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NASCAR Cup Series race held at Texas Motor Speedway From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stock car races in the NASCAR Cup Series have been held at the Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas since 1997. The 400-mile (640 km) event, currently known as Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 for sponsorship reasons, has been held sometime in October or November each year, except for 2024 when it was held in April, where the track's original spring race (held from 1997 to 2020) was traditionally held.
NASCAR Cup Series | |
---|---|
Venue | Texas Motor Speedway |
Location | Fort Worth, Texas, United States |
Corporate sponsor | Autotrader.com/EchoPark Automotive[1] |
First race | 1997 (original) 2005 (current) |
Distance | 400 mi (643.738 km) |
Laps | 267
Stage 1: 80 Stage 2: 85 Final stage: 102 |
Previous names | Dickies 500 (2005–2009) AAA Texas 500 (2010–2019) Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 (2020–2022) Former second race:
|
Most wins (driver) | Jimmie Johnson (5) |
Most wins (team) | Hendrick Motorsports (8) |
Most wins (manufacturer) | Chevrolet (11) |
Circuit information | |
Surface | Asphalt |
Length | 1.5 mi (2.4 km) |
Turns | 4 |
The race's trophy is in the shape of a cowboy hat on top of a piston. Traditionally, the winning driver wears a black cowboy hat and fires a couple of six-shooters in the air on victory lane.[2]
Chase Elliott is the defending winner of the event, having won it in 2024.
The track's original race, held in spring, was held from 1997 to 2020. The first two runnings of the race were controversial, crash-strewn affairs, with universal criticism that the track's design was one groove; Kenny Wallace argued, "They're so busy building condos they don't have time to fix the racetrack." Traditionalist fans also criticized the replacement of North Wilkesboro Speedway with the Texas in the schedule.
There were twelve different winners in the first twelve races, the longest such streak for any NASCAR track in the Cup Series. This list includes Texas native Terry Labonte, who won in 1999, Dale Earnhardt Jr. winning his first race in 2000, and Tony Stewart's 2006 fall victory despite missing the Chase that year. Jeff Burton, the winner of the inaugural race, broke that streak by getting his second Texas win in a last-lap pass in 2007's spring race. In 2011, the race became a Saturday night event, whereas before it was always a Sunday afternoon race. This was done since the night race at Phoenix was moved to February and became a day race. The 2011 race was run on April 9, 2011, and was the first scheduled night race of the season, and in Texas Motor Speedway history for the Cup Series.
The track's fall race was acquired as a result of the Ferko lawsuit, which forced NASCAR to relinquish the sport's fourth major, the Mountain Dew Southern 500 (which only returned in 2020) and in the process end its Grand Slam, as the Southern 500 was one of the four races that made it up. The fall race has been derisively referred to as the "Francis Ferko 500", mostly by traditionalist fans upset by the demise of the Southern 500.
In 2013, NASCAR became involved in controversy when the National Rifle Association (NRA) began to sponsor the spring race; although race sponsorships are negotiated with the track owner, not NASCAR itself, the sanctioning organization has final approval and did not object to the sponsorship.[3][4][5][6] Both NASCAR's acceptance of this sponsorship, and its timing, has been controversial, and offensive to gun control activists.[7][8][9][10] Because of the sponsorship, Senator Chris Murphy asked Rupert Murdoch, whose News Corporation owns Fox Sports, which was scheduled to air the race, to not broadcast it.[11] Fox broadcast the race as scheduled, not least because failure to do so would have been a breach of the network's contract with NASCAR. However, Fox only used the official sponsored name once per hour (the minimum mandated by NASCAR) and otherwise referred to it generically (in this case as the "Texas 500"), the network's usual practice when a race's title sponsor does not buy ads during the race broadcast; the NRA reportedly did not seek to purchase any such ads.[3] The NRA would return as a race sponsor in 2016 for the Bristol Night Race in August at Speedway's owned Bristol Motor Speedway.[12]
In 2014, the race returned to being a Sunday afternoon race because of the NCAA Men's Basketball Final Four games being held at AT&T Stadium in nearby Arlington so that the race occurs on a day in between tournament games.[13] On February 6, 2014, Duck Commander, the business that is the subject of the TV show Duck Dynasty, bought the naming rights for the race.[14] The race returned to its Saturday night date in 2015.[15] In 2017, the race would once again return to Sunday afternoon and the race was renamed under a new sponsorship deal with O'Reilly Auto Parts.[16]
Since 2002, the trophy awarded to the winner has been cowboy boots, a white cowboy hat, and a pair of six-shooters to fire off in victory lane. The winner of the event (both spring and fall race when it joined the calendar in 2005) bolts their name onto a Wall of Champions that have their name engraved on a plate using a laser engraver.
Samsung sponsored the spring race from 2002 to 2012, while RadioShack was previously a co-sponsor. The spring race's joint sponsorship was grandfathered in 2003 by NASCAR's grandfather clause when Nextel became a NASCAR sponsor, as they banned rival wireless sponsorships (Nextel used Motorola exclusively); the ban was lifted after the 2005 merger of Sprint and Nextel because Sprint is sold at RadioShack, and Sprint offers Samsung products.
The track scaled down to just one race starting from the 2021 season, dropping the spring race in favor of hosting the NASCAR All-Star Race and the addition of Circuit of the Americas in Austin to the schedule.[17] In 2024, the race was moved to the former spring slot.
# Wins | Driver | Years Won |
---|---|---|
5 | Jimmie Johnson | 2007, 2012–2015 |
3 | Carl Edwards | 2005, 2008, 2016 |
Kevin Harvick | 2017–2019 | |
2 | Tony Stewart | 2006, 2011 |
# Wins | Team | Years Won |
---|---|---|
8 | Hendrick Motorsports | 2007, 2012–2015, 2021, 2023–2024 |
4 | Stewart-Haas Racing | 2011, 2017–2019 |
Joe Gibbs Racing | 2006, 2010, 2016, 2020 | |
2 | Roush Fenway Racing | 2005, 2008 |
# Wins | Driver | Years Won |
---|---|---|
3 | Kyle Busch | 2013, 2016, 2018 |
2 | Jeff Burton | 1997, 2007 |
Matt Kenseth | 2002, 2011 | |
Greg Biffle | 2005, 2012 | |
Jimmie Johnson | 2015, 2017 | |
Denny Hamlin | 2010, 2019 |
# Wins | Team | Years Won |
---|---|---|
7 | Roush Fenway Racing | 1997, 1998, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2011, 2012 |
5 | Joe Gibbs Racing | 2010, 2013, 2016, 2018, 2019 |
4 | Hendrick Motorsports | 1999, 2009, 2015, 2017 |
2 | Robert Yates Racing | 2001, 2004 |
Team Penske | 2003, 2014 | |
Richard Childress Racing | 2007, 2020 |
# Wins | Sponsor | Years Won |
---|---|---|
3 | Interstate Batteries | 2013, 2016, 2018 |
2 | National Guard | 2005, 2009 |
FedEx | 2010, 2019 | |
Lowe's | 2015, 2017 |
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