2008 Brickyard 400
Race details[1] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Race 20 of 36 in the 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season | |||
Date | July 27, 2008 | ||
Official name | Allstate 400 at the Brickyard | ||
Location | Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 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 88 °F (31 °C); wind speeds up to 9.9 miles per hour (15.9 km/h) | ||
Average speed | 115.117 miles per hour (185.263 km/h) | ||
Attendance | 240,000 | ||
Pole position | |||
Driver | Hendrick Motorsports | ||
Time | 49.515 | ||
Most laps led | |||
Driver | Jimmie Johnson | Hendrick Motorsports | |
Laps | 71 | ||
Winner | |||
No. 48 | Jimmie Johnson | Hendrick Motorsports | |
Television in the United States | |||
Network | ESPN | ||
Announcers | Jerry Punch, Andy Petree and Dale Jarrett |
The 2008 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard, the 15th running of the event, was the twentieth race of the 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup season and the fifteenth NASCAR race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS). It was also the first race under the ESPN/ABC section of the TV coverage for the 2008 season. The 160-lap, 400 miles (640 km) event was raced on July 27 at the 2.5 miles (4.0 km) Indianapolis Motor Speedway located in Speedway, Indiana (a separate town surrounded by Indiana's state capital). Along with ESPN, the IMS Radio Network, working with Performance Racing Network, provided radio coverage (along with Sirius Satellite Radio) with both broadcasts starting at 1 PM US EDT.
The race was deemed a "disaster" for NASCAR, Goodyear, and Indianapolis. Due to the new Car of Tomorrow, the surface at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and problems with Goodyear tires, NASCAR was forced to throw competition cautions every 10–12 laps; an average of just 9 green flag laps were run during the race.[2] Tires started to explode if the race was allowed to continue past that distance. Even at that distance, tires were down to the cords/nylon base. At the end of the race, every tire that Goodyear had brought to the track for the weekend had been used and were no longer usable.
The race was starting to rival the Daytona 500 in terms of the biggest race of the NASCAR season before the tire problems at this race. Since this race, attendance has dropped from a 257,000+ sell out to an estimated 100,000 at the 2010 race. By the 2013 race, the last year NASCAR tracked attendance, it dropped to 70,000.[3]
Qualifying
[edit]Jimmie Johnson held off Mark Martin to win the pole position. Bill Elliott, after starting the first 14 races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, failed in his final run to do so, as he retired following the season.
RANK[4] | DRIVER | NBR | CAR | TIME | SPEED | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jimmie Johnson | 48 | Chevrolet | 49.515 | 181.763 | |
2 | Mark Martin | 8 | Chevrolet | 49.616 | 181.393 | |
3 | Ryan Newman | 12 | Dodge | 49.732 | 180.970 | |
4 | Kasey Kahne | 9 | Dodge | 49.776 | 180.810 | |
5 | Jeff Gordon | 24 | Chevrolet | 49.849 | 180.545 | |
6 | Elliott Sadler | 19 | Dodge | 49.890 | 180.397 | |
7 | Kurt Busch | 2 | Dodge | 49.905 | 180.343 | |
8 | Jamie McMurray | 26 | Ford | 49.911 | 180.321 | |
9 | Carl Edwards | 99 | Ford | 49.942 | 180.209 | |
10 | Matt Kenseth | 17 | Ford | 50.023 | 179.917 | |
11 | Dale Earnhardt, Jr. | 88 | Chevrolet | 50.038 | 179.863 | |
12 | Greg Biffle | 16 | Ford | 50.067 | 179.759 | |
13 | Juan Pablo Montoya | 42 | Dodge | 50.084 | 179.698 | |
14 | Tony Stewart | 20 | Toyota | 50.145 | 179.480 | |
15 | Patrick Carpentier | 10 | Dodge | 50.146 | 179.476 | * |
16 | David Ragan | 6 | Ford | 50.261 | 179.065 | |
17 | Brian Vickers | 83 | Toyota | 50.303 | 178.916 | |
18 | Kevin Harvick | 29 | Chevrolet | 50.319 | 178.859 | |
19 | Kyle Busch | 18 | Toyota | 50.345 | 178.767 | |
20 | David Gilliland | 38 | Ford | 50.447 | 178.405 | |
21 | Jason Leffler | 70 | Chevrolet | 50.467 | 178.334 | * |
22 | Reed Sorenson | 41 | Dodge | 50.511 | 178.179 | |
23 | Denny Hamlin | 11 | Toyota | 50.514 | 178.168 | |
24 | Marcos Ambrose | 47 | Ford | 50.524 | 178.133 | * |
25 | Martin Truex, Jr. | 1 | Chevrolet | 50.568 | 177.978 | |
26 | A.J. Allmendinger | 84 | Toyota | 50.581 | 177.932 | * |
27 | Bobby Labonte | 43 | Dodge | 50.594 | 177.887 | |
28 | Travis Kvapil | 28 | Ford | 50.622 | 177.788 | |
29 | Robby Gordon | 7 | Dodge | 50.676 | 177.599 | |
30 | Michael McDowell | 00 | Toyota | 50.678 | 177.592 | |
31 | Casey Mears | 5 | Chevrolet | 50.698 | 177.522 | |
32 | Jeff Burton | 31 | Chevrolet | 50.724 | 177.431 | |
33 | David Reutimann | 44 | Toyota | 50.749 | 177.343 | |
34 | Michael Waltrip | 55 | Toyota | 50.770 | 177.270 | |
35 | Scott Riggs | 66 | Chevrolet | 50.796 | 177.179 | * |
36 | Joe Nemechek | 78 | Chevrolet | 50.823 | 177.085 | * |
37 | Paul Menard | 15 | Chevrolet | 50.848 | 176.998 | |
38 | Sam Hornish, Jr. | 77 | Dodge | 50.911 | 176.779 | |
39 | J.J. Yeley | 96 | Toyota | 50.923 | 176.737 | * |
40 | Terry Labonte | 45 | Dodge | 51.000 | 176.471 | PC |
41 | Bill Elliott | 21 | Ford | 51.267 | 175.552 | * |
42 | Clint Bowyer | 07 | Chevrolet | 51.471 | 174.856 | |
43 | Dave Blaney | 22 | Toyota | 51.728 | 173.987 | OP |
44 | Johnny Sauter | 08 | Dodge | 51.803 | 173.735 | * |
45 | Tony Raines | 34 | Chevrolet | 51.996 | 173.090 | * |
46 | Stanton Barrett | 50 | Chevrolet | 52.258 | 172.222 | * |
47 | Regan Smith | 01 | Chevrolet | OP |
OP: qualified via owners points
PC: qualified as past champion
PR: provisional
QR: via qualifying race
* - had to qualify on time
Failed to qualify: Bill Elliott (#21), Stanton Barrett (#50), Johnny Sauter (#08), Tony Raines (#34).
Race
[edit]In pre-race practice, teams realized that the tires provided for the race wore down quickly, due to the abrasive course at Indianapolis and the different characteristics of the fifth-generation car that was being used for the first time at Indianapolis. Concerns led NASCAR to implement caution periods after ten laps for tire wear, a procedure NASCAR debuted at 1969 Talladega 500, which had a driver boycott over tire wear issues, and NASCAR called cautions after a specific time in order to allow teams to pit and change tires.
Competition cautions were called between 10–12 laps. Because of an accident involving Michael Waltrip on Lap 4, the first competition yellow would not wave until Lap 14 for a crash when Kurt Busch lost the car off of Turn 1, hitting Kevin Harvick in the process. The only other non-competition yellow came halfway through the race when Brian Vickers' Toyota had its engine fail. Some drivers compared the racing to the roots of NASCAR with ten-lap heat races, as nine competition cautions and the two incidents combined effectively led to ten "heat races" were thrown with the final sprint being a "feature" race. Jimmie Johnson won the race after a battle with Carl Edwards after various teams attempted a two-tire stop in what effectively had become the caution leading to the final shootout, similar to the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.
Numerous drivers suffered tire failures during the race. Dale Earnhardt Jr. was the first on lap 26, blowing a right rear tire while leading the race. Just 3 laps later, Juan Pablo Montoya blew a tire coming off of turn 2. ESPN reported major tire cording on Jeff Gordon. On lap 47, Carl Edwards reported on the radio that he had a right rear tire problem. Just seconds later on the same lap, Matt Kenseth spun on the backstretch with a right rear tire failure, causing major damage to the right side of the car. ESPN reported Kyle Busch had some tire problems on lap 65. After that, tires showed a slight improvement, even though the tires still showed major cording. Throughout the race, drivers expressed their disappointment at the events that had occurred prior and during the event, with Matt Kenseth saying in the garage "It's a really, really disappointing situation. You know, this is one of the biggest races in the year, to never have this car here, before or not come into an open test and then working on this things working the tires, it's pretty darn disappointing... I feel bad for the fans and everything, when we're running three quarters speed because we're worried the tires are going to fall off and we got them blowing every 8 laps. I'm pretty disappointed." NASCAR president Mike Helton announced that NASCAR threw out more competition cautions than expected. Many NASCAR fans compare it to the 2005 United States Grand Prix tire debacle, when tires blowing out became a major concern for drivers. Some also say that this race was another incident that caused the decline of NASCAR's popularity.[5]
Results
[edit]POS[6] | ST | # | DRIVER | SPONSOR / OWNER | CAR | LAPS | MONEY | STATUS | LED | PTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | 48 | Jimmie Johnson | Lowe's (Rick Hendrick) | Chevrolet | 160 | 509236 | running | 71 | 195 |
2 | 9 | 99 | Carl Edwards | Aflac (Jack Roush) | Ford | 160 | 366700 | running | 4 | 175 |
3 | 23 | 11 | Denny Hamlin | FedEx Office (Joe Gibbs) | Toyota | 160 | 331516 | running | 26 | 170 |
4 | 6 | 19 | Elliott Sadler | Stanley (Gillett Evernham Motorsports) | Dodge | 160 | 290745 | running | 5 | 165 |
5 | 5 | 24 | Jeff Gordon | DuPont (Rick Hendrick) | Chevrolet | 160 | 275111 | running | 7 | 160 |
6 | 8 | 26 | Jamie McMurray | Crown Royal (Jack Roush) | Ford | 160 | 206850 | running | 0 | 150 |
7 | 4 | 9 | Kasey Kahne | Budweiser / LifeLock (Gillett Evernham Motorsports) | Dodge | 160 | 225491 | running | 0 | 146 |
8 | 12 | 16 | Greg Biffle | Dish Network / Dish DVRs (Jack Roush) | Ford | 160 | 196225 | running | 0 | 142 |
9 | 32 | 31 | Jeff Burton | Prilosec OTC (Richard Childress) | Chevrolet | 160 | 233783 | running | 10 | 143 |
10 | 26 | 84 | A.J. Allmendinger | Red Bull (Dietrich Mateschitz) | Toyota | 160 | 178775 | running | 4 | 139 |
11 | 2 | 8 | Mark Martin | U.S. Army (Dale Earnhardt, Inc.) | Chevrolet | 160 | 210383 | running | 0 | 130 |
12 | 11 | 88 | Dale Earnhardt, Jr. | National Guard / AMP Energy (Rick Hendrick) | Chevrolet | 160 | 180950 | running | 8 | 132 |
13 | 3 | 12 | Ryan Newman | Alltel (Roger Penske) | Dodge | 160 | 207975 | running | 0 | 124 |
14 | 16 | 6 | David Ragan | AAA Insurance (Jack Roush) | Ford | 160 | 170000 | running | 0 | 121 |
15 | 19 | 18 | Kyle Busch | M&M's (Joe Gibbs) | Toyota | 160 | 180700 | running | 14 | 123 |
16 | 27 | 43 | Bobby Labonte | Cheerios / Totino's Pizza Rolls (Petty Enterprises) | Dodge | 160 | 195536 | running | 0 | 115 |
17 | 22 | 41 | Reed Sorenson | Target (Chip Ganassi) | Dodge | 160 | 184689 | running | 0 | 112 |
18 | 15 | 10 | Patrick Carpentier | Sears Auto Center / Valvoline (Gillett Evernham Motorsports) | Dodge | 160 | 154375 | running | 0 | 109 |
19 | 40 | 07 | Clint Bowyer | Jack Daniel's (Richard Childress) | Chevrolet | 160 | 169875 | running | 0 | 106 |
20 | 20 | 38 | David Gilliland | FreeCreditReport.com (Yates Racing) | Ford | 160 | 175183 | running | 0 | 103 |
21 | 38 | 77 | Sam Hornish, Jr. | Mobil 1 (Roger Penske) | Dodge | 160 | 195400 | running | 0 | 100 |
22 | 24 | 47 | Marcos Ambrose | Little Debbie Snacks (Tad Geschickter) | Ford | 160 | 148825 | running | 0 | 97 |
23 | 14 | 20 | Tony Stewart | Home Depot (Joe Gibbs) | Toyota | 160 | 197461 | running | 0 | 94 |
24 | 25 | 1 | Martin Truex, Jr. | Bass Pro Shops / Cub Cadet (Dale Earnhardt, Inc.) | Chevrolet | 160 | 182408 | running | 3 | 96 |
25 | 35 | 66 | Scott Riggs | State Water Heaters (Gene Haas) | Chevrolet | 160 | 166133 | running | 1 | 93 |
26 | 31 | 5 | Casey Mears | Kellogg's / Carquest (Rick Hendrick) | Chevrolet | 160 | 162725 | running | 0 | 85 |
27 | 43 | 45 | Terry Labonte | Marathon American Spirit Motor Oil (Petty Enterprises) | Dodge | 160 | 161083 | running | 0 | 82 |
28 | 39 | 96 | J.J. Yeley | DLP HDTV (Jeff Moorad) | Toyota | 160 | 153825 | running | 0 | 79 |
29 | 36 | 78 | Joe Nemechek | Furniture Row / DenverMattress.com (Barney Visser) | Chevrolet | 160 | 142225 | running | 0 | 76 |
30 | 33 | 44 | David Reutimann | UPS (Michael Waltrip) | Toyota | 160 | 145200 | running | 0 | 73 |
31 | 42 | 01 | Regan Smith | Principal Financial Group (Dale Earnhardt, Inc.) | Chevrolet | 160 | 152600 | running | 1 | 75 |
32 | 21 | 70 | Jason Leffler | Hunt Brothers Pizza (Gene Haas) | Chevrolet | 160 | 140700 | running | 0 | 67 |
33 | 29 | 7 | Robby Gordon | Menards / Johns Manville (Robby Gordon) | Dodge | 160 | 163558 | running | 0 | 64 |
34 | 30 | 00 | Michael McDowell | Champion Mortgage (Michael Waltrip) | Toyota | 160 | 150097 | running | 1 | 66 |
35 | 41 | 22 | Dave Blaney | Caterpillar (Bill Davis) | Toyota | 160 | 140300 | running | 1 | 63 |
36 | 28 | 28 | Travis Kvapil | Hitachi Power Tools (Yates Racing) | Ford | 160 | 168214 | running | 3 | 60 |
37 | 18 | 29 | Kevin Harvick | Shell / Pennzoil (Richard Childress) | Chevrolet | 148 | 186661 | running | 0 | 52 |
38 | 10 | 17 | Matt Kenseth | DeWalt (Jack Roush) | Ford | 144 | 187241 | running | 0 | 49 |
39 | 13 | 42 | Juan Pablo Montoya | Wrigley's Big Red Slim Pack (Chip Ganassi) | Dodge | 124 | 167408 | crash | 0 | 46 |
40 | 7 | 2 | Kurt Busch | Miller Lite (Roger Penske) | Dodge | 119 | 139425 | running | 0 | 43 |
41 | 37 | 15 | Paul Menard | Menards / Johns Manville (Dale Earnhardt, Inc.) | Chevrolet | 118 | 147300 | running | 0 | 40 |
42 | 17 | 83 | Brian Vickers | Red Bull (Dietrich Mateschitz) | Toyota | 93 | 147600 | engine | 1 | 42 |
43 | 34 | 55 | Michael Waltrip | NAPA Auto Parts (Michael Waltrip) | Toyota | 91 | 139494 | running | 0 | 34 |
Failed to qualify, withdrew, or driver changes: | ||||||||||
POS | NAME | NBR | SPONSOR | OWNER | CAR | |||||
44 | Bill Elliott | 21 | Motorcraft | Wood Brothers | Ford | |||||
45 | Johnny Sauter | 08 | getFUBAR.com | John Carter | Dodge | |||||
46 | Tony Raines | 34 | doorstopnation.com | Bob Jenkins | Chevrolet | |||||
47 | Stanton Barrett | 50 | NOS Energy Drink | Chris Lencheski | Chevrolet |
Post-race
[edit]Two days following the running of the race, NASCAR VP of competition Robin Pemberton formally apologized for the problems, saying that it did not go to IMS with the correct car-tire combination. To rectify those problems, Goodyear staged two additional tire tests at Indy in the fall, the first with only three teams as per the tiremaker's policy September 22 and 23; the other with as many as 12 teams on October 7 and 8 to detect what might have gone wrong and test a new tire to be used for the 2009 race. A total of 7 tests were conducted in preparation for the 2009 race.
The results of these tests indicated an increased amount of load and slip on the right rear tire caused the particle debris to be smaller than anticipated. This prevented rubber from adhering to the track and prevented tire wear from improving as the race progressed.[7]
Legacy
[edit]Many fans have pointed to this race to the overall decline of the Brickyard 400 in general.[8][9] By 2021, NASCAR eventually moved the race to the Speedway's road course, although they returned to the oval in 2024.
See also
[edit]- 2005 United States Grand Prix – a similar situation at the same track during the 2005 Formula One race
- 1969 Talladega 500 – the first race at Talladega, which suffered a similar situation
References
[edit]- ^ Weather information for the 2008 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard at The Old Farmers' Almanac
- ^ "2008 Allstate 400 At The Brickyard". Racing-Reference. Retrieved March 26, 2014.
- ^ Horrall, Zach. "Tire debacle at 2008 Brickyard 400: 'Oh no, we're in trouble'". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 2020-09-22.
- ^ "Race Results". Racing-Reference. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
- ^ Nascar Blows it at Indy, 4 September 2008, archived from the original on 2021-12-21, retrieved 2021-05-03
- ^ "Race Results". Racing-Reference. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
- ^ Indianapolismotorspeedway.com Archived 2009-02-26 at the Wayback Machine "Goodyear, NASCAR Stars Pleased With Progress At Indy Tire Test" Retrieved February 1, 2009
- ^ "The Brickyard 400 Doesn't Matter Anymore". Apex Off. 2019-09-08. Retrieved 2020-09-22.
- ^ "Brick wall: Why Indy has lost its allure for NASCAR fans". www.sportingnews.com. 26 July 2014. Retrieved 2020-09-22.