2006 Subway 500

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Date October 22, 2006 (2006-10-22)
Location Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway, Virginia, US[4]
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 0.526 miles (0.85 km)
2006 Subway 500
Race details[1][2][3]
Race 32 of 36 in the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series
Logo of the Subway 500
2006 Subway 500 program cover
Date October 22, 2006 (2006-10-22)
Location Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway, Virginia, US[4]
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 0.526 miles (0.85 km)
Distance 500 laps, 263 mi (423 km)
Weather Temperatures up to 66.2 °F (19.0 °C); wind speeds up to 5.10 miles per hour (8.21 km/h)[5]
Average speed 70.446 mph (113.372 km/h)
Pole position
Driver Penske Racing South
Time 19.408
Most laps led
Driver Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
Laps 245
Winner
No. 48 Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
Television in the United States
Network NBC
Announcers Bill Weber, Benny Parsons, Wally Dallenbach Jr.
Nielsen ratings
  • 4.1/9 (Final)
  • 3.5/7 (Overnight)[6]
Radio in the United States
Radio Motor Racing Network
Booth announcers Joe Moore, Barney Hall
Turn announcers Mike Bagley, Dan Hubbard, Dave Moody, Jeff Striegle

The 2006 Subway 500 was the 32nd stock car race of the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series and the sixth in the ten-race Chase for the Nextel Cup. It was held on October 22, 2006, before a crowd of 65,000, at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia, United States. Hendrick Motorsports driver Jimmie Johnson won the 500‑lap race starting from the ninth position; Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing finished second, and Bobby Labonte of Petty Enterprises was third.

Jeff Burton was the driver who led the Drivers' Championship going into the race with a 45-point margin over Matt Kenseth in second. Kurt Busch won the pole position with the fastest lap time in qualifying. He was immediately passed by Jeff Gordon at the start of the race. Gordon held the lead for 143 laps, until Johnson took the lead for one lap. Gordon regained the lead on the next lap, only to lose it to Johnson again on the 153rd lap. Labonte moved into the lead on lap 406 and held it with 55 laps remaining when he was passed by Johnson. At the race's final restart on lap 495, Hamlin challenged Johnson for the lead, but the latter held off Hamlin's passing maneuver and won the race. There were 18 cautions and 16 lead changes by five different drivers during the race.

It was Johnson's fifth win of the 2006 season and the 23rd of his career. The result advanced him from to third in the Drivers' Championship, 41 points behind Kenseth (who took over the championship lead when Burton retired during the race; this caused Burton to fall to fifth in the championship, one point behind Hamlin). Chevrolet maintained its lead in the Manufacturers' Championship, 53 points ahead of Dodge, and 61 ahead of Ford with four races left in the season.

Photograph of the Martinsville Speedway in 2011
Martinsville Speedway

The Subway 500 was the 32nd of 36 scheduled stock car races of the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series and the sixth in the ten-race season-ending Chase for the Nextel Cup.[2] On October 22, 2006, it was held at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia,[4] a short track that holds NASCAR races,[7] and ran for a total of 500 laps over a distance of 263 mi (423 km).[8] The standard track at Martinsville Speedway is a four-turn, paperclip-shaped 0.526-mile (0.847 km) oval.[8][9] Its turns are banked at eleven degrees, and neither the front stretch (the location of the finish line) nor the backstretch is banked.[9]

Before the race, Jeff Burton led the Drivers' Championship with 5,763 points, with Matt Kenseth second on 5,718 points and Kevin Harvick with 5,674 points in third. Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were fourth and fifth, and Denny Hamlin, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne, Kyle Busch and Jeff Gordon rounded out the top ten drivers competing for the 2006 Chase for the Nextel Cup.[10] In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet led with 237 points; Dodge was second with 179, followed by Ford with 173.[11] Gordon was the race's defending champion.[12]

After falling from seventh to tenth in the Drivers' Championship at the previous race (at Charlotte Motor Speedway), Gordon said he would try and win races to return to contention for the championship.[13] Jeff Burton called the Subway 500 "another volatile race in the Chase" and thought it would significantly impact the chase contenders.[14] Although Kenseth felt the race would be the toughest for his team, he believed a good finish would put him in a better position for the championship because of his good results at the tracks following the Martinsville race.[14] After a good finish at Charlotte, Earnhardt felt he was in "good shape": "Jeff has been at this a long time, but I don't look at him as indestructible. If he has a mistake or even a couple of bad runs, it will completely shake up the points."[14] After winning the Busch Series championship, Harvick focused on the Nextel Cup championship: "We're excited about it, proud of what we've done this year, and, hopefully, we can do what we need to do on the Cup side in the next five weeks. I have never had a season like this."[15] Hamlin thought he would perform well at Martinsville, where he felt comfortable. He and his team did not rule themselves out of contention for the title.[16]

In preparation for the race, NASCAR held the last of its test days for Nextel Cup entrants on October 16–18 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Sessions began at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), paused from 5:00 to 6:00 p.m., and concluded at 9:00 p.m. Fifty-eight cars, a mix of Cars of Tomorrow and 2006 cars, participated in the October 16 afternoon session. Reed Sorenson was quickest with a speed of 171.652 miles per hour (276.247 km/h), and Casey Mears had the highest speed of 173.077 miles per hour (278.540 km/h) in the evening session. During the third session (with 75 cars), Kyle Busch had the fastest speed of 175.382 miles per hour (282.250 km/h); Gordon had the highest speed of the three days, at 175.553 miles per hour (282.525 km/h) in the fourth session. During the fifth session, on the afternoon of October 18, 23 cars were tested. Scott Wimmer had the highest speed of 172.364 miles per hour (277.393 km/h), and Jeff Green had the highest speed of 174.639 miles per hour (281.054 km/h) in the evening session.[17]

There were 50 cars represented by 3 different manufacturers entered for the race from a total of 29 teams.[18] One team substituted for its regular driver. Morgan-McClure Motorsports driver Todd Bodine decided to concentrate on the Craftsman Truck Series title and was replaced by Ward Burton, the 2002 Daytona 500 champion.[19] Burton, who had not raced since 2004, went to Motor Mile Speedway to reacquaint himself with NASCAR.[20] According to crew chief Chris Carrier, Burton expressed a large amount of interest in driving at Martinsville: "He's a Virginia driver and we're a Virginia team. That makes for a great combination at Martinsville."[20] On October 18, Roush Racing announced that Craftsman Truck Series driver David Ragan would drive the No. 06 car in four of the season's five remaining races beginning with the Subway 500. Ragan said the experience would help him prepare for his full-time début in 2007.[21]

Practice and qualification

Kurt Busch at Sonoma Speedway in 2015
Kurt Busch (pictured in 2015) had the ninth pole position of his career.

Three practice sessions were held before the Sunday race: one on Friday and two on Saturday. The first session lasted 90 minutes, the second 60 minutes, and the third 45 minutes.[2] In the first practice session, Gordon was fastest with a time of 19.478 seconds; Ryan Newman was second and Hamlin third. Johnson took fourth position, and Dave Blaney placed fifth. Kurt Busch, Sterling Marlin, Green, Sorenson, and Kahne rounded out the session's top ten drivers.[22] Martin switched to a back-up car after he crashed.[2]

Fifty cars entered qualifying on Friday afternoon,[2][23] due to NASCAR's qualifying procedure, only forty-three could race. Each driver ran two laps, with the starting order determined by the competitor's fastest times.[2] Kurt Busch clinched his sixth pole position of the season, the ninth of his career and his first at Martinsville,[2] with a time of 19.408 seconds. He was joined on the grid's front row by Gordon, who was 0.038 seconds slower and had the pole position until Kurt Busch's lap.[24][25] Hamlin qualified third, Newman fourth, and Tony Stewart fifth. Blaney was sixth, with Earnhardt and Green seventh and eighth. Johnson, a Chase for the Nextel Cup driver, qualified ninth, and Ken Schrader rounded out the top ten qualifiers. Harvick, another driver in the Chase, set the twelfth-fastest time. The seven drivers who failed to qualify were Mike Bliss, Hermie Sadler, Chad Chaffin, Morgan Shepherd, Ted Christopher, Derrike Cope, and Stanton Barrett.[25] After the qualifier, Kurt Busch said, "It was a great lap, unexpected for me, but this team has always qualified well at this track, Martinsville is the kind of track that you either love or hate, and I've learned to do both. It's a tough, challenging short track."[24]

On Saturday morning, Marlin was fastest in the second practice session with a time of 19.668 seconds. Positions two through ten were occupied by Kahne, Gordon, Dale Jarrett, Mears, Johnson, Hamlin, Brian Vickers, Greg Biffle, and Jeff Burton. Of the other drivers in the Chase, Kyle Busch was 13th-fastest and Martin 19th.[26] During the second practice session, Scott Riggs had an engine failure in the session's opening minutes and changed engines.[26][27] Later that day, Johnson led the final practice session with a 19.722 lap; Harvick, Biffle, Marlin, David Stremme, Hamlin. Earnhardt, Kyle Busch, Gordon, and Mears were in positions two to ten. Other Chase drivers included Jeff Burton in 17th and Kahne in 17th; all were within one-tenth of a second of Johnson's time.[28] The session was suspended when Kenny Wallace's engine blew up since the track then needed to be checked and cleaned, and Wallace changed engines. Jarrett spun out with a brake problem, but since he made only minor contact with the wall, he did not have to switch to a back-up car. After a similar collision, Michael Waltrip also did not have to switch cars.[2]

Qualifying results

Grid No. Driver Team Manufacturer Time Speed
1 2Kurt BuschPenske Racing SouthDodge19.40897.568
2 24Jeff GordonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet19.44697.377
3 11Denny HamlinJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet19.48497.187
4 12Ryan NewmanPenske Racing SouthDodge19.48997.162
5 20Tony StewartJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet19.51497.038
6 22Dave BlaneyBill Davis RacingDodge19.55796.825
7 8Dale Earnhardt Jr.Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet19.56796.775
8 66Jeff GreenHaas CNC RacingChevrolet19.59796.627
9 48Jimmie JohnsonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet19.63196.460
10 21Ken SchraderWood Brothers RacingFord19.63596.440
11 96Tony RainesHall of Fame RacingChevrolet19.64696.386
12 29Kevin HarvickRichard Childress RacingChevrolet19.66096.317
13 40David StremmeChip Ganassi RacingDodge19.67696.239
14 45Kyle PettyPetty EnterprisesDodge19.68396.205
15 5Kyle BuschHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet19.69096.171
16 41Reed SorensonChip Ganassi RacingChevrolet19.69996.128
17 10Scott RiggsEvernham MotorsportsDodge19.70996.0781
18 1Martin Truex Jr.Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet19.72496.005
19 42Casey MearsChip Ganassi RacingDodge19.72695.995
20 17Matt KensethRoush RacingFord19.73795.942
21 25Brian VickersHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet19.74095.927
22 14Sterling MarlinMB2 MotorsportChevrolet19.75095.879
23 01Joe NemechekGinn RacingChevrolet19.75295.869
24 26Jamie McMurrayRoush RacingFord19.75595.854
25 6Mark MartinRoush RacingFord19.77695.752
26 7Robby GordonRobby Gordon MotorsportsChevrolet19.78095.733
27 99Carl EdwardsRoush RacingFord19.79195.680
28 31Jeff BurtonRichard Childress RacingChevrolet19.79795.651
29 38David GillilandRobert Yates RacingFord19,81195.583
30 43Bobby LabontePetty EnterprisesDodge19.81895.549
31 32Travis KvapilPPI MotorsportsChevrolet19.84595.420
32 9Kasey KahneEvernham MotorsportsDodge19.85095.396
33 55Michael WaltripWaltrip-Jasper RacingDodge19.86695.319
34 19Elliott SadlerEvernham MotorsportsDodge19.86795.314
35 4Ward BurtonMorgan-McClure MotorsportsChevrolet19.86995.304
36 18J. J. YeleyJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet19.87295.290
37 07Clint BowyerRichard Childress RacingChevrolet19.89495.185
38 16Greg BiffleRoush RacingFord19.90495.137
39 88Dale JarrettRobert Yates RacingFord19.90895.118
40 78Kenny WallaceFurniture Row RacingChevrolet19.91995.0651
41 06David RaganRoush RacingFord19.93994.970
42 34Kevin LepageFront Row MotorsportsChevrolet19.96494.851
43 72Mike SkinnerCJM RacingChevrolet19.96594.846
Failed to qualify
44 49Mike BlissBAM RacingDodge19.99394.713
45 00Hermie SadlerMBA RacingChevrolet20.14693.994
46 61Chad ChaffinFront Row MotorsportsDodge20.21393.682
47 89Morgan ShepherdShepherd Racing VenturesDodge20.21793.664
48 27Ted ChristopherKirk Shelmerdine RacingChevrolet20.23193.599
49 74Derrike CopeMcGlynn RacingDodge20.27793.387
50 30Stanton BarrettRick Ware RacingChevrolet20.55192.142
1 Moved to the back of the field for changing engines
Sources:[25][18][3]

Race

Standings after the race

References

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