2006 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard
Race details[1][2]
Race 21 of 36 in the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series
2006 Brickyard 400 program cover
2006 Brickyard 400 program cover
Date August 6, 2006 (2006-August-06)
Official name Allstate 400 at the Brickyard
Location Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway, Indiana
Course Permanent racing facility
2.5 mi (4.023 km)
Distance 160 laps, 400 mi (643.737 km)
Weather Hot with temperatures approaching 89.6 °F (32.0 °C); wind speeds up to 10.2 miles per hour (16.4 km/h)[3]
Average speed 137.182 miles per hour (220.773 km/h)
Attendance 280,000
Pole position
Driver Richard Childress Racing
Time 49.240
Most laps led
Driver Jeff Burton Richard Childress Racing
Laps 87
Winner
No. 48 Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
Television in the United States
Network NBC
Announcers Bill Weber, Wally Dallenbach Jr., Benny Parsons
Nielsen Ratings
  • 5.5/13 (Final)
  • 4.8/11 (Overnight)[4]

The 2006 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard was the 21st stock car race of the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. The 13th running of the event, it was held on August 6, 2006 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana before a crowd of 280,000 spectators. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the 160-lap race starting from the fourth position. Roush Racing driver Matt Kenseth finished second and Richard Childress Racing's Kevin Harvick was third.

Jeff Burton won the pole position by posting the fastest lap in qualifying, and held his start line advantage for the next seven laps until Kasey Kahne passed him. Burton retook the lead from Kahne on the next lap, and led the most laps out of any one else (87) as the lead of the race changed eighteen times by nine different drivers. After falling to 39th because of a flat left-front tire on the 39th lap, Johnson recovered lost ground by maneuvering his way through traffic. He became the new leader on lap 117 after overtaking Harvick. Johnson led for a total of 38 laps en route to his fourth victory of the season, his first at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and the 22nd of his career.

After the race Johnson's lead in the Drivers' Championship over Kenseth grew to 107 points. Although Burton finished down the order after slowing midway through the race, he kept the third position. Kyle Busch and Harvick were still in fourth and fifth, and Mark Martin likewise retained sixth the position. Chevrolet maintained its lead in the Manufacturers' Championship, 38 points ahead of Dodge, and 40 in front of Ford with fifteen races remaining in the season.

Background

Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where the race was held.

The Allstate 400 at the Brickyard was the 21st out of 36 scheduled stock car races of the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. It was held on August 6, 2006 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana,[2] a superspeedway that holds NASCAR races.[5] Indianapolis Motor Speedway's standard layout is a 2.5-mile (4.0 km) four-turn rectangular-oval track.[6] Its turns are banked at nine degrees, and neither the front stretch (the location of the finish line) nor the back stretch are banked.[6]

Before the race Jimmie Johnson led the Drivers' Championship with 2,939 points, with Matt Kenseth in second and Jeff Burton third. Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick were fourth and fifth. Mark Martin, Kasey Kahne, Denny Hamlin, Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart rounded out the top ten with six races of the regular season remaining until the Chase for the Nextel Cup.[7][8] Chevrolet led the Manufacturers' Championship with 150 points; Dodge was second with 117 points, with Ford a close third on 113.[9] Stewart was the race's defending champion.[10]

In preparation for the race, NASCAR held the fifth of its six test days for Nextel Cup entrants on July 10–12 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Sessions began at 9:00 a.m. EST, and concluded at 6:00 p.m. 58 cars, participated in the July 10 morning session, while 63 were entered for the afternoon session. Dale Earnhardt Jr. was quickest with a speed of 177.518 mph (285.688 km/h) and Robby Gordon had the highest speed of 177.204 mph (285.182 km/h) in the afternoon session. Sterling Marlin, David Stremme, Kenseth, Chad Chaffin and Greg Biffle all damaged their cars in collisions with the barriers lining the track. The second day of testing was cancelled because of rain. The start of the final day of testing was delayed because of further rain where 42 cars took part. Reed Sorenson recorded the fastest speed of all three days of 181.892 mph (292.727 km/h) in the day's sole testing session.[11]

Robert Yates Racing development driver Stephen Leicht was entered for the race in his attempt to become the youngest person in history to qualify for a Nextel Cup Series race. His Busch Series race seat was taken by David Gilliland to enable full concentrate on the race for Leicht.[12] After taking the pole position for the Pepsi 400 in July, and leading the race with two laps to go before placing fourth, No Fear Racing's Boris Said attempted to qualify for the round at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.[13] Bobby Hamilton Jr. of Bobby Hamilton Racing confirmed through a press release that he would enter the Brickyard 400, and would also compete in the Craftsman Truck Series race at Indianapolis Raceway Park.[14]

Practice and qualifying

Four one-hour practice sessions were held before the Sunday race: two on both Friday and Saturday.[1] Ken Schrader was fastest in the first practice session with a time of 49.911 seconds; Robby Gordon was second and Clint Bowyer third. Hamlin was fourth-fastest, ahead of Casey Mears and Earnhardt. Stremme, Scott Wimmer, Harvick and Paul Menard rounded out the session's top ten drivers.[15] Boris Said made contact with a right-hand side wall leaving turn four, but he escaped with minor damage to his car.[16] In the second practice session, Kurt Busch was quickest with a 49.440 seconds lap, followed by Kahne, Robby Gordon, Scott Riggs, Schrader, Bowyer, Johnson, Reed Sorenson, Burton, and Hamlin.[17] Early in the session, Michael Waltrip hit the turn four wall, but sustained no major damage to his car.[2] Sorenson lost control of his vehicle in turn one, causing him to spin backwards into a wall forty minutes in. Sorenson's car was heavily damaged, and he was transported to the infield care center for a pre-cautionary check-up and later released.[16] Sorenson was uninjured,[18] and he went into a back-up car.[2]

Jeff Burton (pictured in 2007) had the fifth pole position of his career.

There were 50 cars entered in the qualifier on Saturday morning,[2] according to NASCAR's qualifying procedure, 43 were allowed to race. Each driver ran two laps, with the starting order determined by the competitor's fastest times.[2] A widely believed perception in the paddock was that the first cars to set lap times would have more of an advantage over those that drove later in qualifying as track temperatures rose.[16] In what was considered a "surprise" result,[19] Burton clinched his third pole position of the season, and the fifth of his career, with an early lap of 49.240 seconds. He was joined on the grid's front row by his Richard Childress Racing teammate Bowyer who was two-thousands of a second slower.[20][21] Kurt Busch qualified third, Kahne took fourth, and Johnson started fifth. J. J. Yeley, Biffle, Ryan Newman, Robby Gordon and Harvick completed the top ten.[22] The seven drivers who failed to qualify were Paul Menard, Waltrip, Johnny Sauter, Kevin Lepage, Leicht, Hamilton and Derrike Cope.[21] After the qualifier Burton said, "I think I left a little bit out there. I ran as hard as I thought I could run and come back. I was a little bit conservative in a few places that if somebody has a little more confidence, they might be able to do better than that."[22]

Kahne paced the third practice session with a time of 51.161 seconds. Bowyer was twenty-seven thousands of a second slower in second, and Harvick was third. Fourth through tenth was composed of Kurt Busch, Burton, Kenseth, Stremme, Jamie McMurray, Johnson, and Martin Truex Jr.[23] Kurt Busch's left-front tire blew after deflating, and he collided with the turn one wall. He switched to a back-up car for the remainder of the weekend. Bowyer had a similar issue with his car's left-front tire coming off turn four but he stopped in a safe location.[23] Later that afternoon, Burton set the fastest lap in the final practice session at 51.370 seconds; Kenseth was second, and Carl Edwards third. Bowyer was fourth-fastest, Schrader placed fifth, and Brian Vickers sixth. Hamlin was seventh-quickest, Robby Gordon eighth, Martin ninth, and Harvick tenth.[23]

Qualifying results

Qualifying results
Grid No. Driver Team Manufacturer Time Speed
1 31 Jeff Burton Richard Childress RacingChevrolet49.240182.778
2 07Clint BowyerRichard Childress RacingChevrolet49.242182.771
3 2Kurt BuschPenske Racing SouthDodge49.247182.7521
4 9Kasey Kahne Evernham MotorsportsDodge49.331182.441
5 48Jimmie JohnsonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet49.386182.238
6 18J. J. YeleyJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet49.404182.171
7 16Greg BiffleRoush RacingFord49.433182.065
8 12Ryan Newman Penske Racing SouthDodge49.471181.925
9 7Robby GordonRobby Gordon MotorsportsChevrolet49.484181.877
10 29Kevin HarvickRichard Childress RacingChevrolet49.523181.734
11 21Ken SchraderWood Brothers RacingFord49.576181.540
12 10Scott RiggsEvernham MotorsportsDodge49.703181.076
13 96Tony RainesHall of Fame RacingChevrolet49.714181.036
14 11Denny HamlinJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet49.741180.937
15 19Jeremy MayfieldEvernham MotorsportsDodge49.859180.509
16 24Jeff GordonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet49.860180.505
17 37Mike SkinnerR&J Racing Dodge49.865180.487
18 26Jamie McMurrayRoush RacingFord49.882180.426
19 6Mark MartinRoush Racing Ford49.935180.234
20 17Matt KensethRoush RacingFord49.965180.126
21 01Joe NemechekGinn Racing Chevrolet49.969180.112
22 99Carl EdwardsRoush RacingFord49.982 180.065
23 1Martin Truex Jr.Dale Earnhardt Inc. Chevrolet49.982 180.065
24 40David StremmeChip Ganassi RacingDodge50.150179.462
25 34Chad Chaffin Front Row MotorsportsDodge50.177179.3651
26 00Bill ElliottMichael Waltrip RacingChevrolet50.207179.258
27 38Elliott SadlerRobert Yates RacingFord50.215179.229
28 78Kenny WallaceFurniture Row RacingChevrolet50.223179.201
29 66Jeff GreenHaas CNC RacingChevrolet50.272179.026
30 25Brian VickersHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet50.287178.973
31 8Dale Earnhardt Jr.Dale Earnhardt Inc.Chevrolet50.301178.923
32 20Tony StewartJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet50.305178.909
33 14Sterling MarlinMB2 MotorsportsChevrolet50.323178.845
34 4Scott WimmerMorgan–McClure MotorsportsChevrolet50.355178.731
35 88Dale JarrettRobert Yates RacingFord50.368178.6851
36 32Travis KvapilPPI MotorsportsChevrolet50.380178.642
37 5Kyle BuschHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet50.414178.522
38 43Bobby LabontePetty EnterprisesDodge50.435178.447
39 42Casey MearsChip Ganassi Racing Dodge 50.463 178.348
40 45Kyle PettyPetty EnterprisesDodge 50.555178.0242
41 41Reed SorensonChip Ganassi RacingDodge50.765177.2882
42 22Dave BlaneyBill Davis RacingDodge 50.856176.9702
43 60Boris SaidNo Fear RacingFord50.412178.529
Failed to qualify
44 15Paul MenardDale Earnhardt Inc.Chevrolet50.499178.221
45 55Michael WaltripWaltrip-Jasper RacingDodge50.536178.091
46 70 Johnny SauterHaas CNC RacingChevrolet50.676177.599
47 49Kevin LepageBAM RacingDodge50.818177.103
48 90Stephen LeichtRobert Yates RacingFord50.863176.946
49 04Bobby Hamilton Jr.Bobby Hamilton RacingDodge50.903176.807
50 61Derrike CopeFront Row MotorsportsChevrolet 51.563174.537
1 Moved to the back of the grid for changing engines (#34, 88) and for going to a backup car (#2)
2 Grid order set by owner points
Source:[21]

Race

Live television coverage of the race began at 1:30 p.m. in the United States on NBC. Around the start of the race, weather conditions were sunny. Howard Brammer, reverend of Traders Point Christian Church in downtown Indianapolis, began pre-race ceremonies with an invocation. Kelly Rowland of the American girl group Destiny's Child performed the national anthem, and the chairwoman of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Mari Hulman George commanded the drivers to start their engines. During the pace laps, Chaffin and Dale Jarrett went to the back of the grid for changing their engines, and Kurt Busch did the same after going into his back-up car.[24] NASCAR scheduled a competition caution for laps 15 and 40 to enable teams to check the state of their tires after drivers raised concerns about their lifespan.[25]

The race started at 2:54 p.m. Burton maintained the lead going into the first turn, and pulled way to hold a small but healthy gap by the end of the first lap.[24] On the second lap, Bowyer lost second when Johnson overtook him.[26] The first caution was given on lap three as Elliott Sadler lost control of his car in turn one, and heavily clouted a wall with the rear of his car.[24] Joe Nemechek did minor damage to his car when he hit wall try to avoid Sadler.[1] Under caution, Nemechek, Said and Sorenson elected to drive down pit road for repairs, but NASCAR forbade pit stops for fuel because of the first competition caution.[1][24] Burton led at the lap seven restart, followed by Kahne and Johnson.[26] However, Burton only led for the first two turns as Kahne passed him.[24] Burton retook the first position from Kahne on the next lap.[26] Jeff Gordon went to pit road on lap nine to repair a broken bolt on his left-front sway bar, but he did not get lapped by the leader until three laps after.[24] Biffle was passed by Bowyer for fourth on the eleventh lap. After starting 32nd, Stewart moved into 15th by lap 15.[26] The first competition caution was waved on the next lap. All drivers made pit stops for fuel, tires and track bar adjustments.[24]

Burton retained the lead on the lap-20 restart. On the lap, the third caution came out for Said who was hit at the rear of his car by Sorenson, causing Said to collide with a wall between turns three and four, and rested facing the opposite direction in the infield grass.[1][26] The race restarted four laps later with Burton still in first. Kahne and Biffle moved past Johnson to claim the second and third positions on the same lap.[26] Just as NASCAR was about to trigger the second competition caution,[24] Johnson's front-left tire went flat on lap 39, and he was worried about potential damage to his front-left fender.[27][28] Johnson continued to drive slower than the rest of the field until the discarded rubber that was left on the track necessitated the fourth caution. Every driver (including Burton) chose to make pit stops for fuel during the caution. Kenny Wallace staggered his stop, enabling him to lead the 41st lap.[24] As Johnson exited his pit stall, a fire ignited due to him burning fuel that spilt onto the concrete surface but safety crews quickly extinguished the blaze.[2] Burton became the leader once more, and retained it at the restart on lap 45. Kahne dropped to eighth over the next three laps, while Johnson gained eight positions to run 30th by the 50th lap despite a visible left-front tire rub on his car.[1][26]

On lap 58, Jeremy Mayfield lost control of his car in turn two, and drifted up into the wall, triggering the fifth caution.[1][24] During the caution, some drivers, including Burton, made pit stops for tires and car adjustments.[24] Vickers elected to have only two new tires at his stop, and assumed the lead for the restart on lap 61.[26] Burton passed Vickers to get back the lead on the following lap.[24] Vickers then lost second place to Harvick, before dropping to fifth when Kenseth and Edwards moved past him. Over laps 70 and 73, Harvick and his teammate Burton exchanged the first position before the battle ended with Harvick successfully taking the lead. He subsequently pulled away from Burton.[26] Edwards moved ahead of Burton for second on the 77th lap as he was seeking to get closer to Harvick. Eight laps later, Burton was demoted to fourth when Kenseth overtook him.[24][26] A sixth caution was needed on lap 86 when debris was located in turn three's high groove.[1] The entire field chose to make pit stops for tires and car adjustments under the caution. Edwards fell from second to eighth because his stop was problematic as his crew could not correctly fit a lug nut for his front-right tire. Harvick stayed in the lead at the lap 90 restart, and began to pull away from Kenseth.[1][24][26]

Jimmie Johnson (pictured in 2007) recovered from a flat front-right tire early in the race to claim his fourth victory of the season.

Kenseth drew alongside Harvick, and passed him to take the lead on lap 110. By lap 115, Burton slowed and he fell to seventh.[24][26] After falling to 39th, Johnson recovered several positions as he maneuvered his way through traffic.[28] He moved past Harvick for second on the 116th lap. On the lap after, Johnson passed Kenseth on the backstretch for the lead. Johnson began to pull away from the remainder of the field. Green flag pit stops began on lap 123 when Biffle came onto pit road. Johnson stopped on the following lap, giving the first position to Kenseth. Kyle Busch and Nemechek each led one lap before making their own separate pit stops. After the pit stops, Johnson regained the lead. On lap 140, Johnson's lead of 1.826 seconds was reduced to nothing when the seventh caution was given for debris in turn three.[26] Johnson and most of the field elected to make pit stops for tires and car adjustments under caution.[24] Kyle Busch chose not to make a pit stop, and led the field at the lap 147 restart, with Earnhardt second and Newman third.[26] Further down the field, three-abreast racing occurred, as drivers on worn tires tried to fend off the attacks from those on newer tires.[24]

After emerging from the pit stops in eighth, Johnson returned to the top three by the 150th lap.[24][29] The following lap, Earnhardt overtook Kyle Busch in turn two to become the new leader. Earnhardt held it until Johnson got by him in turn four. Kenseth moved past Earnhardt for second on lap 152 as the latter's old tires meant he lost further positions over the next four laps.[26] As Johnson started the final lap, he led Kenseth by 2.13 seconds when the final caution was necessitated for two separate crashes that ended competitive racing.[27] Riggs ran into the rear of Robby Gordon's vehicle who slid upwards into the side of Biffle's car; both drivers spun leaving turn two. While battling Stewart for eighth, Kahne oversteered and slowed, causing Edwards to tap Kahne and the latter spun 360 degrees and went into a wall at turn three heavily with the front of his car. Kahne was uninjured.[1] Other drivers involved were Hamlin, and Tony Raines.[27]

The field was frozen in place, with the order of finish determined by where the drivers were when the caution began.[30] This gave Johnson his fourth victory of the season,[29] his first at Indianapolis Motor Speedway,[24] and the 22nd of his career.[27] Johnson's achievement made him the second driver after Jarrett to win the Daytona 500 and the Brickyard 400 in the same year.[27] Kenseth finished second, Harvick came third, Bowyer took fourth, and Martin placed fifth. Earnhardt, Kyle Busch, Stewart, Edwards, and Hamlin completed the top ten finishers.[2] The race had a total of eight cautions and 18 lead changes by nine drivers. Burton led six times for a total of 86 laps, more than any other driver. Johnson led three times for 33 laps.[2]

Post-race

Johnson appeared in Victory Lane after his victory lap to celebrate his fourth win of the season in front of the crowd; the win earned him $452,861.[31] He said that he doubted his ability to win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, "I've watched so many races here as a kid growing [up]. I thought I would come here in an Indy car. I drove in the off-road ranks and idolized Rick Mears, Roger Mears, Robby Gordon, and those guys all came out of off-road racing to Indy car. I hoped to win here in an Indy car. I can't believe I'm here in a stock car in NASCAR winning the biggest race."[32] Johnson continued, "I knew we had a fast race car. We had to come through traffic, and that made it harder on the tires."[33] Kenseth reserved praise for his crew chief Robbie Reiser but spoke of his disappoint after he could not win the race,[33] "The 48 [Johnson] came out of nowhere and blew by us all and won the race. He just got through traffic better than us. He just did a better job of being in the right place getting through those cars."[32] Third-placed Harvick said he could not challenge Johnson due to his fast pace, "He pretty much had us all covered.",[34] and, "We had a good car, but we got a little bit behind on the last pitstop. We put on four tyres but didn't have enough time left."[35]

Kahne was the most affected of all the drivers in the provisional Chase for the Nextel Cup standings after his last lap crash with Stewart. He said, "I was trying to get in a battle with all those guys for positions sixth, seventh and eighth. Trying to pass Stewart, I got loose. I was trying to stay off Tony and I guess I ran into the wall."[36] After going airborne from driving over debris scattered on the track from Kahne's car, Raines said, "He got loose and overcorrected. Whatever fell out of his car was the size of a beer cooler. I was surprised the car even drove back. I think the bottom was all torn up."[33] Nevertheless, Stewart spoke of his happiness over coming eighth despite losing positions because of a mistake by his pit crew, "I think I passed 60 cars or more today. We got ourselves into the top 10 early in the race, and just had an airgun break on a pit stop ... we came in and made sure the lug nuts were tight, went to the back, and then battled our way back into the top 10, so I'm pretty happy."[34] Earnhardt said that while he could not take the victory, he was attempting to maintain his position to the best of his ability, "I'd love having a better car and not having to make that call (to stay out). We can't make the Chase with 30-place race cars. We took a chance and made it work and just got lucky."[36]

The result kept Johnson in the lead of the Drivers' Championship with an increased margin of 107 points over Kenseth. Burton maintained the third position, while Harvick's third-place finish allowed him to tie with Kyle Busch on points for fourth. Martin stayed in sixth and Hamlin advanced to seventh. Rounding out the top ten were Jeff Gordon, Stewart and Earnhardt.[2] Johnson said about his elongated lead, "It’s way too early to say we’ve broken the pattern, but this is a great start."[37] In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet maintained its lead with 159 points. Dodge remained in second with 121 points with Ford another two points behind in third.[9] The race took two hours, 54 minutes and 57 seconds to complete; because it ended under caution, no margin of victory was recorded.[2]

Race results

Race results
Pos. Grid No. Driver Team Manufacturer Laps Points
1 548Jimmie JohnsonHendrick Motorsports Chevrolet1601851
2 2017Matt KensethRoush RacingFord1601751
3 1029Kevin HarvickRichard Childress RacingChevrolet160 1701
4 207Clint BowyerRichard Childress RacingChevrolet160160
5 196Mark MartinRoush RacingFord160155
6 318Dale Earnhardt Jr.Dale Earnhardt Inc.Chevrolet160150
7 375Kyle BuschHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet1601511
8 3220Tony StewartJoe Gibbs Racing Chevrolet 160142
9 2299Carl EdwardsRoush RacingFord160138
10 1411Denny HamlinJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet160134
11 1396Tony RainesHall of Fame RacingChevrolet160130
12 32Kurt Busch Penske Racing SouthDodge160127
13 812Ryan NewmanPenske Racing SouthDodge160124
14 1121Ken SchraderWood Brothers RacingFord160121
15 131Jeff BurtonRichard Childress RacingChevrolet1601282
16 1624Jeff GordonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet160115
17 30 25Brian VickersHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet1601171
18 2440David StremmeChip Ganassi RacingDodge160109
19 231Martin Truex Jr.Dale Earnhardt Inc.Chevrolet160 106
20 344Scott WimmerMorgan-McClure MotorsportsChevrolet160103
21 1210Scott RiggsEvernham MootrsportsDodge160100
22 2600Bill ElliottMichael Waltrip RacingChevrolet16097
23 3942Casey MearsChip Ganassi RacingDodge16094
24 2101Joe NemechekGinn RacingChevrolet160961
25 3632Travis KvapilPPI MotorsportsChevrolet16088
26 1826Jamie McMurrayRoush RacingFord16085
27 4045Kyle PettyPetty EnterprisesDodge16082
28 3588Dale JarrettRobert Yates RacingFord16079
29 4222Dave BlaneyBill Davis RacingDodge16076
30 4141Reed SorensonChip Ganassi RacingDodge16073
31 3314Sterling MarlinMB2 MotorsportsChevrolet16070
32 2878Kenny WallaceFurniture Row RacingChevrolet160721
33 716Greg BiffleRoush RacingFord16064
34 618J. J. YeleyJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet16061
35 97Robby GordonRobby Gordon MotorsportsChevrolet16058
36 49Kasey KahneEvernham MotorsportsDodge159601
37 1737Mike SkinnerR&J RacingDodge15952
38 2966Jeff GreenHaas CNC RacingChevrolet15949
39 2534Chad ChaffinFront Row MotorsportsDodge15946
40 3843Bobby LabontePetty EnterprisesDodge13543
41 1519Jeremy MayfieldEvernham MotorsportsDodge8240
42 4360Boris SaidNo Fear RacingFord1937
43 2738Elliott SadlerRobert Yates RacingFord334
Source:[2]
1 Includes five bonus points for leading a lap
2 Includes ten bonus points for leading the most laps

Standings after the race

References

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