2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season
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Champions | Seasons
Kevin Harvick, the current points leader

The 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series is the 68th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 45th modern-era Cup series season. The season began at Daytona International Speedway with the Sprint Unlimited, the Can-Am Duel and the Daytona 500. The season will end with the Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Kyle Busch entered as the defending champion.

The season also marks the second season of a new television contract. During the season, races will be broadcast in the United States by Fox Sports and NBC Sports.

The season will mark the final year of the partnership between Sprint Corporation and NASCAR[1] and the final season for three-time Sprint Cup Series champion Tony Stewart.[2]

Teams and drivers

Chartered teams

Manufacturer Team No. Race driver Crew chief
Chevrolet Chip Ganassi Racing 1 Jamie McMurray Matt McCall
42 Kyle Larson Chad Johnston[3]
Germain Racing 13 Casey Mears Bootie Barker
Hendrick Motorsports 5 Kasey Kahne Keith Rodden
24 Chase Elliott (R) Alan Gustafson
48 Jimmie Johnson Chad Knaus
88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Greg Ives
HScott Motorsports 15 Clint Bowyer Steve Addington
46 Michael Annett Jay Guy
JTG Daugherty Racing 47 A. J. Allmendinger Randall Burnett
Circle Sport
Leavine Family Racing
95 Ty Dillon 5 Todd Parrott
Michael McDowell 31 Dave Winston
Richard Childress Racing 3 Austin Dillon Slugger Labbe
27 Paul Menard Justin Alexander
31 Ryan Newman Luke Lambert
Stewart-Haas Racing 4 Kevin Harvick Rodney Childers
10 Danica Patrick Billy Scott
14 Brian Vickers 5 Mike Bugarewicz
Ty Dillon 3
Tony Stewart 28
41 Kurt Busch Tony Gibson
Tommy Baldwin Racing 7 Regan Smith Tommy Baldwin, Jr.
Ford Front Row Motorsports 34 Chris Buescher (R) Bob Osborne
38 Landon Cassill Donnie Wingo
Go FAS Racing 32 Bobby Labonte 4 Wally Rogers
Jeffrey Earnhardt (R) 20
Joey Gase 3
Patrick Carpentier 2
Richard Petty Motorsports 43 Aric Almirola Trent Owens
44 Brian Scott (R) Chris Heroy
Roush Fenway Racing 6 Trevor Bayne Matt Puccia
16 Greg Biffle Brian Pattie
17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Nick Sandler 35
Mike Kelley 1
Team Penske 2 Brad Keselowski Paul Wolfe
22 Joey Logano Todd Gordon
Toyota BK Racing 23 David Ragan Patrick Donahue
83 Michael Waltrip 1 Doug Richert
Matt DiBenedetto 35 Gene Nead
Furniture Row Racing 78 Martin Truex Jr. Cole Pearn 35
Todd Berrier 1
Joe Gibbs Racing 11 Denny Hamlin Mike Wheeler
18 Kyle Busch Adam Stevens
19 Carl Edwards Dave Rogers
20 Matt Kenseth Jason Ratcliff

Non-chartered teams

Complete schedule

Manufacturer Team No. Race driver Crew chief
Chevrolet The Motorsports Group 30 Josh Wise Dave Fuge
Ford Wood Brothers Racing 21 Ryan Blaney (R) Jeremy Bullins
Toyota 2
Chevrolet 9
Premium Motorsports[4] 98 Cole Whitt Mark Hillman

Limited schedule

Manufacturer Team No. Race driver Crew chief Round(s)
Chevrolet Circle Sport – Leavine Family Racing 59 Michael McDowell Dave Winston 1
Hillman Racing 40 Reed Sorenson Pat Tryson 1
Premium Motorsports 55 5
Toyota Michael Waltrip 1
Ford Front Row Motorsports 35 David Gilliland Joe Lax 1
Todd Anderson 1
2
Toyota BK Racing 26 Robert Richardson Jr. Mike Ford 1
93 Matt DiBenedetto Gene Nead 1
Ryan Ellis Mike Ford 3

Changes

Teams

Drivers

Crew chiefs

Manufacturers

Rule changes

Technical changes

All cars will run a digital dashboard starting in 2016. The dashboard is currently only providing information that was previously provided on manual gauges and lap times, but plans are to work in tire pressure readings and other telemetry to drivers, teams, and fans at home in the future.

At all tracks except Daytona and Talladega:

At Daytona and Talladega:

Safety enhancements at all tracks:

Other changes:

Schedule

The final calendar – comprising 36 races, as well as exhibition races, which are the Sprint Unlimited, Can-Am Duel qualifying duel races for the Daytona 500[35] and the Sprint All-Star Race – was released on October 26, 2015. With the schedule announcement also came the announcement of NASCAR securing a five-year contract with each track to continue to host races over the next five seasons.[36] Key changes from 2015 include:

No Race Title Track Date Time (ET)
Sprint Unlimited Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach February 13 8:00 p.m.
Can-Am Duel February 18 7:00 p.m.
1 Daytona 500 February 21 1:00 p.m.
2 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton February 28 1:00 p.m.
3 Kobalt 400 Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas March 6 3:30 p.m.
4 Good Sam 500 Phoenix International Raceway, Avondale March 13 3:30 p.m.
5 Auto Club 400 Auto Club Speedway, Fontana March 20 3:30 p.m.
6 STP 500 Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway April 3 1:00 p.m.
7 Duck Commander 500 Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth April 9 7:30 p.m.
8 Food City 500 Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol April 17 1:00 p.m.
9 Toyota Owners 400 Richmond International Raceway, Richmond April 24 1:00 p.m.
10 GEICO 500 Talladega Superspeedway, Lincoln May 1 1:00 p.m.
11 Go Bowling 400 Kansas Speedway, Kansas City May 7 7:30 p.m.
12 AAA 400 Drive for Autism Dover International Speedway, Dover May 15 1:00 p.m.
Sprint Showdown Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord May 20 7:00 p.m.
NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race May 21 7:00 p.m.
13 Coca-Cola 600 May 29 6:00 p.m.
14 Axalta "We Paint Winners" 400 Pocono Raceway, Long Pond June 5 1:00 p.m.
15 FireKeepers Casino 400 Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn June 12 1:00 p.m.
16 Toyota/Save Mart 350 Sonoma Raceway, Sonoma June 26 3:00 p.m.
17 Coke Zero 400 Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach July 2 7:45 p.m.
18 Quaker State 400 Kentucky Speedway, Sparta July 9 7:30 p.m.
19 New Hampshire 301 New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon July 17 1:30 p.m.
20 Brickyard 400 Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway July 24 3:00 p.m.
21 Pennsylvania 400 Pocono Raceway, Long Pond July 31 1:30 p.m.
22 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen Watkins Glen International, Watkins Glen August 7 2:30 p.m.
23 Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol August 20 8:00 p.m.
24 Pure Michigan 400 Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn August 28 2:00 p.m.
25 Bojangles' Southern 500 Darlington Raceway, Darlington September 4 6:00 p.m.
26 Federated Auto Parts 400 Richmond International Raceway, Richmond September 10 7:30 p.m.
Chase for the Sprint Cup
Round of 16
27 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 400 Chicagoland Speedway, Joliet September 18 2:00 p.m.
28 New England 300 New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon September 25 2:00 p.m.
29 Dover 400 Dover International Speedway, Dover October 2 2:00 p.m.
Round of 12
30 Bank of America 500 Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord October 8 7:00 p.m.
31 Hollywood Casino 400 Kansas Speedway, Kansas City October 16 2:15 p.m.
32 Alabama 500 Talladega Superspeedway, Lincoln October 23 2:00 p.m.
Round of 8
33 Goody's Fast Relief 500 Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway October 30 1:00 p.m.
34 AAA Texas 500 Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth November 6 2:00 p.m.
35 Can-Am 500 Phoenix International Raceway, Avondale November 13 2:30 p.m.
Championship 4
36 Ford 400 Homestead-Miami Speedway, Homestead November 20 2:30 p.m.

Season summary

Race reports

Speedweeks 2016

Speedweeks 2016 started with the 2016 Sprint Unlimited. Denny Hamlin led the most laps and won his third career Sprint Unlimited, followed by Joey Logano, Paul Menard, Kyle Larson, and Casey Mears. The race saw several multicar crashes, including one that sent the race into overtime. During the overtime period, a clean restart occurred before another multicar crash caused the race to end under yellow.[37]

Qualifying for the front row of the Daytona 500 took place the following day. Rookie Chase Elliott won the pole, becoming the youngest Daytona 500 pole winner ever at the age of 20 years, 2 months, and 17 days. Matt Kenseth joined Elliott on the front row by qualifying second.[38]

The following Thursday, the 2016 Can-Am Duels took place to set the remainder of the starting lineup for the Daytona 500. Dale Earnhardt Jr. led the most laps and won the first duel race. The second duel race was won by Kyle Busch ahead of a last-lap crash that involved multiple drivers including Jimmie Johnson, Martin Truex Jr., and polesitter Kenseth.[39]

Round 1: Daytona 500

Elliott started on pole, but was taken out of contention by an early spin through the grass that destroyed the front end of his car. Several other small wrecks occurred throughout the race including a spin by Brian Vickers that caused Trevor Bayne and Carl Edwards to make contact, a single-car wreck that sent Earnhardt into the wall, and a wreck between Danica Patrick and Greg Biffle. Denny Hamlin led the most laps, with the four Joe Gibbs Racing drivers and Truex Jr. up front for most of the race. On the last lap, Hamlin passed Kenseth for the lead and beat Truex Jr. to the line in a photo-finish, which was the closest margin in Daytona 500 history.[40]

Round 2: Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500

Kurt Busch started on pole after his younger brother Kyle Busch's pole-winning qualifying time was disallowed, resulting in him starting in the rear. The race used the new low downforce package and saw few caution flags. Kenseth led several laps but went two laps down after a miscommunication following a pit road penalty. Kevin Harvick led the most laps but Johnson took the lead after pitting early during the final round of green-flag pit stops. After a cut tire from Ryan Newman sent the race into overtime, Johnson would win the race under caution after a multicar wreck occurred following a clean restart. The win was the 76th career win for Johnson, tying Dale Earnhardt.[41]

Round 3: Kobalt 400

Kurt Busch led the field to green after a brief delay to rain showers. The race was plagued by high winds, with a sandstorm hitting the track at one point. Jimmie Johnson led the most laps in the race. A few wrecks occurred including one involving Regan Smith and Kyle Larson and a multicar wreck that took Matt Kenseth and Chase Elliott out of contention. Kyle Busch had the lead in the closing laps, but was passed by Brad Keselowski, who went on to win the race. Keselowski was followed by Joey Logano, Johnson, Kyle Busch, and Austin Dillon.[42]

Round 4: Good Sam 500

Kyle Busch started from the pole and led the early part of the race. Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl Edwards, and Kevin Harvick also led throughout the race, with Harvick leading the most laps. The race saw several drivers have tire issues from melted tire beads including Ryan Newman, Paul Menard, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., Brad Keselowski, and Kasey Kahne. Kahne's crash into the wall sent the race into overtime, where Harvick beat Edwards in a photo-finish, followed by Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch, and Earnhardt, Jr. Harvick won his 8th career race at Phoenix.[43]

Round 5: Auto Club 400

Austin Dillon started the race from the pole. A number of drivers had tire issues throughout the race, including Kyle Larson, who crashed into the inside wall hard. Another incident occurred with Kasey Kahne and Danica Patrick got together, sending Patrick into the wall. Kevin Harvick led the most laps in the race. The race went into overtime after Kyle Busch got into the wall from a blown tire. In the overtime finish, Jimmie Johnson scored his 77th career win, ahead of Harvick, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, and Ricky Stenhouse, Jr.[44]

Round 6: STP 500

Joey Logano started on the pole and led early before fading. A few incidents occurred during the race including an early spin by Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Denny Hamlin getting into the wall. Kyle Busch led the most laps and went on to win the race, his first career win at Martinsville and completing the weekend sweep as he won the Camping World Truck Series race the day before. Kyle Busch was followed by A.J. Allmendinger, Kyle Larson, Austin Dillon, and Brad Keselowski.[45]

Round 7: Duck Commander 500

Carl Edwards led the field to green after a two-hour delay from rain. Martin Truex, Jr. led the most laps in the race. Late in the race, a 13-car wreck occurred when Austin Dillon spun and caused a chain reaction that collected several drivers including Paul Menard, Ryan Newman, Trevor Bayne, Brian Vickers, and Brian Scott. During the final caution, Truex, Jr. stayed out while several other drivers came to pit road for fresh tires. On the restart, Kyle Busch was able to get around Truex, Jr. and win the race, his second straight Cup win and second consecutive weekend sweep as he won the Xfinity Series race the night before. Kyle Busch was followed across the finish line by Dale Earnhardt Jr., Joey Logano, Jimmie Johnson, and Chase Elliott.[46]

Round 8: Food City 500

Carl Edwards started the race from pole position as Dale Earnhardt Jr. went two laps down early after not being able to get going at the initial start. Matt Kenseth led several laps in the early part of the race. Kyle Busch experienced tire issues, a spin, and pit-road speeding penalties before a cut right-front tire sent him hard into the wall a little past halfway, ending his race. Kenseth also had a right-front tire issue that sent him into the wall and knocked him out of contention. Kyle Larson experienced a broken track bar that left him multiple laps down. Denny Hamlin and Aric Almirola both got into the wall late in the race in separate crashes. Edwards would go on to lead the most laps and win the race, his first of the season. Edwards was followed by Earnhardt, Jr. (who rebounded from his early issues), Kurt Busch, Chase Elliott, and Trevor Bayne. BK Racing driver Matt DiBenedetto recorded a career best finish of 6th.[47]

Round 9: Toyota Owners 400

Kevin Harvick started from pole after qualifying was rained out and the field was set by practice speeds. The race saw long green-flag runs in the early part of the race. Several drivers rotated the lead throughout the race, including Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch, and Kurt Busch. In the later part of the race, a few incidents occurred including a cut tire from Tony Stewart, who made his first start of the season after missing the first eight races due to an offseason back injury, and a wreck from Brian Scott. In the closing laps, Kyle Busch held the lead with Edwards close behind. On the final lap, Edwards did a "bump and run" move to take the lead from Kyle Busch and score his second straight win. Kyle Busch finished second, followed by Johnson, Kasey Kahne, and Harvick.[48]

Round 10: GEICO 500

Chase Elliott was on pole position for the race. The race was threatened by rain and featured intense racing and numerous multicar wrecks. Early in the race, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. got loose and collected Kasey Kahne. Under this caution, Ty Dillon relieved Tony Stewart, who made his second start of the season since returning from a back injury. Near the middle of the race, a 7-car wreck occurred that saw Chris Buescher flip multiple times. Carl Edwards got into Earnhardt, Jr., causing serious damage to both cars. Kahne would also be involved in a second wreck. Toward the later part of the race, several crashes occurred, including "The Big One", which involved 21 cars, and a hard wreck involving Danica Patrick and Matt Kenseth that saw Kenseth go airborne and ride along the infield wall upside down. Brad Keselowski won the race as a multicar wreck occurred coming to the checkered flag that involved Kevin Harvick and Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., among others.[49]


Results and standings

Races

No. Race Pole position Most laps led Winning driver Manufacturer Report
Sprint Unlimited Johnson, JimmieJimmie Johnson Hamlin, DennyDenny Hamlin Hamlin, DennyDenny Hamlin Toyota Report
Can-Am Duel 1 Elliott, ChaseChase Elliott Earnhardt, Jr., DaleDale Earnhardt, Jr. Earnhardt, Jr., DaleDale Earnhardt, Jr. Chevrolet Report
Can-Am Duel 2 Kenseth, MattMatt Kenseth Busch, KyleKyle Busch Busch, KyleKyle Busch Toyota
1 Daytona 500 Elliott, ChaseChase Elliott Hamlin, DennyDenny Hamlin Hamlin, DennyDenny Hamlin Toyota Report
2 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 Busch, KurtKurt Busch Harvick, KevinKevin Harvick Johnson, JimmieJimmie Johnson Chevrolet Report
3 Kobalt 400 Busch, KurtKurt Busch Johnson, JimmieJimmie Johnson Keselowski, BradBrad Keselowski Ford Report
4 Good Sam 500 Busch, KyleKyle Busch Harvick, KevinKevin Harvick Harvick, KevinKevin Harvick Chevrolet Report
5 Auto Club 400 Dillon, AustinAustin Dillon Harvick, KevinKevin Harvick Johnson, JimmieJimmie Johnson Chevrolet Report
6 STP 500 Logano, JoeyJoey Logano Busch, KyleKyle Busch Busch, KyleKyle Busch Toyota Report
7 Duck Commander 500 Edwards, CarlCarl Edwards Truex Jr., MartinMartin Truex Jr. Busch, KyleKyle Busch Toyota Report
8 Food City 500 Edwards, CarlCarl Edwards Edwards, CarlCarl Edwards Edwards, CarlCarl Edwards Toyota Report
9 Toyota Owners 400 Harvick, KevinKevin Harvick Edwards, CarlCarl Edwards Edwards, CarlCarl Edwards Toyota Report
10 GEICO 500 Elliott, ChaseChase Elliott Keselowski, BradBrad Keselowski Keselowski, BradBrad Keselowski Ford Report
11 Go Bowling 400 Report

Drivers' Championship

(key) Bold – Pole position awarded by time. Italics – Pole position set by final practice results or 2015/16 Owner's points. * – Most laps led.
. – Eliminated after Round of 16
. – Eliminated after Round of 12 . – Eliminated after Round of 8

Pos. Driver DAY ATL LVS PHO CAL MAR TEX BRI RCH TAL KAN DOV CLT POC MCH SON DAY KEN NHA IND POC GLN BRI MCH DAR RCH CHI NHA DOV CLT KAN TAL MAR TEX PHO HOM Pts
1 Kevin Harvick 4 6* 7 1* 2* 17 10 7 5 15 351
2 Kyle Busch 3 3 4 4 25 1* 1 38 2 2 342
3 Carl Edwards 5 5 18 2 7 6 7 1* 1* 35 337
4 Jimmie Johnson 16 1 3* 11 1 9 4 23 3 22 329
5 Joey Logano 6 12 2 18 4 11 3 10 8 25 316
6 Kurt Busch 10 4 9 6 30 13 9 3 10 8 312
7 Brad Keselowski 20 9 1 29 9 5 18 18 11 1* 300
8 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 36 2 8 5 11 14 2 2 13 40 279
9 Martin Truex Jr. 2 7 11 14 32 18 6* 14 9 13 274
10 Austin Dillon 9 11 5 9 24 4 19 26 20 3 272
11 Chase Elliott (R) 37 8 38 8 6 20 5 4 12 5 271
12 Denny Hamlin 1* 16 19 3 3 39 12 20 6 31 269
13 Jamie McMurray 17 21 16 16 10 23 13 13 16 4 261
14 A. J. Allmendinger 21 27 14 17 8 2 22 19 25 14 232
15 Matt Kenseth 14 19 37 7 19 15 11 36 7 23 231
16 Trevor Bayne 28 22 17 23 20 27 15 5 17 10 228
17 Kasey Kahne 13 23 10 22 28 22 8 17 4 39 224
18 Ryan Blaney (R) 19 25 6 10 35 19 29 11 28 9 219
19 Ryan Newman 11 24 13 39 14 10 17 9 18 28 219
20 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 22 10 12 37 5 32 16 16 26 16 218
21 Paul Menard 18 18 15 38 15 8 26 15 22 26 201
22 Kyle Larson 7 26 34 12 39 3 14 35 15 29 197
23 Greg Biffle 34 13 20 21 37 12 39 12 14 20 188
24 Aric Almirola 12 15 24 13 21 40 24 34 21 27 180
25 Landon Cassill 23 36 28 25 16 28 25 22 27 11 170
26 Danica Patrick 35 20 21 19 38 16 21 27 24 24 166
27 Clint Bowyer 33 35 22 31 18 25 38 8 33 7 160
28 Casey Mears 32 14 23 35 17 31 23 24 29 33 149
29 Brian Scott (R) 24 31 27 27 12 26 27 30 35 30 142
30 Matt DiBenedetto 40 29 31 20 27 29 34 6 30 36 128
31 Regan Smith 8 34 25 28 23 34 31 37 32 32 127
32 David Ragan 29 32 32 24 22 21 33 39 23 34 124
33 Michael McDowell 15 33 29 26 31 24 29 31 21 120
34 Chris Buescher (R) 39 28 26 30 33 33 28 21 34 37 101
35 Michael Annett 27 30 30 33 29 35 32 31 36 38 90
36 Brian Vickers 26 36 13 7 37 86
37 Cole Whitt DNQ 37 39 36 26 30 30 28 DNQ 18 86
38 Tony Stewart 19 6 57
39 Michael Waltrip 30 12 42
40 Jeffrey Earnhardt (R) 38 33 34 35 32 38 36
41 Bobby Labonte 31 19 34
42 Josh Wise DNQ 39 35 34 36 38 40 33 39 DNQ 34
43 David Gilliland DNQ 17 24
44 Reed Sorenson DNQ 37 36 40 40 11
45 Robert Richardson Jr. 38 3
Ineligible for Sprint Cup driver points
Pos. Driver DAY ATL LVS PHO CAL MAR TEX BRI RCH TAL KAN DOV CLT POC MCH SON DAY KEN NHA IND POC GLN BRI MCH DAR RCH CHI NHA DOV CLT KAN TAL MAR TEX PHO HOM Pts
Ty Dillon 25 17 15 20 25 QL
Joey Gase 32 36
Ryan Ellis 37

Manufacturers' Championship

Pos Manufacturer Wins Points
1 Toyota 5 420
2 Chevrolet 3 404
3 Ford 2 368
Source:[50]

Media coverage

In the United States, Fox and NBC will continue to broadcast the season. The first 16 events will be broadcast on either Fox or Fox Sports 1,[51] and the final 20 events will be shared between NBC and NBCSN.[52] However, the Watkins Glen race will be aired on USA Network due to NBC focusing on the 2016 Summer Olympics.[53]

See also

References

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  2. "Tony Stewart planning retirement after one more season". ESPN News Services (ESPN Internet Ventures). Associated Press. September 30, 2015. Retrieved November 23, 2015.
  3. Spencer, Lee (November 23, 2015). "Johnston to replace Heroy as Kyle Larson's crew chief". Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network, LLC. Retrieved November 23, 2015.
  4. "Jayski's® NASCAR Silly Season Site — NASCAR Sprint Cup News Page". www.jayski.com. Retrieved 2016-01-06.
  5. Pockrass, Bob (August 22, 2015). "Michael Waltrip Racing to close at season's end". ESPN.com. Bristol, Tennessee: ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
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  13. Wackerlin, Jeff (January 20, 2016). "Cassill Ready for Next Chapter". MRN.com. Charlotte, North Carolina: Motor Racing Network. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
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