiscal year
ended  December 31, 2000.  With the exception of Mr.  Maclellan,  who missed one
regularly scheduled meeting and one special meeting of the Board, one meeting of
the Audit Committee, and one meeting of the Compensation Committee,  each of the
directors  attended all meetings  held by  committees of the Board on which they
served,  and  each of the  directors  attended  all  meetings  of the  Board  of
Directors.  Directors  who are not  employees of the Company  received an annual
retainer  of $10,000  plus  $1,000 per Board of  Directors  meeting  attended in
person,  $500  per  Board  of  Directors  meeting  attended  by  telephone,  and
reimbursement   of  expenses   incurred  in  attending   such  Board   meetings.
Compensation for each of the non-employee directors in 2000 was $15,500 for each
of Messrs. Alt, Bosworth and Mr. Scudder, and $14,000 for Mr. Maclellan.  In May
2000,  the Board of Directors  granted each  non-employee  director an option to
purchase 2,500 shares of the Company's  Class A Common Stock,  under the Outside
Director Stock Option Plan, at $12.1875 per share,  the fair market value on the
date of the grant. The options  immediately  vested and must be exercised within
ten (10)  years of the date of the  grant.  The  option  grant was in lieu of an
increase in cash compensation.

         Compensation  Committee.  The  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of
Directors  met  twice  during  2000.  This  committee  reviews  all  aspects  of
compensation of the Company's  executive  officers and makes  recommendations on
such matters to the full Board of Directors.  The Compensation  Committee Report
on  Executive  Compensation  for  2000 is set  forth  below.  See  "Compensation
Committee Report on Executive Compensation."

         Audit  Committee and Audit  Committee  Report.  The Audit Committee met
twice during 2000. Messrs. Alt, Bosworth,  Maclellan,  and Scudder served as the
Audit Committee until May 18, 2000, at which time Mr. Scudder  resigned from the
Audit Committee.  For the balance of 2000, Messrs. Alt, Bosworth,  and Maclellan
served as the Audit Committee.  The  responsibilities of the Audit Committee are
set forth in the Audit Committee Report, which appears below. All of the members
of the Audit Committee are independent directors, as defined in the NASDAQ Stock
Market's Listing Rule 4200. The Audit Committee has been operated  pursuant to a
written charter  detailing its duties since May 18, 2000. The written charter is
included as Appendix A to the Proxy  Statement.  In performing  its duties,  the
Audit Committee,  as required by applicable  Securities and Exchange  Commission
rules, issues a report recommending to the Board of Directors that the Company's
audited financial  statements be included in the Company's Annual Report on Form
10-K, and certain other matters,  including the interpretation of the Company' s
outside public accountants.  The 2000 Report of the Audit Committee is set forth
below.

         The Audit  Committee  Report shall not be deemed to be  incorporated by
reference  into any filing made by the Company under the  Securities Act of 1933
or the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  notwithstanding  any general statement
contained in any such filings  incorporating  this Proxy Statement by reference,
except to the extent the Company incorporates such report by specific reference.

                         Audit Committee Report for 2000

         The primary  purpose of the Audit  Committee  is to assist the Board of
Directors in fulfilling its oversight  responsibilities  relating to the quality
and  integrity  of the  Company's  financial  reports  and  financial  reporting
processes  and  systems of  internal  controls.  Management  of the  Company has
primary  responsibility for the Company's  financial  statements and the overall
reporting  process,  including  maintenance of the Company's  system of internal
controls. The Company retains independent public accountants who are responsible
for conducting an independent audit of the Company's  financial  statements,  in
accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles,  and issuing a report
thereon.  In  performing  its duties,  the Audit  Committee  has  discussed  the
Company's financial statements with management and the Company's

                                       3



independent  auditors and, in issuing this report, has relied upon the responses
and  information   provided  to  the  Audit  Committee  by  management  and  the
independent public accountants. For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2000, the
Audit Committee (1) reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements with
management and  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, the Company's independent auditors;
(2)  discussed  with the  auditors  the  matters  required  to be  disclosed  by
Statement on Auditing  Standards No. 61; and (3) received and discussed with the
independent auditors the written disclosures and the letter from the independent
auditors required by Independence  Standards Board Statement No. 1. Based on the
foregoing reviews and meetings,  the Audit Committee recommended to the Board of
Directors that the audited financial statements be included in the Annual Report
on Form  10-K  for the  year  ended  December  31,  2000,  for  filing  with the
Securities and Exchange  Commission.  The Audit  Committee also  recommended the
appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as the Company's independent auditors
for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2001.

                                            Audit Committee:
                                            William T. Alt
                                            Robert E. Bosworth
                                            Hugh O. Maclellan, Jr.


         Nominating Committee. The Board does not maintain a standing nominating
committee or other committee performing similar functions.

         Compensation  Committee Interlocks and Insider  Participation.  Messrs.
Alt, Bosworth,  Maclellan,  and Scudder served as the Compensation  Committee in
2000.  None of such  individuals has been an officer or employee of the Company.
Mr. Scudder's law firm serves as the Company's  corporate and securities counsel
and earned approximately $261,756 in fees for legal services during 2000.


                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

         In 2000,  the  Company  engaged in several  transactions  with Clyde M.
Fuller,  a holder of  approximately  11.5% of the Company's  outstanding  Common
Stock. He is the stepfather of David R. Parker and is employed by the Company at
a nominal salary.  The terms of all  transactions  were negotiated by Mr. Fuller
and Mr.  Parker.  Tenn-Ga Truck Sales,  Inc., a corporation  wholly owned by Mr.
Fuller,  purchased used tractors from the Company for approximately $2.0 million
during  2000,  and leased  revenue  equipment  to the Company for  approximately
$700,000.  The price paid for the used  tractors  was the same offer the Company
had  received  from the  equipment  manufacturer  and the  Company  believes  it
represented fair market value. J-Mar Truck Lines, Inc. ("J-Mar"),  a corporation
wholly  owned by Mr.  Fuller,  purchased  used  trailers  from the  Company  for
approximately $1.4 million in March of 2000, in exchange for an interest-bearing
promissory  note which was repaid in full in November  2000.  The purchase price
was higher than the offer  received  from the  equipment  manufacturer,  and the
Company  believes it  represented  fair market value.  In June 2000, the Company
elected  to lease  the  trailers  from  J-Mar  in the  amount  of  approximately
$227,200.  In November 2000, due to an increased  operational  need arising from
the CTS  acquisition,  the Company elected to repurchase the trailers from J-Mar
in the amount of approximately $1.3 million.  In February 2000, the Company sold
approximately  2.5  acres of land to Mr.  Fuller  for  $88,000  in the form of a
non-interest-bearing  promissory  note with an 18-month  term.  The Company also
paid a bonus  of  approximately  $500,000  to Mr.  Fuller  for his  services  in
negotiating a favorable tractor purchase and trade package during 2000.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  UNANIMOUSLY  RECOMMENDS THAT  STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
"FOR" THE NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR PRESENTED IN PROPOSAL 1.

                                       4



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         The following  table sets forth  information  concerning the annual and
long-term  compensation  paid to the chief executive  officer and the four other
named executive officers of the Company (the "Named Officers"),  for services in
all  capacities  to the Company for the fiscal  years ended  December  31, 2000,
1999, and 1998.



                           Summary Compensation Table
-------------------------- ------ ------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------ ------------------
                                                                                   Long Term Compensation
                                                                             ------------------------------------
                                              Annual Compensation                    Awards            Payouts
                                  ------------------------------------------ ----------------------- ------------
                                                                                          Securities
                                                                             Restricted   Underlying
   Name and Principal                                        Other Annual      Stock       Options       LTIP         All Other
       Position             Year     Salary      Bonus(1)   Compensation(2)    Award(s)     (#)(1)      Payouts     Compensation(3)
-------------------------- ------ ------------ ----------- ----------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------------
                                                                                          
David R. Parker            2000      $509,135       -             -              -          120,000       -            $5,407
Chairman, President, and   1999      $496,875    $216,176         -              -           17,206       -            $9,376
Chief Executive Officer    1998      $487,500    $172,813         -              -           18,250       -            $8,828
-------------------------- ------ ------------ ----------- ----------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------------
Michael W. Miller
Executive Vice President   2000      $241,250       -          $27,600           -           60,000       -               -
and Chief Operating        1999      $226,912     $98,938         -              -           13,298       -               -
Officer                    1998      $179,210     $86,000         -              -           10,000       -               -
-------------------------- ------ ------------ ----------- ----------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------------
Ronald B. Pope             2000      $145,193       -             -              -           30,000       -               -
Senior Vice                1999      $124,016     $54,656         -              -            9,322       -               -
President-Sales/Marketing  1998      $108,323     $39,926         -              -           10,000       -               -
-------------------------- ------ ------------ ----------- ----------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------------
R. H. Lovin, Jr.           2000      $113,879       -          $13,200           -           40,000       -               -
Vice President-            1999      $106,732     $47,336         -              -            9,078       -               -
Administration             1998      $102,891     $39,414         -              -            7,500       -               -
-------------------------- ------ ------------ ----------- ----------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------------
Joey B. Hogan              2000      $166,539       -             -              -           50,000       -               -
Chief Financial Officer    1999      $155,770     $68,157         -              -           12,272       -               -
and Treasurer              1998      $136,732     $56,250         -              -           10,000       -               -
-------------------------- ------ ------------ ----------- ----------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ------------------

-----------------------------------



(1)      No bonus  was paid in 2000.  For  prior  years,  amount  reflects  cash
         portion of bonus  earned by the Named  Officer  during the fiscal  year
         covered.  In 1999, the cash portion is equal to 75% of the bonus earned
         under  the  Named  Officers'  bonus  program.  In  accordance  with the
         program,  the  remaining 25% was paid through  issuance of  immediately
         exercisable  stock  options  at the rate of an option on 100 shares for
         each $1,000 of bonus payment  foregone.  For 1999,  the Named  Officers
         received  options  under the  bonus  program,  with no market  value at
         February 29, 2000 (the date of the grant),  to purchase  the  following
         number of shares of Class A Common Stock: David Parker - 7,206; Michael
         Miller  - 3,298;  Joey  Hogan - 2,272;  Ronald  Pope - 1,822;  and R.H.
         Lovin, Jr. - 1,578.
(2)      For all Named  Officers  other  than Michael W. Miller and R.H.  Lovin,
         Jr., other  annual  compensation  did  not  exceed  10%  of  such Named
         Officer's  total  salary for any  reported  year.  The  amounts  listed
         for  Messrs.  Miller  and Lovin reflect  the amount of  the Company car
         allowance for each.
(3)      Reportable  portion  of premiums paid  on split-dollar  life  insurance
         policies.

                                       5



The following table lists stock options granted to the Named Officers during the
fiscal  year ended  December  31,  2000.  The  Company has not granted any stock
appreciation rights ("SARs").




---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          Option/SAR Grants in Last Fiscal Year
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   Potential realizable
                                                                                                 value at assumed annual
                                                                                                   rates of stock price
                                                                                                 appreciation for option
                                      Individual Grants                                                    term
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------
                            Number of                                 Exercise
                           securities         Percent of total         or base     Expiration
          Name             underlying     options/SARs granted to       price         Date        5% ($)        10% ($)
                             options      employees in fiscal year     ($/Sh)
                           granted (#)
------------------------- -------------- --------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------
                                                                                           
David R. Parker                   7,206                                   13.125    02/29/2010       59,478        150,735
                                 10,000            20.7%                 12.1875    05/18/2010       76,650        194,245
                                110,000                                     8.00    07/27/2010      553,410      1,402,500
------------------------- -------------- --------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------
Michael W. Miller                 3,298                                   13.125    02/29/2010       27,222         68,988
                                 10,000            10.3%                 12.1875    05/18/2010       76,650        194,245
                                 50,000                                     8.00    07/27/2010      251,550        637,500
------------------------- -------------- --------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------
Ronald B. Pope                    1,822                                   13.125    02/29/2010       15,039         38,113
                                  7,500             5.2%                 12.1875    05/18/2010       57,487        145,684
                                 22,500                                     8.00    07/27/2010      113,198        286,875
------------------------- -------------- --------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------
R.H. Lovin, Jr.                   1,578                                   13.125    02/29/2010       13,025         33,009
                                  7,500             6.8%                 12.1875    05/18/2010       57,487        145,684
                                 32,500                                     8.00    07/27/2010      163,508        414,375
------------------------- -------------- --------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------
Joey B. Hogan                     2,272                                   13.125    02/29/2010       18,753         47,526
                                 10,000             8.5%                 12.1875    05/18/2010       76,650        194,245
                                 40,000                                     8.00    07/27/2010      201,240        510,000
------------------------- -------------- --------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------



       The  following  table  demonstrates  that no options  under the Plan were
exercised during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2000, by the Named Officers.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        Aggregated Option Exercises in Last Fiscal Year and FY-End Option Values
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         Number of Securities
                              Shares                  Underlying Unexercised Options        Value of Unexercised
                             Acquired                      at Fiscal Year End                   In-the-Money
                                on         Value                  (#)                  Options at Fiscal Year End(1) ($)
                             Exercise   Realized   ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------
        Name                   (#)          ($)        Exercisable      Unexercisable      Exercisable     Unexercisable
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------- ------------------ ---------------- -----------------
                                                                                       
David R. Parker                -0-          -0-         129,705           159,501              0             302,500
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------- ------------------ ---------------- -----------------
Michael W. Miller              -0-          -0-          57,297           75,001               0             137,500
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------- ------------------ ---------------- -----------------
Ronald B. Pope                 -0-          -0-          28,988           40,334               0              61,875
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------- ------------------ ---------------- -----------------
R. H. Lovin, Jr.               -0-          -0-          45,078           50,500               0              89,375
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------- ------------------ ---------------- -----------------
Joey B. Hogan                  -0-          -0-          27,271           70,001               0             110,000
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------- ------------------ ---------------- -----------------



(1)    Based on the $10.75  closing price of the Company's  Class A Common Stock
       on December  29, 2000.

                                       6



         The  Company  does not have a  long-term  incentive  plan or a  defined
benefit or actuarial plan and has never issued any stock appreciation rights.

Employment Agreements

         The  Company  currently  does not have any  employment,  severance,  or
change-in-control  agreements with any of its executive officers. However, under
certain  circumstances  in which  there  is a  change  of  control,  holders  of
outstanding  stock  options  granted  under the Plan may be entitled to exercise
such options notwithstanding that such options may otherwise not have been fully
exercisable.  The Board of Directors has the authority to extend  similar rights
to holders of additional awards under the Plan.

Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation

         The  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of  Directors  prepared  the
following report on executive compensation.

         The approach to determining executive  compensation  generally consists
of three elements: base salary, annual stock option grants, and an annual bonus.
For 2000, the Chief  Executive  Officer  participated in the same program as the
other  executive  officers  and was  evaluated  on the same  basis as the  other
executive  officers.  The Compensation  Committee believes that the annual bonus
program  directly links  corporate  performance to executive  compensation.  The
Compensation Committee also believes that the annual stock option grants and the
stock-based component of the annual bonus indirectly link executive compensation
to corporate performance to the extent corporate performance is reflected in the
Company's stock price.

         The  Compensation  Committee  has  reviewed  the base  salaries  of its
executive  officers and believes  such  salaries are nearly  comparable to those
earned  by  similarly-situated  executives.  Under  the  executive  compensation
program,  increases in base salaries are intended to slow after executives reach
target  salaries  identified by the  Compensation  Committee.  The  Compensation
Committee   may   adjust   the   targets   as   executives   assume   additional
responsibilities.  In 2000,  the Company  continued  to move Mr.  Miller and Mr.
Hogan toward their target salaries.  Mr. Parker's salary,  which had essentially
remained  the same since the  Company's  initial  public  offering in 1994,  was
increased to $525,000 in May of 2000.

         The annual stock option element of the  compensation  program  provides
that each  executive  will be granted an annual  stock  option to purchase up to
10,000 shares of the  Company's  Class A Common Stock at the market price on the
date of the annual  meeting  under the  Company's  incentive  stock plan for key
employees. In July 2000, the Board of Directors accelerated the vesting schedule
of certain stock options  granted in years 1998,  1999, and 2000 to vest ratably
over three  years and expire ten years from the date of grant.  Certain  options
granted prior to 1998 vest ratably over five years and expire ten years from the
date of grant. The Compensation  Committee  believes that a multi-year  granting
and vesting schedule will encourage the executives to remain with the Company.

         During  2000,  the  Compensation   Committee  accelerated  the  vesting
schedule for stock options  granted in 1998,  1999,  and 2000, and awarded a one
time stock option grant as an incentive for senior  management.  This action was
in  addition to the usual  compensation  formula  utilized  by the  Compensation
Committee,  to  acknowledge  that  the  trucking  industry's  current  difficult
operating climate has not resulted in adequate reward for sustained effort.

         The  annual  bonus  element of the  compensation  program  permits  the
executives  to earn a percentage of their salary based upon the  achievement  of
individual and corporate goals for that year. For senior management,  60% to 75%
of the bonus is based upon  attaining or exceeding the earnings per share target
established  at the  beginning of the year.  The remainder of the bonus is based
upon achieving certain individual goals that are established at the beginning of
each year. The Board of Directors  establishes the goals for the Chief Executive
Officer,  and the Chief Executive Officer  establishes the goals for the rest of
the executives.

         The initial  bonus amounts for the  executives  are adjusted up or down
based  upon the  Company's  ranking  among its peer  group of  companies  in the
following  performance  measures:  revenue  growth,  earnings per share  growth,
pretax margin,  and return on average equity.  The peer group  identified by the
Compensation  Committee consists of Swift  Transportation,  Werner  Enterprises,
M.S.  Carriers,  U.S. Xpress  Enterprises,  and Transport Corp. of America.  The
annual bonus for senior  management  is limited to 75% of the  executive's  base
salary.  The Company must achieve its earnings per share goal for any individual
bonus to be paid.  There is an exception for individual  goal bonuses to be paid
if the Company  achieves at least a threshold  percentage  of the  earnings  per
share goal and ranks first or second in its peer group.

         The executives currently must accept at least 25% of their annual bonus
in the form of stock-based  compensation and may choose to receive up to 100% of
the bonus in the form of stock-based  compensation.  The Compensation  Committee
believes that this bonus program provides incentives to grow earnings per share,
achieve  individual  goals, and perform at or above the level of peer companies.
For 2000,  the Company  was ranked  third of six by the  Compensation  Committee
among

                                       7



its peer  group in the  designated  performance  measures  and each of the Named
Officer executives met at least 75% of his established personal goals.  However,
the Company did not achieve the designated  percentage of its earnings per share
goal. Accordingly, no bonuses were earned for 2000.



                                            Compensation Committee

                                            William T. Alt
                                            Robert E. Bosworth
                                            Hugh O. Maclellan, Jr.
                                            Mark A. Scudder

                                       8




                  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS
                                 AND MANAGEMENT

         The following  table sets forth,  as of March 20, 2001,  the number and
percentage  of  outstanding  shares of Common Stock  beneficially  owned by each
person known by the Company to  beneficially  own more than 5% of such stock, by
each  director  and Named  Officer  of the  Company,  and by all  directors  and
executive officers of the Company as a group.




                                 SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS AND MANAGEMENT
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                               Amount & Nature of
                                                                                   Beneficial
    Title of Class              Name of Beneficial Owner(1)                       Ownership(2)          Percent of Class
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                                                                                           
                                                                                                        36.17% of Class A
  Class A & Class B     David R. Parker &                                                               100.0% of Class B
        Common          Jacqueline F. Parker                                      6,545,758(3)           46.92% of Total
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
    Class A Common      Michael W. Miller                                            65,924                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
    Class A Common      R. H. Lovin, Jr.                                             49,250                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
    Class A Common      Joey B. Hogan                                                40,949                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
    Class A Common      Ronald B. Pope                                               37,778                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                        William T. Alt
                        300 Forest Avenue
    Class A Common      Chattanooga, TN  37405                                        7,000                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                        Hugh O. Maclellan, Jr.
                        501 Provident Building
    Class A Common      Chattanooga, TN  37402                                       28,200                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
    Class A Common      Mark A. Scudder(4)                                           11,650                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                        Robert E. Bosworth(5)
                        174 Meadow Pond Run
    Class A Common      Lookout Mountain, GA  30750                                  29,700                     *
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                                                                                                        13.86% of Class A
    Class A Common      Clyde M. Fuller(6)                                          1,607,500            11.52% of Total
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                                                                                                        9.03% of Class A
    Class A Common      Dimensional Fund Advisors Inc.(7)                           1,047,200            7.51% of Total
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
                                                                                                        9.43% of Class A
    Class A Common      FMR Corp.(8)                                                1,094,200            7.84% of Total
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------
  Class A & Class B     All directors and executive officers as a group
        Common          (9 persons)                                                 6,816,209            48.86% of Total
----------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------------------- --------------------------

---------------------



*        Less than one percent (1%).
(1)      The business address of Mr. and Mrs. Parker,  Mr. Lovin, Mr. Hogan, Mr.
         Pope,   Mr.  Miller,   and  Mr.  Fuller  is  400  Birmingham   Highway,
         Chattanooga, TN 37419.
(2)      In accordance  with  applicable  rules  under the  Securities  Exchange
         Act of 1934,  as amended,  the number of shares of Class A Common Stock
         beneficially  owned  includes the  following  shares  underlying  stock
         options that are exercisable or will become  exercisable within 60 days
         following  March 20, 2001:  Mr .Parker - 133,038;  Mr. Miller - 60,630;
         Mr. Lovin - 47,578;  Mr. Pope - 31,488;  Mr. Hogan - 35,604;  Mr. Alt -
         7,000;  Mr.  Maclellan - 7,000; Mr. Scudder - 7,000; and Mr. Bosworth -
         7,000. The beneficial ownership also

                                       9



         includes  the  following  shares  held  by  the  Named  Officer  in the
         Company's  401(k) Plan:  Mr. Parker - 7,720;  Mr.  Miller - 5,294;  Mr.
         Lovin - 1,672; Mr. Hogan 1,945; and Mr. Pope - 6,190.
(3)      Includes  4,055,000 shares of Class A Common Stock and 2,350,000 shares
         of Class B Common Stock,  of which are all owned by Mr. and Mrs. Parker
         as Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship,  except 200,000 shares of
         Class A Common Stock owned by the Parker Family Limited Partnership, of
         which Mr. and Mrs. Parker are general  partners.  Also includes 133,038
         shares of Class A Common Stock  underlying stock options granted to Mr.
         Parker that are exercisable or will become  exercisable  within 60 days
         following  March 20, 2001,  and 7,720 shares held by Mr.  Parker in the
         Company's 401(k) Plan.
(4)      Mr.  Scudder's  business  address  is 411 S. 13th  Street,  Suite  200,
         Lincoln,  NE 68508.  His holdings  include 200 shares of Class A Common
         Stock held as  custodian  for a minor child under the Uniform  Gifts to
         Minors  Act,  as to which  beneficial  ownership  is  disclaimed.  Also
         includes 7,000 shares of Class A Common Stock  underlying stock options
         granted to Mr. Scudder that are exercisable or will become  exercisable
         within 60 days of March 20, 2001.
(5)      Mr.  Bosworth's  holdings include 22,700 shares of Class A Common Stock
         held by Hamico,  Inc., a charitable  foundation for which Mr.  Bosworth
         serves as  director  and  executive  officer.  Mr.  Bosworth  disclaims
         beneficial  ownership  of all such  shares  held by Hamico,  Inc.  Also
         includes 7,000 shares of Class A Common Stock  underlying stock options
         granted to Mr. Bosworth that are exercisable or will become exercisable
         within 60 days of March 20, 2001.
(6)      Includes  1,575,000 shares of Class A Common  Stock and  32,500  shares
         of Class A Common  Stock underlying exercisable stock options.
(7)      As  reported on  Form 13G filed  with  the  SEC  February 2, 2001.  The
         business  address   of  Dimensional  Fund  Advisors  Inc.,  a  Delaware
         corporation, is 1299 Ocean Avenue, 11th Floor, Santa Monica, CA  90401.
(8)      As  reported  on Form 13G filed with the SEC  February  13,  2001.  The
         business  address of FMR Corp.  is 82  Devonshire  Street,  Boston,  MA
         02109.   Includes  361,000  shares   beneficially   owned  by  Fidelity
         Management  Trust  Company,  and 733,200 shares  beneficially  owned by
         Fidelity Management & Research Company.

                                       10



                             STOCK PERFORMANCE GRAPH

                COMPARISON OF FIVE-YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
                 PERFORMANCE GRAPH FOR COVENANT TRANSPORT, INC.

         The following graph compares the cumulative total stockholder return of
the Company's Class A Common Stock with the cumulative total stockholder  return
of  the  Nasdaq  Stock  Market  (U.S.  Companies)  and  the  Nasdaq  Trucking  &
Transportation  Stocks  commencing  December 29, 1995,  and ending  December 29,
2000.

                            GRAPH WAS CENTERED HERE
                                IN PRINTED FORM




                                           Legend
Symbol       CRSP Total Returns Index for:             12/1995   12/1996   12/1997   12/1998   12/1999   12/2000
------       -----------------------------             -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
                                                                                    
--------- #  Covenant Transport, Inc.                   100.0     119.8     127.1     149.0     144.8       89.6
--- - --- *  Nasdaq Stock Market (US Companies)         100.0     128.0     150.7     212.5     394.9      237.6
- - - - - ^  Nasdaq Trucking & Transportation Stocks    100.0     110.4     141.3     127.1     122.8      111.7
             SIC 3700-3799, 4200-4299, 4400-4599, 4700-4799 US & Foreign



Notes:
    A.  The lines represent  monthly index  levels derived from compounded daily
        returns that include all dividends.
    B.  The indexes are reweighted daily, using the market capitalization on the
        previous trading day.
    C.  If the monthly interval, based on the fiscal year-end, is  not a trading
        day, the preceding trading day is used.
    D.  The index level for all serives was set to $100.0 on 12/29/1995.


Prepared  by CRSP  (www.crsp.uchicago.edu),  Center  for  Research  in  Security
Prices,  Graduate  School of  Business,  The  University  of Chicago.  Used with
permission. All rights reserved.

The stock  performance  graph  assumes  $100 was  invested on December 29, 1995.
There can be no assurance  that the Company's  stock  performance  will continue
into the future with the same or similar trends depicted in the graph above. The
Company will not make or endorse any predictions as to future stock performance.
The CRSP Index for Nasdaq Trucking & Transportation Stocks includes all publicly
held truckload motor carriers traded on the Nasdaq Stock Market,  as well as all
Nasdaq companies within the Standard Industrial Code Classifications  3700-3799,
4200-4299,  4400-4599,  and 4700-4799 US & Foreign. The Company will provide the
names of all companies in such index upon request.

                                       11



      COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(a) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

         Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934  requires  the
Company's  officers  and  directors,  and  persons  who own  more  than 10% of a
registered  class  of the  Company's  equity  securities,  to  file  reports  of
ownership  and  changes in  ownership  with the SEC.  Officers,  directors,  and
greater  than 10%  stockholders  are required by SEC  regulation  to furnish the
Company  with copies of all Section  16(a) forms they file.  Based solely upon a
review  of the  copies  of such  forms  furnished  to the  Company,  or  written
representations  that no Forms 5 were  required,  the Company  believes that its
officers,  directors,  and greater than 10% beneficial  owners complied with all
Section  16(a)  filing  requirements  applicable  to them  during the  Company's
preceding  fiscal year,  except that a Form 5 for Clyde Fuller with respect to a
grant of stock options which occurred in July 2000, was not filed until March of
2001.

                                   PROPOSAL 2
                    RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT
                               PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

         The  Board of  Directors  has  selected  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as
independent  public  accountants  for the  Company  for the fiscal  year  ending
December 31, 2001.  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP has served as independent public
accountants    for    the    Company    since    1992.     Representatives    of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP are expected to be present at the Annual Meeting and
will have an  opportunity  to make a statement,  if they desire to do so, and to
respond to appropriate questions.

                       Fiscal Year 2000 Audit Fee Summary

         During fiscal year 2000,  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP provided services
in the following  categories to the Company,  and the Company paid the following
amounts to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP:

         Financial information audit fees                     $ 94,300
         System design & implementation fees                  $ 0
         All other fees                                       $ 196,700

The Audit Committee has considered  whether the provision of non-audit  services
by the Company's auditor is compatible with maintaining auditor independence.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  UNANIMOUSLY  RECOMMENDS THAT  STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
"FOR"  PROPOSAL  2 TO RATIFY  THE  SELECTION  OF  PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS  LLP AS
INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS FOR THE COMPANY.

                                   PROPOSAL 3
              APPROVAL OF AMENDED AND RESTATED INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN

Description of Plan

         In August  1994,  the  Company's  Board of Directors  and  stockholders
adopted an  Incentive  Stock Plan (the  "Plan") to attract and retain  executive
personnel and other key employees and motivate them through  incentives that are
aligned with the  Company's  goals of increased  profitability  and  stockholder
value.  The Company  adopted  amendments to the Plan on August 15, 1996, May 20,
1999,  and July 27,2000.  Awards may be in the form of incentive  stock options,
non-qualified  stock options,  restricted  stock awards,  or any other awards of
stock consistent with the Plan's purpose.  The Plan is administered by the Board
of Directors or a committee that may be appointed by the Board of Directors. All
employees are eligible for  participation,  and actual  participants in the Plan
are selected from  time-to-time  by the  administrator.  The  administrator  may
substitute  new stock  options  for  previously  granted  options.  No awards of
incentive stock options may be made after the period under applicable provisions
of the Internal Revenue Code. In 1999, stockholders approved an amendment to the
Plan to  increase  the  shares of Class A Common  Stock  reserved  for  issuance
pursuant to the Plan to 1,300,000. To date, 1,296,966 shares remain reserved for
stock issuance  pursuant to the Plan. The Company has awarded  options and other
grants (less  cancellations)  covering  approximately  1,192,610 of such shares,
including  683,676 shares  underlying  options and other grants to its executive
officers.

Plan Amendment and Restatement

         The proposed  Amendment and  Restatement  of the Plan (the "Amended and
Restated Plan") would amend the Plan to reserve an additional  1,003,034  shares
of Class A Common  Stock  for  issuance,  bringing  the  total  number of shares
subject to the Amended and Restated Plan to  2,300,000,  and restate the Plan to
incorporate the prior amendments

                                       12



and the  proposed  amendment.  The  Amended  and  Restated  Plan is  included as
Appendix  B to the Proxy  Statement.  The  Board of  Directors  has  unanimously
recommended  approval  of  Proposal  3 and  believes  that the  ability to offer
additional equity incentives is important to providing  compensation that aligns
the interests of employees and stockholders. The market price of the stock as of
December 31, 2000, was $10.75,  which results in the stock underlying the entire
additional  1,003,034  shares  covered by the Amended and Restated Plan having a
market value of $10.8 million at such date.

Federal Income Tax Consequences for Incentive Stock Options

         Options  granted as an incentive  stock option  ("ISO") are intended to
qualify under Section 422 of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code") for special tax treatment. Neither the grant of the ISO nor the exercise
of the ISO by a  participant  ("Optionee")  will  result in the  recognition  of
taxable income to the Optionee.  However,  the exercise of an ISO will result in
an item of tax preference to an Optionee  potentially subject to the alternative
minimum  tax.  The  ultimate  sale or other  disposition  by the Optionee of the
shares  obtained  upon  exercise of the ISO will result in capital  gain or loss
equal to the  difference  between the fair market  value on the date of sale and
the exercise price. The Company will not have a deduction with regard to the ISO
at the time of the grant,  the  exercise  or the  ultimate  sale of the  shares.
Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  if an Optionee sells or disposes of the shares
prior to two years  after the date of the grant of the ISO or one year after the
date of the exercise,  the Optionee will  recognize  compensation  income on the
sale to the  extent  the value on the date of  exercise  exceeded  the  exercise
price.  The excess of the amount received on the sale over the value on the date
of  exercise  will  be  capital  gain.  In the  case  of  such  a  disqualifying
disposition of shares, the Company may deduct the amount of income recognized as
compensation income. A person entitled to exercise the ISO after the death of an
Optionee  may sell the stock  obtained on the  exercise of an option at any time
without regard to the normal holding requirements.  In addition to the foregoing
federal tax  considerations,  the  exercise of an ISO and the  ultimate  sale or
other  disposition of the shares acquired  thereby will in most cases be subject
to state income taxation.

Federal Income Tax Consequences for Nonstatutory Stock Options

         An Optionee does not realize any compensation  income upon the grant of
a Nonstatutory  Stock Option ("NSO").  Additionally,  the Company may not take a
tax  deduction  at the time of the grant.  Upon  exercise of an NSO, an Optionee
realizes  and  must  report  as  compensation  income  an  amount  equal  to the
difference  between  the  fair  market  value of the  securities  on the date of
exercise and the exercise price.  The Company is entitled to take a deduction at
the same time and in the same  amount as the  Optionee  reports as  compensation
income, provided the Company withholds federal income tax in accordance with the
Code and applicable Treasury  regulations.  In addition to the foregoing federal
tax  considerations,  the exercise of an Option and the  ultimate  sale or other
disposition of the shares of Common Stock acquired thereby will in most cases be
subject to state income taxation.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  UNANIMOUSLY  RECOMMENDS THAT  STOCKHOLDERS VOTE
"FOR"  PROPOSAL 3 TO AMEND AND  RESTATE THE  INCENTIVE  STOCK PLAN TO RESERVE AN
ADDITIONAL   1,003,034   SHARES  OF  CLASS  A  COMMON   STOCK  FOR  ISSUANCE  TO
PARTICIPANTS, FOR A TOTAL OF 2,300,000 SHARES.

                              STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

         Stockholder  proposals  intended  to be  presented  at the 2002  Annual
Meeting of the  Stockholders  of the Company  must be received by the  Corporate
Secretary  of the Company at the  Company's  principal  executive  offices on or
before December 15, 2001, to be included in the Company's proxy material related
to that meeting.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

         The Board of Directors does not intend to present at the Annual Meeting
any matters other than those described herein and does not presently know of any
matters that will be presented by other parties.

                                            Covenant Transport, Inc.


                                            /s/ David R. Parker
                                            David R. Parker
                                            Chairman of the Board

April 9, 2001

                                       13




                                   Appendix A

                         CHARTER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
                                       OF
                             THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                                       OF
                            COVENANT TRANSPORT, INC.

                                  May 12, 2000

                                    Recitals.

                  On February 8, 1999, the Securities and Exchange  Commission's
Blue  Ribbon  Committee  on  Improving  the  Effectiveness  of  Corporate  Audit
Committees   (the  "Blue   Ribbon   Committee")   issued  a  report   containing
recommendations  for improving the  effectiveness of corporate audit committees.
The Blue Ribbon  Committee  directed its  recommendations  to the Securities and
Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission"),  the New  York  Stock  Exchange  (the
"NYSE"),  the American Stock Exchange (the "AMEX"),  the National Association of
Securities  Dealers (the "NASD"),  and the Auditing  Standards Board (the "ASB")
(collectively,    the   "Regulatory   Authorities").    In   response   to   its
recommendations,  the Regulatory  Authorities have adopted new rules and amended
existing rules pertaining to corporate audit committees.

                  The Board of Directors  (the  "Board") of Covenant  Transport,
Inc., a Nevada corporation (the "Company"),  in response to actions taken by the
Regulatory  Authorities,  now adopts this Amended and Restated  Audit  Committee
Charter (this "Charter"). This Charter describes the duties and responsibilities
of the Company's  audit  committee (the "Audit  Committee") and grants the Audit
Committee the authority necessary to perform its oversight responsibility.

                                    Charter.

                  1.  Purpose  of Audit  Committee.  The  purpose  of the  Audit
Committee is to assist the Board in fulfilling its  responsibility to ensure the
fairness and accuracy of the Company's  financial  statements  and to ensure the
existence of appropriate  internal financial  controls,  and the independence of
the independent  public  accountant's  engaged to audit the Company's  financial
statements (the "external auditors"),  and to render the reports required of the
Audit Committee  pursuant to Item 306 of Regulation SK, and to allow the Company
to make the  disclosures  required by Item 7(e)(3) of Schedule 14(A) and related
Commission regulations.

                  2.  Qualifications  of Audit  Committee.  The Audit  Committee
shall consist of not less than three nor more than five directors,  each of whom
meets the definition of an "independent  director" specified by Rule 4200 of the
NASDAQ  Stock  Market,   Inc.'s   listing   requirements,   unless   exceptional
circumstances exist that under NASDAQ listing requirements would allow the Audit
Committee to include one non-independent  director member, who may not be either
a current employee or immediate family member of a current employee. Each member
of the Audit Committee shall be generally familiar with the general requirements
of financial reporting.

                  3.  Duties  of the  Audit  Committee.  Subject  to the  second
sentence of Paragraph 10, the Audit Committee will perform the following  duties
in the manner and priority the Audit Committee determines, in its discretion, to
be appropriate under the circumstances:

                  (a) Review the Company's  earnings  statements with management
and with the Company's external auditors prior to the release of such statements
to the public;

                  (b) Assure that the Company's interim financial statements are
reviewed  by the  Company's  external  auditors,  as required by Item 3 10(b) of
Regulation SK, prior to the filing of such interim financial statements with the
Commission as part of the Company's report on Form 10-K;

                                       14




                  (c)  Review  and  discuss  the  Company's   audited  financial
statements with management;

                  (d)  Review  and  discuss  the  Company's   audited  financial
statements with the Company's  external  auditors and shall review those matters
required to be discussed  by SAS-61,  as modified or  supplemented  from time to
time;
                  (e) Receive the  written  disclosures  and the letter from the
Company's  external auditors required by Independent  Standards Board's Standard
No. 1, as modified or  supplemented,  discuss with the external  auditors  their
independence,  and review all audit and other services performed by the external
auditors  for the Company to assure that such  services  do not  compromise  the
external auditors' independence;

                  (f) Review annually the scope of the external  auditors' work,
including any non-auditing or consulting services;

                  (g)  Review  with  the   Company's   external   auditors   all
adjustments  made to the Company's  audited  financial  statements,  including a
reconciliation of any adjustments made in the audited financial  statements from
the Company's quarterly interim financial statements;

                  (h) Review with management and the Company's external auditors
any significant financial reporting issues or judgments called for in connection
with the  preparation  of the  Company's  financial  statements,  including  the
adequacy  and  appropriateness  of  any  reserves,   policies  relating  to  the
recognition  of  revenue,  the  quality  and  appropriateness  of the  Company's
accounting  principles,  and any other matters  which,  in its judgment,  or the
judgment of the Company's external auditors, could have a material impact on the
Company's financial statements;

                  (i)  Meet  with  the  Company's  external  auditors  and  with
management  to review and assess any  material  financial  risk  exposure to the
Company  and the steps  management  has or plans to take to monitor  and control
financial risk;

                  (j) Review with the Company's external auditors and management
the adequacy of the Company's internal financial controls and reporting systems;

                  (k) Confer  with the  Company's  external  auditors  about any
matters described in Section 10A of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 that
may have come to the attention of the external auditors;

                  (1) Review any major  changes to the  Company's  auditing  and
accounting  policies and practices  suggested by the Company's external auditors
or by management. (In undertaking the duties specified herein, in communications
with the Company's  external  auditors,  the Audit Committee will, in accordance
with SAS-6 1, communicate with the external auditors with respect to (1) methods
used to  account  for  significant  or unusual  transactions;  (2) the effect of
significant  accounting  policies in  controversial  or emerging areas for which
there is a lack of authoritative guidance or consensus;  (3) the process used by
management in formulating  particularly sensitive accounting estimates,  and the
basis  for the  auditors  conclusions  regarding  the  reasonableness  of  those
estimates;  and (4) disagreements with management,  if any, over the application
of accounting principles,  the basis for management's accounting estimates,  and
the disclosures in the Company's financial statements);

                  (m) Recommend  annually the  selection  and  engagement of the
Company's  external  auditors and review  their fees and the proposed  scope and
plan of the annual audit;

                  (n)  Review  the  external  auditors'  management  letter  and
consider any comments made by the external auditors with respect to improvements
in the  internal  accounting  controls of the Company,  consider any  corrective
action  recommended by the external  auditors,  and review any corrective action
taken by management;

                                       15



                  (o)  Review  and  devote  attention  to  any  areas  in  which
management  and the  Company's  external  auditors  disagree and  determine  the
reasons for such disagreement;

                  (p) Review the  performance  of the external  auditors and, if
appropriate,  recommend that the Board replace any external  auditor  failing to
perform satisfactorily;

                  (q) Review the  performance of the Company's  Chief  Financial
Officer and Controller;

                  (r) Review any  difficulties  any  external  auditor  may have
encountered  with  respect  to  performance  of  an  audit,  including,  without
limitation,  any  restrictions  placed  upon the scope of the audit on access to
information, or any changes in the proposed scope of the audit;

                  (s) Provide,  as part of the Company's proxy filed pursuant to
Regulation  14A or 14C,  as  applicable,  the  report  required  by Item  306 of
Regulation  SK and cause a copy of that  report to be  included  annually in the
Company's proxy solicitation materials;

                  (t) Periodically  review the adequacy of this Charter and make
recommendations to the Board with respect to any changes in this Charter.

                  4. Access to Information. In order to perform its obligations,
the Audit Committee shall have unrestricted  access to all relevant internal and
external  Company  information  and to any officer,  director or employee of the
Company.

                  5. Employee Access to Audit Committee.  Any person employed by
the Company and any of the Company's independent contractors will have access to
the Audit  Committee to report any matter which such person believes would be of
interest to the  AuditCommittee  or of general concern to the Audit Committee or
the  Board.   Contacting  a  member  of  the  Audit   Committee  to  report  any
irregularity, questionable activity, or other matter will not subject the person
making the report to discipline.

                  6. Frequency of Meetings.

                  (a) The Audit  Committee  will meet each quarter  prior to the
release of the Company's earnings  statements to review the earnings release. In
addition,  the Audit  Committee  will  convene  if a meeting  is  noticed by its
Chairman, any member of the Audit Committee,  any member of the Board, the Chief
Financial Officer, or the Chief Executive Officer.

                  (b) The  Audit  Committee,  at least  once a year,  will  meet
privately   with  the  Company's   external  and  internal   auditors,   and  no
representative of the Company's management shall attend such meetings.

                  7.  Access  to Legal  Counsel.  The  Audit  Committee,  at its
request,  shall have access to the  Company's  outside  legal  counsel,  and, if
requested,  to its own independent  legal counsel.  The Company will pay for the
cost of any such legal counsel.

                  8. Meeting Procedures.

                  (a) Members of the Audit  Committee  shall  endeavor to attend
all meetings of the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee may meet telephonically
or in person and may take  action  upon the written  consent of all  members.  A
majority of the Audit Committee will constitute a quorum for all purposes.

                  (b) Written minutes will be maintained for each meeting of the
Audit Committee.

                                       16




                  9. Other Duties.  The Audit  Committee will perform such other
duties as the Board may assign to it.

                  10. Limitation of Audit Committee Duties.  The Audit Committee
is not an  investigative  committee of the Board and shall have no investigative
duties unless expressly  assigned to the Audit Committee by the Board. The Audit
Committee  will exercise its business  judgment in  performing  its duties under
this Charter,  including  the duties  outlined in Paragraph 3, and may emphasize
and  prioritize  those  duties and  responsibilities  set forth  above which the
Committee,  in its  discretion  and judgment,  believes are the most  important,
given the particular circumstances. It is not the duty of the Audit Committee to
undertake the audit of the Company  itself,  to plan the audit,  or to undertake
any of the responsibilities of the Company's internal or external auditors.  The
Audit Committee is not required to follow the procedures required of auditors in
performing  reviews  of  interim  financial   statements  or  audited  financial
statements.  In  performing  its  functions,  the Audit  Committee may rely upon
information provided to it by management, by the Company's internal and external
auditors,  or by legal  counsel.  This  Charter  imposes  no duties on the Audit
Committee or its members that are greater than those duties  imposed by law upon
a director of a Nevada  corporation  under Section  78.138 of the Nevada General
Corporation Law. If any claim is asserted  against the Audit  Committee,  any of
its members or the Company by a stockholder or any other person, nothing in this
Charter  shall be construed  to limit or restrict  any defense  available to the
Audit Committee, any of its members, or the Company.

                                       17


                                   Appendix B

                            COVENANT TRANSPORT, INC.
                              INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN
                              Amended and Restated
                               as of May 17, 2001


                                    ARTICLE I
                                     GENERAL

        1.1 Purpose: The purpose of the Covenant Transport, Inc. Incentive Stock
Plan  (the  "Plan")  is to  attract  and  retain  the best  available  executive
personnel  and  other  key  employees  who  are  primarily  responsible  for the
management,  growth and success of the business, and to provide an incentive for
such  employees  to exert their best  efforts on behalf of  Covenant  Transport,
Inc., its subsidiaries and its stockholders.

        1.2  Establishment  and Approval of Plan:  Covenant  Transport,  Inc., a
Nevada corporation, (the "Corporation") adopted this Incentive Stock Plan, which
was approved by the unanimous votes of the Directors and  stockholders on August
4, 1994,  and amended on August 15, 1996, May 20, 1999, and July 27, 2000. As so
established  and approved,  this Plan shall be known as the Covenant  Transport,
Inc. Incentive Stock Plan.

        1.3  Administration:


                  a. The Plan shall be administered by the Board of Directors or
         a committee as appointed  from  time-to-time  by the Board of Directors
         (the Board of Directors or the  committee is  hereinafter  collectively
         referred to as the "Committee"). For all transactions involving Section
         16 "insiders" (i.e., executive officers,  directors,  and more than 10%
         stockholders), any Committee shall consist of at least two members, all
         members must also be members of the Board of Directors, and the members
         of such  Committee,  with respect to any award,  shall be Directors who
         are  non-employee  directors within the meaning of Rule 16b-3 under the
         Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 (the "Act") or any similar rule which
         may subsequently be in effect ("Rule 16b-3").


                b. The Committee  shall have the sole and complete  authority to
         select the employees to whom grants will be made ("Participants"), make
         Awards  (as  defined in  Section  1.5) in such forms and  amounts as it
         shall determine,  impose such limitations,  restrictions and conditions
         upon such Awards as it shall  determine,  construe  and  implement  the
         provisions  of the Plan and  adopt,  amend  or  rescind  administrative
         guidelines  relating  to the Plan,  correct  any defect or  omission or
         reconcile  any  inconsistency  in  this  Plan or in any  Award  granted
         hereunder,  and make all  other  determinations  and to take all  other
         actions   necessary   or   advisable   for   the   implementation   and
         administration of the Plan.  Decisions of the Committee shall be final,
         conclusive  and binding upon all persons,  including  the  Corporation,
         stockholders,  Participants  and all  other  persons.  No member of the
         Committee shall be liable for any action taken or decision made in good
         faith relating to the Plan or any Award thereunder.

                c. To the extent that any such action would not contravene  Rule
         16b-3,  the Committee  may delegate any of its  authority  hereunder to
         such persons as it deems appropriate.

        1.4  Eligibility  for  Participation:  Participants in the Plan shall be
selected by the Committee from the executive officers and other key employees of
the  Corporation  and its  subsidiaries  who occupy  responsible  managerial  or
professional  positions  and who have the  capability  of  making a  substantial
contribution to the success of the Corporation.  In making this selection and in
determining the form and amount of Awards, the Committee shall consider

                                       18



any  factors  it  deems  relevant,  including  the  individual's  functions  and
responsibilities,  the  value  of his  or her  service  to the  Corporation  and
potential contributions to the Corporation's profitability and sound growth.

        1.5 Types of Awards Under Plan: Awards under the Plan may be in the form
of any one or more of the following: as described in Article II, Incentive Stock
Options  ("ISOs") and  Non-statutory  Stock  Options  ("NSOs");  as described in
Article III,  Restricted  Stock  Awards  ("Restricted  Stock");  as described in
Article IV,  Reload  Options;  and as  described in Article V, Other Stock Based
Awards and Other Benefits (all  collectively  "Awards").  ISOs,  NSOs and Reload
Options are referred to individually as "Option" or Collectively as "Options."

        1.6 Shares Subject to Plan: The maximum number of shares of Common Stock
which may be issued for all purposes  under the Plan shall be Two Million  Three
Hundred Thousand (2,300,000).

                a. In the event of any change in the outstanding Common Stock by
         reason of a stock split, stock dividend, combination,  reclassification
         or exchange of Common Stock, recapitalization, merger, consolidation or
         other  event,  the  shares of Common  Stock  authorized  hereunder  and
         outstanding Awards, as applicable, shall be proportionately adjusted by
         the Committee in its sole  discretion  and any such  judgment  shall be
         binding and conclusive on all persons.  Provided,  however, in the case
         of ISOs, no such  adjustment  shall be made if the result thereof would
         be that the excess of the  aggregate  fair  market  value of the shares
         subject  to the  Option  immediately  after  the  adjustment  over  the
         aggregate  Exercise Price of such shares is more than the excess of the
         aggregate  fair  market  value  of all  shares  subject  to the  Option
         immediately  before such  substitution or assumption over the aggregate
         Exercise Price of such shares, or that the new Option or the assumption
         of the old Option gives the Participant additional benefits which he or
         she did not have under the old Option.

                b. Any shares of Common Stock subject to an Option which for any
         reason is canceled or terminated without having been exercised,  or any
         shares  of  Restricted  Stock  which  are  forfeited,  shall  again  be
         available  for Awards  under the Plan.  Fractional  shares shall not be
         issued.  The Committee  will  determine the manner in which  fractional
         share value(s) will be treated. Each Award shall state the total number
         of shares of Common Stock subject to the Awards.

        1.7 General Definitions:

                a. The term Subsidiary shall mean,  unless the context otherwise
         requires,  any corporation  (other than the Corporation) in an unbroken
         chain of  corporations  beginning  with the  Corporation if each of the
         corporations  other than the last  corporation in such chain owns stock
         possessing  at least fifty  percent (50%) of the voting power in one of
         the other  corporations in such chain. For the purpose of this section,
         stock  ownership  shall be determined in accordance with Section 424 of
         the Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended from time to time (the
         "Code").

                b. The term  Board of  Directors  shall  mean  only the Board of
         Directors  of the  Corporation.  The term  Director  shall  mean only a
         member of the Board of Directors.

                c. Except as limited in Section 2.7 below  relating to Incentive
         Stock  Options,  as  defined  in  Section  422 of the  Code,  the  term
         disability  shall have the meaning  determined  by the Committee in its
         sole discretion.

                                   ARTICLE II
                                  ISOs AND NSOs

        2.1 Award of ISOs and NSOs: The Committee may, from time-to-time, in its
sole  discretion and subject to such terms and conditions of this Plan and as it
may prescribe, award to any Participant options to purchase Common Stock, either
as a tax-qualified Option ("ISO") or as a non-statutory Option ("NSO").

        2.2  Agreements:  The  award of an ISO or NSO  shall be  evidenced  by a
signed  agreement  containing  such terms and conditions as the Committee may in
its  sole  discretion  determine  ("Agreement"),  so  long  as  such  terms  and
conditions are not  inconsistent  with this Plan. An ISO Agreement shall specify
that the Award is intended to qualify as

                                       19




an Incentive  Stock  Option,  as such term is defined in Section 422 of the Code
and Options issued thereunder shall comply with the applicable provisions of the
Code.

        2.3 Exercise Price: The purchase price of Common Stock under each ISO or
NSO (the "Exercise  Price") shall be (a) with respect to ISOs, not less than the
Fair Market  Value of the Common  Stock,  on the date the ISO is awarded  except
that,  in the  case of a  grantee  who is a 10% or  greater  stockholder  in the
Corporation, not less than 110% of the fair market value of the Common Stock, on
the date the ISO is awarded,  provided that the Exercise Price shall be adjusted
by the Committee with respect to Awards not already granted to remain consistent
with  restrictions  imposed by the Code and (b) with  respect to NSOs,  not less
than seventy  percent (70%) of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock, on the
date that the NSO is awarded.  In no event shall the Exercise Price of an ISO or
NSO be less than the par value of the Common  Stock.  "Fair Market  Value" means
the closing price of the Common Stock on the date an Option is awarded,  as such
price is reported by The Nasdaq Stock Market, other over-the-counter  market, or
stock exchange, as applicable.  If no reported quotation or sale of Common Stock
takes place on the date in  question,  the last  reported  closing  price of the
Common Stock shall be determinative.

        2.4 Exercise and Term of Options:

                a. Options shall be exercisable at such time and subject to such
         restrictions  and conditions as the Committee shall approve,  either at
         the  time  of  grant  of  such   Options  or   pursuant  to  a  general
         determination,  which  need not be the same for all  Participants.  The
         Committee shall establish  procedures governing the exercise of Options
         and shall require that written notice of exercise be given and that the
         Exercise  Price be paid in full.  In  connection  with any  Award,  the
         Committee  may specify such  vesting and  forfeiture  provisions  as it
         deems appropriate.  To the extent permitted by law, and consistent with
         Rule 16b-3,  the Committee may permit a Participant,  in lieu of paying
         the  Exercise  Price in full in cash,  to make  payment in Common Stock
         already  owned  by the  Participant,  or in the  value  of  surrendered
         Options which are then exercisable,  valued at Fair Market Value on the
         date of exercise,  as partial or full payment of the Exercise Price. As
         soon as  practicable  after  receipt of full payment,  the  Corporation
         shall  deliver  to  the   Participant  a  certificate  or  certificates
         representing the acquired shares of Common Stock.

                b. Subject to such terms and  conditions  as the  Committee  may
         establish from time-to-time, which terms and conditions with respect to
         ISOs shall not be  inconsistent  with the applicable  provisions of the
         Code and the Act, the Options may be exercised at any time prior to the
         expiration date of the Option  established by the Committee at the time
         of the Award.

                c.  Subject  to the  terms  and  conditions  established  by the
         Committee,  Options  may be  exercised  either for the total  number of
         shares  to which the  Options  relate or to such  portion  or  portions
         thereof as the Participant shall determine.  Unless otherwise  provided
         in the Agreement,  or the Code, Options may be exercised without regard
         to the sequence in which such Options were granted.

        2.5  Limitation  on ISOs:  Notwithstanding  anything  in the Plan to the
contrary,  the  following  additional  conditions  shall  apply to the  grant of
Options which are intended to qualify as ISOs, which  additional  conditions may
be modified from  time-to-time  by the Committee to remain  consistent  with the
Code.

                a. The aggregate  Fair Market Value  (determined  as of the date
         the ISO is  granted)  of shares of Common  Stock with  respect to which
         ISOs are first exercisable for the first time by any Participant during
         any calendar  year (under all ISO plans of the  Corporation)  shall not
         exceed  $100,000;  provided that, to the extent that such limitation is
         exceeded, any excess Options shall be deemed to be NSOs.

                b. All ISOs must be granted  within ten years of the  earlier of
         the date on which this Plan was adopted by the  Corporation's  Board of
         Directors or the date this Plan was approved by the stockholders.

                c. Unless sooner  exercised,  terminated or cancelled,  all ISOs
         shall expire no later than ten years after the date of grant or, in the
         case  of  a  grantee  who  is a  10%  or  greater  stockholder  in  the
         Corporation, no later than five years after the date of the grant.

                                       20



                d. The  Agreement  shall  provide  that  the ISO is  exercisable
         during  the  Participant's  lifetime  only by the  Participant  (or the
         Participant's  legal  representative,  in the event the  Participant is
         disabled)  and that the ISO is not  transferable  other than by will or
         the laws of descent and distribution.

        2.6 Death of Optionee:

                a. Upon the death of the Optionee,  any ISO  exercisable  on the
         date of death may be exercised by the Optionee's  estate or by a person
         who acquires the right to exercise  such ISO by bequest or  inheritance
         or by reason of the death of the Optionee,  provided that such exercise
         occurs  within both the  remaining  option term of the ISO and one year
         after the Optionee's death.

                b. The  provisions of this Section  shall apply  notwithstanding
         the fact that the Optionee's  employment may have  terminated  prior to
         death,  but only to the extent of any ISO's  exercisable on the date of
         death.

        2.7  Retirement or  Disability.  Upon the  termination of the Optionee's
employment by reason of Disability or  retirement,  the Optionee may,  within 36
months from the date of such termination of employment, exercise any ISOs to the
extent such ISOs were exercisable at the date of such termination of employment.
Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  the tax treatment available pursuant to Section
422 of the Code upon the  exercise of an ISO may not be available to an Optionee
who exercises any Incentive Stock Options more than (i) 12 months after the date
of termination of employment due to permanent  Disability (as defined in Section
22(e)(3)  of the Code) or (ii) three  months  after the date of  termination  of
employment due to retirement.

        2.8  Termination  for Other Reasons.  Except as provided in Sections 2.6
and 2.7, or except as  otherwise  determined  by the  Committee,  all ISOs shall
terminate upon the termination of the Optionee's employment.

                                   ARTICLE III
                             RESTRICTED STOCK AWARDS

        3.1  Awards  of  Restricted  Stock:  The  Committee  may  award  to  any
Participant  shares  of  Common  Stock  which are  subject  to the  restrictions
described in this Article and such other terms and  conditions  as the Committee
may prescribe ("Restricted Stock").

        3.2 Restricted Stock Agreement: Shares of Restricted Stock awarded shall
be evidenced by a signed  agreement  containing such terms and conditions as the
Committee may in its sole discretion  determine  ("Restricted Stock Agreement"),
so long as such terms and conditions are not inconsistent with this Plan.

        3.3  Restriction:  Except as provided in Section  3.6, at the time of an
Award of Restricted Stock, the Committee shall establish in its discretion,  for
each Participant a vesting schedule and a period of time  ("Restricted  Period")
during which Restricted Stock may not be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged or
otherwise  encumbered,   except  as  hereinafter   provided.   Except  for  such
restrictions  and subject to this Article III,  the  Participant  shall have all
rights of a stockholder  with respect to such  Restricted  Stock.  The Committee
may,  in  its  discretion,  accelerate  the  time  at  which  any  or all of the
restrictions shall lapse with respect to any shares of Restricted Stock prior to
the  expiration  of  the  Restricted  Period  or  remove  any  or  all  of  such
restrictions, as it deems appropriate.

        3.4 Registration and Redelivery of Restricted Stock: Each certificate of
Restricted  Stock  shall  be  registered  in the  name  of the  Participant  and
deposited by the  Participant,  together  with a stock power  endorsed in blank,
with the  Corporation.  During the Restricted  Period the Restricted Stock shall
remain  in the  possession  of the  Corporation.  At the  end of the  Restricted
Period, the Corporation shall redeliver to the Participant (or the Participant's
legal  representative  or personal  representative)  the  certificates of Common
Stock deposited  pursuant to this Section.  The Common Stock so delivered to the
Participant shall no longer be subject to the provisions of this Article.

        3.5  Consideration  For and Exchange of  Restricted  Stock:  An Award of
Restricted  Stock may provide that the  Participant  be required to furnish such
consideration  for the Award as the Committee shall determine,  or may be issued
in  exchange  for  past  services  or  other  legal  consideration.  An Award of
Restricted Stock may provide that such

                                       21



Restricted  Stock may be  exchanged  during  the  Restriction  Period  for other
Restricted  Stock upon such terms and  conditions as the Committee may permit or
shall require.

        3.6  Termination of Employment:  Unless the Restricted  Stock  Agreement
otherwise  provides,  in  the  event  the  Participant's   employment  with  the
Corporation  and/or its Subsidiaries is terminated for reasons other than death,
Disability or retirement, all Restricted Stock awarded to such Participant which
is still subject to  restriction  shall be  forfeited.  For the purposes of this
Section  the  forfeiture  period for each  Award of  Restricted  Stock  shall be
separately  calculated from the date of the Award.  Unless the Restricted  Stock
Agreement  otherwise  provides,  the restrictions  provided in Section 3.3 shall
terminate on the Participant's death, Disability or attainment of age sixty-five
(65).

                                   ARTICLE IV
                                 RELOAD OPTIONS

        4.1 Authorization of Reload Options.  Concurrently with the award of any
Option to any  Participant  in the Plan,  the  Committee  may  authorize  reload
options ("Reload  Options") to purchase for cash or shares a number of shares of
Common Stock up to (i) the number of shares of Common Stock used to exercise the
underlying Option, and (ii) the number of shares of Common Stock used to satisfy
any tax  withholding  requirement  incident to the  exercise  of the  underlying
Option,  in either  case  through  the use of  shares of Common  Stock or vested
Options.  Notwithstanding  the fact that the underlying  Option may be an ISO, a
Reload  Option is not intended to qualify as an  "incentive  stock option" under
Section 422 of the Code.

        4.2 Reload Option  Amendment.  Each ISO and NSO Agreement shall state if
the  Committee  has  authorized  Reload  Options with respect to the  underlying
Options. Upon the exercise of an underlying Option, any additional Reload Option
must be evidenced by an amendment to the underlying Agreement.

        4.3  Reload  Exercise  Price.   Unless  otherwise   established  by  the
Committee,  the Exercise  Price per share of Common Stock  deliverable  upon the
exercise of a Reload  Option shall be the fair market value of a share of Common
Stock on the date the grant of the Reload Option becomes effective.

        4.4 Term and Exercise. Each Reload Option is fully exercisable two years
from the  effective  date of grant (or if less than two years  remains until the
termination of this Plan, then such Reload Option shall be exercisable within 90
days prior to termination of the Plan).  The term of each Reload Option shall be
equal to the remaining option term of the underlying Option.

        4.5  Termination  of Employment.  No additional  Reload Options shall be
granted to Optionees  when Options are  exercised  pursuant to the terms of this
Plan following termination of the Optionee's employment.

        4.6 Application  Sections.  Applicable  sections regarding the manner of
payment, restrictions,  death, retirement and Disability of the Participant, and
similar  provisions  relating to the  underlying  Option,  are  incorporated  by
reference in this Article IV as though fully set forth herein.

                                    ARTICLE V
                   OTHER STOCK BASED AWARDS AND OTHER BENEFITS

        5.1 Other  Stock Based  Awards:  The  Committee  shall have the right to
grant Awards valued in whole or in part by reference to, or otherwise  based on,
the  Corporation's  Common Stock ("Other Stock Based Awards") which may include,
without  limitation,  the grant of Common  Stock  based on  certain  conditions,
including short-term  incentives or the issuance of Common Stock in lieu of cash
under other  incentive  or deferred  compensation  programs of the  Corporation.
Payment  under or a  settlement  of any such Awards shall be made in such manner
and at such times as the Committee may determine.

        5.2 Other Benefits:  The Committee shall have the right to provide types
of Awards under this Plan in addition to those  specifically,  if the  Committee
believes  that such Awards  would  further the  purposes for which this Plan was
established.  Payment  under or  settlement  of any such Awards shall be made in
such manner and at such times as the Committee shall determine.

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        5.3  Agreements:  Awards of Other Stock Based  Awards or Other  Benefits
shall be evidenced by a signed  agreement  ("Other  Agreement")  containing such
terms and conditions as the Committee may in its sole discretion determine.

        5.4  Termination  of  Employment:  Unless an Other  Agreement  otherwise
provides,  except  in  the  event  of the  Participant's  death,  Disability  or
retirement  after  attaining  the age 65,  in the  event  that  the  Participant
terminates  employment with the Corporation and/or its Subsidiaries prior to the
time benefits  become payable  pursuant to Awards of Other Stock Based Awards or
Other  Benefits,  such  Stock  Based  Awards  and/or  Other  Benefits  shall  be
immediately  forfeited.  Unless an Other Agreement  otherwise  provides,  in the
event of the Participant's  death,  Disability or retirement after attaining age
65, the Corporation  shall pay to the Participant  (or the  Participant's  legal
representative  or  personal  representative)  the amount  which would have been
payable to the Participant had the Participant satisfied all of the requirements
contained in the Other Agreement  calculated as of the date of the occurrence of
an event described in this sentence.

                                   ARTICLE VI
                            MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

        6.1  Non-Transferability:  No Award, or agreement,  or interest therein,
under this Plan is transferable by the Participant other than by will, under the
laws of descent and distribution,  or pursuant to a qualified domestic relations
order.  All Awards must be granted to the Participant  during the  Participant's
lifetime.  All Awards are exercisable during the Participant's  lifetime only by
the  Participant  or the  Participant's  guardian or legal  representative.  All
Awards  are  exercisable  after the  Participant's  death  only as  specifically
provided in the Plan.  Any transfer  contrary to this Section 6.1 shall  nullify
the Award.

        6.2 Acceleration Upon Certain Changes:  Notwithstanding  anything in the
Plan to the contrary,  agreements may contain  change of control  provisions for
the benefit of the  Participant as the Committee shall approve (such approval to
be  conclusively  evidenced by the execution and delivery of such  agreements to
the Participants). Change of control provisions shall mean provisions to protect
Participant's  interest  in the Plan  should the  Corporation,  its stock or its
assets,  be acquired by another  person or entity,  or should the  Participant's
employment terminate in connection therewith.

        6.3 Tax Withholding: The Committee shall have sole discretion whether to
withhold  stock  sufficient  to satisfy  any  withholding  or other tax due with
respect  the  exercise  of an Option,  the  vesting of  Restricted  Stock or any
similar  transaction  under the Plan or to demand such amounts in cash.  Any tax
withholding  effected in shares of Common Stock must comply with Rule 16b-3,  if
applicable.

        6.4 Amendment of the Plan:

                a. The Committee may, without further action by the stockholders
         and without  receiving  further  consideration  from the  Participants,
         amend  this Plan or  condition  or  modify  Awards  under  this Plan in
         response to changes in securities  or other laws or rules,  regulations
         or  regulatory  interpretations  thereof  applicable to this Plan or to
         comply with stock exchange rules or requirements.

                  b.  The  Committee  may at any  time  and  from  time  to time
         terminate  or modify or amend the Plan in any respect,  provided,  such
         termination, modification, or amendment of the Plan, except as provided
         in  subsection  (a),  shall not without  the consent of a  participant,
         affect his or her rights  under an Award  previously  granted to him or
         her.

        6.5  Non-Uniform   Determinations:   The   Committee's   determinations,
including without limitation, (a) the Participants' right to receive Awards, (b)
the form, amount and timing of Awards, (c) the terms,  conditions and provisions
of Awards (including  vesting and forfeiture  provisions) and (d) the agreements
evidencing the same, need not be uniform and may be made by it selectively among
Participants who receive, or who are eligible to receive, Awards under the Plan,
whether or not such Participants are similarly situated.

        6.6  Limitations  on Awards:  In the case of officers and other  persons
subject to Section  16(b) of the Act,  the  Committee,  in its  discretion,  may
impose limitations upon the exercise,  delivery or payment of any Award which it
believes are necessary or desirable in order to comply with Section 16(b) of the
Act and the rules and regulations

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thereunder.  The  Committee  may  require  any  person  receiving  Common  Stock
hereunder to acknowledge that such Common Stock is being acquired for investment
purposes  and not with a view for resale or  distribution  and such Common Stock
shall not be sold or transferred  unless in accordance  with  applicable law and
regulations.  If the  Corporation,  as  part of an  offering  of  securities  or
otherwise,  finds it desirable  because of legal or regulatory  requirements  to
reduce the period during which Options may be exercised,  the Committee  may, in
its  discretion and without the holders'  consent,  so reduce such period on not
less than fifteen (15) days' written notice to the holders thereof.

        6.7 Restrictions on Exercise: To the extent required to comply with Rule
16b-3,  no Participant  receiving an award under this Plan may dispose of Common
Stock awarded under the Plan prior to the expiration of six months from the date
of grant or  dispose  of an Option  awarded  under the Plan,  or its  underlying
Common Stock, prior to the expiration of six months from the date of acquisition
of the Option.

        6.8  Indemnification:  Committee  members shall be indemnified  and held
harmless by the  Corporation  from any loss,  liability,  or expense that may be
imposed upon or incurred by such present or past Committee  member in connection
with or resulting from any claim,  action,  or proceeding in which the member is
involved  by  reason  of any  action  taken or  failure  to act  under the Plan;
provided  such member  shall give the  Corporation  an  opportunity,  at its own
expense, to defend the same. The foregoing right of indemnification shall not be
exclusive  of any other rights of  indemnification  to which such persons may be
entitled  under the  Corporation's  Articles of  Incorporation  or Bylaws,  as a
matter or law,  or  otherwise,  or any power  that the  Corporation  may have to
indemnify them or hold them harmless.

        6.9 Rights of Participants:  Nothing in the Plan shall interfere with or
limit  in any way the  right  of the  Corporation  and/or  its  Subsidiaries  to
terminate  any  Participant's  employment  at any  time,  nor  confer  upon  any
Participant any right to continue in the employment for any period of time or to
continue his or her present or any other rate of compensation. No employee shall
have a right to be selected as Participant,  or, having been so selected,  to be
selected again as a Participant.

        6.10 Requirements of Law: Awards,  agreements and the issuance of shares
of Common Stock shall be subject to applicable laws, rules and regulations,  and
to such approvals by any governmental agencies or securities exchanges as may be
required.  The  Committee  shall  determine  whether any Option or Common  Stock
issued  hereunder is required to be registered  under the Securities Act of 1933
or may be issued under an exemption.  In its sole  discretion,  the  Corporation
may, but is not obliged to, file a registration  statement covering Common Stock
issued under the Plan.

        6.11 Legend on Stock Certificates:  Unless Common Stock issued under the
Plan  has  been  previously  registered,  issued  Common  Stock  shall  bear the
following or similar legend:

         "The  securities   represented  by  this   certificate  have  not  been
         registered  under the  Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act") or under
         the securities laws of any state and may not be transferred,  assigned,
         sold or hypothecated unless a registration statement under the 1933 Act
         and the applicable  state laws shall be in effect with respect  thereto
         or an opinion  of  counsel  satisfactory  to the  Corporation  shall be
         received  to the  effect  that  registration  under  the  1933  Act and
         applicable state securities laws is not required."

        6.12 Effective Date: This Amended and Restated Plan was duly approved by
unanimous  consent  of the  Directors,  to be  effective  when  ratified  by the
stockholders. No Awards of ISOs shall be made hereunder after December 31, 2003.

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