2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series

The 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series was the 58th season of professional Stock car racing in the United States and the 35th modern-era NASCAR Cup series season. It was started at Daytona International Speedway on Sunday, February 12 with the Budweiser Shootout and ended on Monday, November 20, with the Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The Chase for the Nextel Cup began with the Sylvania 300 on Sunday, September 17, at New Hampshire International Speedway.

2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series
Previous: 2005 Next: 2007
Champions | Seasons
Jimmie Johnson, the 2006 Nextel Cup Series champion. This was the first of his five consecutive titles.
Matt Kenseth finished second behind Johnson by 56 points.
Denny Hamlin finished third in the championship and also won Rookie of the Year.

Tony Stewart, driver of the No. 20 Chevrolet for Joe Gibbs Racing, was the defending series champion, but lost out in defending his championship this year, having finished outside of the top 10 in the points standings after the Chevy Rock and Roll 400. He did, however, claim a $1 million (US) bonus as the best finisher outside the Chase for the Nextel Cup drivers, winning three of the ten Chase races. By the end of the season Chevrolet had captured 23 victories, and 270 points to win the NASCAR Manufacturers' Championship over Ford.[1]

The 2006 season was the first for Ford's all-new Fusion, which replaced the Taurus both in NASCAR and in showrooms. Also, a new version of the Chevrolet Monte Carlo, called the Monte Carlo Super Sport (SS for short) debuted on the circuit. Additionally, 2006 was the first Cup Series season since 1979 without Rusty Wallace and 1974 without Ricky Rudd, although Rudd made one appearance in relief and would return for one final year in 2007 before retiring. It was also the last season before Toyota joins the NASCAR Cup Series as a manufacturer.

Teams and drivers

Complete schedule

Car(s) Team No. Driver(s) Crew Chief
Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt, Inc. 1 Martin Truex Jr. (R) Kevin Manion
8 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Tony Eury Jr.
Furniture Row Racing 78 Kenny Wallace 31 Joe Garone
Jimmy Spencer 3
Travis Kvapil 1
Max Papis 1
MB2 Motorsports
Ginn Racing
01 Joe Nemechek Ryan Pemberton
14 Sterling Marlin Doug Randolph
Haas CNC Racing 66 Jeff Green Harold Holly
Hall of Fame Racing 96 Terry Labonte 7 Phillipe Lopez
Tony Raines 29
Hendrick Motorsports 5 Kyle Busch Alan Gustafson
24 Jeff Gordon Steve Letarte
25 Brian Vickers Lance McGrew
48 Jimmie Johnson Chad Knaus
Joe Gibbs Racing 11 Denny Hamlin (R) Mike Ford
18 J. J. Yeley (R) Steve Addington
20 Tony Stewart Greg Zipadelli
Morgan-McClure Motorsports 4 Scott Wimmer 28 Chris Carrier
P. J. Jones 1
Todd Bodine 3
Ward Burton 4
PPI Motorsports 32 Travis Kvapil 34 James Ince
Ron Fellows 2
Richard Childress Racing 07 Clint Bowyer (R) Gil Martin
29 Kevin Harvick Todd Berrier
31 Jeff Burton Scott Miller
Robby Gordon Motorsports 7 Robby Gordon Greg Erwin
Dodge BAM Racing 49 Brent Sherman (R) 8 Ron Otto
Jimmy Spencer 1
Mike Wallace 1
Kevin Lepage 17
Chris Cook 2
Mike Bliss 7
Bill Davis Racing 22 Dave Blaney Kevin Hamlin
Chip Ganassi Racing
with Felix Sabates
40 David Stremme (R) 34 Jeff Vandermoss
Scott Pruett 2
41 Reed Sorenson (R) Jimmy Elledge
42 Casey Mears Donnie Wingo
Evernham Motorsports 9 Kasey Kahne Kenny Francis
10 Scott Riggs Rodney Childers
19 Jeremy Mayfield 21 Chris Andrews
Bill Elliott 1
Elliott Sadler 14
Penske Racing South 2 Kurt Busch Roy McCauley
12 Ryan Newman Matt Borland
Petty Enterprises 43 Bobby Labonte Todd Parrott
45 Kyle Petty Paul Andrews
Waltrip-Jasper Racing 55 Michael Waltrip Derrick Finley
Ford Robert Yates Racing 38 Elliott Sadler 22 Tommy Baldwin Jr.
David Gilliland 14
88 Dale Jarrett Slugger Labbe
Roush Racing 6 Mark Martin Pat Tryson
16 Greg Biffle Doug Richert
17 Matt Kenseth Robbie Reiser
26 Jamie McMurray Jimmy Fennig/Wally Brown
99 Carl Edwards Bob Osborne
Wood Brothers/JTG Racing[2] 21 Ken Schrader David Hyder
Chevrolet
Dodge
Ford
Peak Fitness Racing 9
Front Row Motorsports 27
34 Randy LaJoie 2 Wayne Hatfield
Chad Chaffin (R) 11
Chad Blount 7
Carl Long 3
Greg Sacks 2
Mike Skinner 2
Johnny Miller 1
Joey McCarthy 1
Brian Simo 1
Kertus Davis 1
Kevin Lepage 4
61 Kevin Lepage 13 Greg Conner 15
Mike Steurer 17
Craig Osbourne 4
Chad Chaffin (R) 17
Brian Simo 1
Chad Blount 1
Ted Christopher 1
Derrike Cope 1
Stanton Barrett 1

Limited schedule

Car(s) Team No. Driver(s) Crew Chief Rounds
Chevrolet Braun Racing 71 Jason Leffler Todd Lohse 1
CJM Racing 72 Kertus Davis Doug George 2
Brent Sherman 1
David Gilliland 1
Dale Quarterley 1
Mike Skinner 4
Brandon Whitt 2
Competitive Edge Motorsports 51 Mike Garvey Barry Haefele 10
Cupp Motorsports 46 Carl Long Stan Hover 4
Dale Earnhardt, Inc. 15 Paul Menard Dan Stillman 10
Front Row Motorsports 92 Chad Chaffin (R) Teddy Brown 1
Randy LaJoie 1
Chad Blount 6
Johnny Miller 1
Haas CNC Racing 70 Johnny Sauter Bootie Barker 2
Hendrick Motorsports 44 Terry Labonte Peter Sospenzo 10
Kirk Shelmerdine Racing 27 Kirk Shelmerdine Phil Harris 6
Tom Hubert 2
Ted Christopher 3
Mike Skinner 1
MB2 Motorsports 36 Bill Elliott Frank Stoddard 1
MBA Racing 00 Hermie Sadler Micah Horton 8
Larry Carter 5
8
Michael Waltrip Racing Bill Elliott 5
Morgan-McClure Motorsports 04 Eric McClure Danny Gill 1
Richard Childress Racing 33 Scott Wimmer Pat Smith 1
Stanton Barrett Racing 95 Stanton Barrett Shawn Parker 16
Dodge Arnold Motorsports 50 Larry Foyt Buddy Sisco 1
Bill Davis Racing 23 Mike Skinner Ricky Viers 1
Bill Lester 3
Bobby Hamilton Racing 04 Bobby Hamilton Jr. 3
Brandon Ash Racing 02 Brandon Ash Ed Ash 2
Chip Ganassi Racing 30 Juan Pablo Montoya Dan Kolanda 3
Steve Boyer 1
1
Rick Ware Racing Stanton Barrett 3
52 Dan Kolanda 1
Larry Gunselman 2
Steve Portenga 1
Donnie Neuenberger 2
McGlynn Racing 74 Derrike Cope Dom Turse 27
R&J Racing 37 Chad Blount Mark Tutor 1
Mike Skinner 5
Carl Long 3
David Murry 2
Bill Elliott 4
Shepherd Racing Ventures 89 Morgan Shepherd Doug George 16
Kertus Davis 1
Team Red Bull 83 Bill Elliott Ricky Viers 1
84 A. J. Allmendinger 2
Ford Andy Belmont Racing 59 Andy Belmont Billy Owen 1
Brent Sherman Racing 04 Brent Sherman 1
Hover Motorsports 80 Carl Long Stan Hover 1
MBA Racing 00 Hermie Sadler Micah Horton 9
No Fear Racing 60 Boris Said Frank Stoddard 4
David Ragan 2
Robert Yates Racing 90 Stephen Leicht Raymond Fox Jr. 2
Marc Goossens 1
Roush Racing 06 Todd Kluever Frank Stoddard 7
David Ragan 2
Sacks Motorsports 13 Greg Sacks 1
Chevrolet
Dodge
Ford
Phoenix Racing 09 Mike Wallace Marc Reno 6
Jeremy Mayfield 2

Driver changes for 2006

Several new drivers were in their first stint as regulars on the Nextel Cup circuit in 2006. After winning back-to-back Busch Series championships in 2004 and 2005, Martin Truex Jr. drove the No. 1 Chevrolet for Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI). Vacated by Michael Waltrip, their No. 15 car was driven by rookie Paul Menard and ran a part-time schedule of only seven races.

Waltrip left DEI to drive Bill Davis Racing's new No. 55 car, but ownership was transferred to the newly merged (with the old No. 77 team) Waltrip-Jasper Racing to ensure that Waltrip would compete in the first five races. Despite the change, the No. 55 still received most of its equipment and crew from BDR. On January 23 in Charlotte, North Carolina, as part of the annual Media Tour, NASCAR announced that the Toyota Camry would be added to the series in 2007, meaning that Toyota would become the first non-American car manufacturer to run in the premier series since Jaguar in the mid-1950s. Waltrip-Jasper Racing and BDR became two of the first Toyota teams, although they raced Dodges. They did so without Dodge's support because BDR had raced Toyotas in the Craftsman Truck Series. The team hired Dave Blaney to take the wheel of the No. 22 Dodge. A third Toyota team, carrying the No. 83, was owned by Red Bull Energy Drink, with Brian Vickers as the driver. It was believed that they would also buy the No. 7 Jim Smith-owned team driven by Robby Gordon. 1988 series champion Bill Elliott attempted three races for Red Bull in a Dodge, as the 2006 Camry was not approved for racing. He didn't make any starts in the ride, nor did former Champ Car driver A. J. Allmendinger. With Blaney's departure, the No. 07 Chevy for Richard Childress Racing was driven by Clint Bowyer.

2004 Nextel Cup champion Kurt Busch, who was taken over by in Roush Racing's, replaced a retired Rusty Wallace in the No. 2 Dodge for Penske Racing. 2003 Rookie of the Year Jamie McMurray replaced Busch to drive Roush's No.26 (formerly 97) Ford. In addition, Mark Martin continued his "Salute to You" tour for their No.6 car.

With the egressing of both McMurray and Sterling Marlin from Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, Casey Mears became the senior driver and moved to No. 42 Dodge and Reed Sorenson took over his ride in the No. 41. David Stremme replaced Marlin in the No. 40 car. Sold to resort magnate Bob Ginn during the season and formerly numbered 10, Marlin drove the No. 14 car for MB2 Motorsports and Scott Riggs took the No. 10 car to Evernham Motorsports just as they switched from Chevy to Dodge. Jeremy Mayfield and Elliott Sadler were released from Evernham Motorsports and Robert Yates Racing. Sadler drove Evernham's No. 19, and David Gilliland replaced him in RYR No. 38 car; that change took effect for the GFS Marketplace 400.

Jeff Green replaced Mike Bliss in the No. 66 (formerly No. 0) car, which left Petty Enterprises' No. 43 Dodge open for former Joe Gibbs Racing driver Bobby Labonte to step in. His new teammate/team owner Kyle Petty brought sponsorships from Wells Fargo, NTB, and Schwan's to the No. 45 car, with Schwan's moving from the No. 49. Competitive Edge Motorsports ceased operations, and Marathon Petroleum Company sponsored Kyle Petty. J. J. Yeley took over for Labonte in JGR No. 18 Chevrolet. Denny Hamlin, after scoring three Top 10 finishes at the end of the previous season, raced full-time in their newly entered No. 11 car, and he claimed rookie of the year honors, two checkered flags (both at Pocono Raceway, the first rookie to sweep both races in a single season) and third in the Championship standings.

Hall of Fame Racing started operations in 2006. Two-time Cup series champion Terry Labonte drove their No. 96 car for the first five races utilizing the past champions provisional rule, and Tony Raines took over at Martinsville. Labonte wound down his career "Texas Style" in the No. 44 Hendrick Motorsports second car following the Dickies 500 race in November in his home state at Texas Motor Speedway, where he finished 34th.

Brent Sherman took over for Ken Schrader in the No. 49 Dodge for BAM Racing, only to be replaced by Kevin Lepage, who started the season in the No. 61 (formerly No. 66) car for Peak Fitness Racing. Bliss replaced Sherman in the No. 49 as well. Front Row Motorsports hired Chad Chaffin to run for Rookie of the Year and Randy LaJoie (who was replaced by Chad Blount) to run full-time in their No. 34/92 car as well as buying Peak Fitness Racing's No. 61, suspending the 92's operations. Schrader replaced Ricky Rudd in the Wood Brothers No. 21 Ford. Starting this season, Wood Brothers made a partnership with JTG Racing (a Busch Series and Truck Series at that time) to field the No. 21 entry and the team was renamed to Wood Brothers/JTG Racing.[2]

Scott Wimmer took Mike Wallace's place in Morgan-McClure Motorsports's No. 4 Chevrolet but departed when 2002 Daytona 500 champion Ward Burton took over for him late in the season after sitting on the sidelines. Travis Kvapil moved from the Jasper team to Chevrolet for PPI Motorsports. Furniture Row Racing announced it would run full-time with Kenny Wallace driving their No. 78 Chevrolet.

Schedule

No. Race Title Track Date
Budweiser Shootout Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach February 12
Gatorade Duel February 16
1 Daytona 500 February 19
2 Auto Club 500 California Speedway, Fontana February 26
3 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, Nevada March 12
4 Golden Corral 500 Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton March 20
5 Food City 500 Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol March 26
6 DirecTV 500 Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway April 2
7 Samsung/Radio Shack 500 Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth April 9
8 Subway Fresh 500 Phoenix International Raceway, Phoenix April 22
9 Aaron's 499 Talladega Superspeedway, Talladega May 1
10 Crown Royal 400 Richmond International Raceway, Richmond May 6
11 Dodge Charger 500 Darlington Raceway, Darlington May 13
Nextel Open Lowe's Motor Speedway, Concord May 20
Nextel All-Star Challenge
12 Coca-Cola 600 May 28
13 Neighborhood Excellence 400 presented by Bank of America Dover International Speedway, Dover June 4
14 Pocono 500 Pocono Raceway, Long Pond June 11
15 3M Performance 400 presented by Post-It Picture Paper Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn June 18
16 Dodge/Save Mart 350 Infineon Raceway, Sonoma June 25
17 Pepsi 400 Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach July 1
18 USG Sheetrock 400 Chicagoland Speedway, Joliet July 9
19 Lenox Industrial Tools 300 New Hampshire International Speedway, Loudon July 16
20 Pennsylvania 500 Pocono Raceway, Long Pond July 23
21 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway August 6
22 AMD at The Glen Watkins Glen International, Watkins Glen August 13
23 GFS Marketplace 400 Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn August 20
24 Sharpie 500 Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol August 26
25 Sony HD 500 California Speedway, Fontana September 3
26 Chevy Rock & Roll 400 Richmond International Raceway, Richmond September 9
Chase for the Championship
27 Sylvania 300 New Hampshire International Speedway, Loudon September 17
28 Dover 400 Dover International Speedway, Dover September 24
29 Banquet 400 presented by ConAgra Foods Kansas Speedway, Kansas City October 1
30 UAW-Ford 500 Talladega Superspeedway, Talladega October 8
31 Bank of America 500 Lowe's Motor Speedway, Concord October 14
32 Subway 500 Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway October 22
33 Bass Pro Shops 500 Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton October 29
34 Dickies 500 Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth November 5
35 Checker Auto Parts 500 presented by Pennzoil Phoenix International Raceway, Phoenix November 12
36 Ford 400 Homestead-Miami Speedway, Homestead November 19

Races

No. Race Pole position Most laps led Winning driver Manufacturer
Budweiser Shootout Ken Schrader Ken Schrader Denny Hamlin Chevrolet
Gatorade Duel 1 Jeff Burton Elliott Sadler Elliott Sadler Ford
Gatorade Duel 2 Jeff Gordon Jeff Gordon Jeff Gordon Chevrolet
1 Daytona 500 Jeff Burton Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
2 Auto Club 500 Kurt Busch Greg Biffle Matt Kenseth Ford
3 UAW-Daimler Chrysler 400 Greg Biffle Matt Kenseth Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
4 Golden Corral 500 Kasey Kahne Greg Biffle Kasey Kahne Dodge
5 Food City 500 Tony Stewart Tony Stewart Kurt Busch Dodge
6 DirecTV 500 Jimmie Johnson Tony Stewart Tony Stewart Chevrolet
7 Samsung/Radio Shack 500 Kasey Kahne Tony Stewart Kasey Kahne Dodge
8 Subway Fresh 500 Kyle Busch Greg Biffle Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
9 Aaron's 499 Elliott Sadler Jeff Gordon Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
10 Crown Royal 400 Greg Biffle Kevin Harvick Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet
11 Dodge Charger 500 Kasey Kahne Greg Biffle Greg Biffle Ford
Nextel Open Scott Riggs Scott Riggs Scott Riggs Dodge
Nextel All-Star Challenge Kasey Kahne Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
12 Coca-Cola 600 Scott Riggs Kasey Kahne Kasey Kahne Dodge
13 Neighborhood Excellence 400 presented by Bank of America Ryan Newman Jamie McMurray Matt Kenseth Ford
14 Pocono 500 Denny Hamlin Denny Hamlin Denny Hamlin Chevrolet
15 3M Performance 400 presented by Post-It Picture Paper Kasey Kahne Jeff Gordon Kasey Kahne Dodge
16 Dodge/Save Mart 350 Kurt Busch Jeff Gordon Jeff Gordon Chevrolet
17 Pepsi 400 Boris Said Tony Stewart Tony Stewart Chevrolet
18 USG Sheetrock 400 Jeff Burton Matt Kenseth Jeff Gordon Chevrolet
19 Lenox Industrial Tools 300 Ryan Newman Kyle Busch Kyle Busch Chevrolet
20 Pennsylvania 500 Denny Hamlin Denny Hamlin Denny Hamlin Chevrolet
21 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard Jeff Burton Jeff Burton Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
22 AMD at the Glen Kurt Busch Kurt Busch Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
23 GFS Marketplace 400 Jeff Burton Matt Kenseth Matt Kenseth Ford
24 Sharpie 500 Kurt Busch Jeff Burton Matt Kenseth Ford
25 Sony HD 500 Kurt Busch Kasey Kahne Kasey Kahne Dodge
26 Chevy Rock & Roll 400 Denny Hamlin Kyle Busch Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
27 Sylvania 300 Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
28 Dover 400 Jeff Gordon Matt Kenseth Jeff Burton Chevrolet
29 Banquet 400 presented by ConAgra Foods Kasey Kahne Jimmie Johnson Tony Stewart Chevrolet
30 UAW-Ford 500 David Gilliland Dale Earnhardt Jr. Brian Vickers Chevrolet
31 Bank of America 500 Scott Riggs Kasey Kahne Kasey Kahne Dodge
32 Subway 500 Kurt Busch Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
33 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 Matt Kenseth Tony Stewart Tony Stewart Chevrolet
34 Dickies 500 Brian Vickers Tony Stewart Tony Stewart Chevrolet
35 Checker Auto Parts 500 presented by Pennzoil Jeff Gordon Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
36 Ford 400 Kasey Kahne Kasey Kahne Greg Biffle Ford

NOTE: An asterisk (*) in each Top Ten finish denotes a rookie driver.

Budweiser Shootout

This non-points race, which involved the previous season's pole winners and past Shootout winners, was held February 12, 2006, at Daytona International Speedway after a postponement of one day due to rain, and in a major upset, rookie Denny Hamlin won the event. Even though he was classified as a rookie, Hamlin had qualified by winning the pole position for the Checker Auto Parts 500 held November 13, 2005 in Phoenix. Hamlin drove in only 7 Nextel Cup races in 2005.

Daytona 500

Qualifying and Gatorade Duels

Jeff Burton won the pole for the race with a speed of over 189 mph, and would start alongside Jeff Gordon in an all-Chevy front row. Gordon would win the second Gatorade Duel (his third career victory in a Daytona qualifying race) after Elliott Sadler won in race 1, which was delayed by showers.

The race

The weather dawned cloudy and cold for the 48th running of the "Great American Race", when Jeff Burton led the field to the green at 2:45 pm, which at the time was the latest scheduled start in the history of the race (the reason for this was that NBC chose it as its lead-in program to the primetime portion of its day's coverage of the Winter Olympic Games from Turin). There were several lead changes in the early part of the race going, with a race record of 32. The first caution flew on lap 18 when Martin Truex Jr. hit the wall. During this caution, Burton was passed by Elliott Sadler for the lead a lap later. The race restarted on lap 20 and 4 laps later, Jeff Gordon took the led away from Sadler. Carl Edwards, a popular "dark horse candidate" for the Nextel Cup championship, had his day end early, as he was involved in a five-car pileup on lap 80 that collected Dale Jarrett, Kyle Petty, Jeff Green, J. J. Yeley and Joe Nemechek. This was the biggest crash of the day, since the "Big One" never occurred. This would also bring out the third caution flag. Because of this, Edwards finished 43rd. Tony Stewart was a "magnet for controversy", tangling with Jeff Gordon on lap 48 and Matt Kenseth on lap 106. The first incident (which left debris on the track) brought out the second caution, which ended when the race restarted four laps later, and the second one would bring out the fifth caution. Stewart was penalized for aggressive driving after the incident with Kenseth, in which he blocked the No.17 car into the grass, causing it to spin and hit the wall in turn 3. Kenseth took matters into his own hands and was black flagged for hitting Stewart's car in retaliation on pit road. The three drivers involved in these two incidents would repair their cars and get back into contention. Kenseth at first failed to answer the black flag, which resulted in NASCAR no longer continuing to score the 17 car for 1 lap. Kenseth would make up the lost lap and catch up to lead lap traffic.

Jimmie Johnson had one of the strongest cars all day. He took the lead with 10 laps to go just as the ninth caution flag came out for an crash involving Gordon, Kurt Busch, Jamie McMurray, and Sterling Marlin. This set up a 10-lap battle for the win. The race was extended into "overtime" when McMurray and Burton collided on lap 197, bringing out yet the 10th caution. The green-white-checkered finish ended when Casey Mears and Ryan Newman battled for second, leaving Johnson to take the victory. The race ended under caution when Greg Biffle crashed in turn 4, just before Johnson crossed the line. The 48th running of the Daytona 500 was the first win for the No. 48 car on a restrictor plate track. This was also Johnson's 19th career win and his first during his streak of five consecutive NASCAR Sprint Cup Championships from 2006 to 2010.

One surprise of this race was Kirk Shelmerdine, who finished 20th. He had barely qualified for the Daytona 500 and his independently owned No. 27 was fielded with a car that had a borrowed engine and donated tires, as well as a team with a volunteer pit crew.

Top Ten Results: (Race distance extended to 203 laps/507.5 miles due to green-white-checkered rule.)

  1. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  2. No. 42 Casey Mears
  3. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  4. No. 38 Elliott Sadler
  5. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  6. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *
  7. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  8. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  9. No. 21 Ken Schrader
  10. No. 88 Dale Jarrett

Failed to qualify: Scott Riggs (No. 10), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Scott Wimmer (No. 4), Mike Skinner (No. 23), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Larry Gunselman (No. 52), Chad Blount (No. 37), Larry Foyt (No. 50), Andy Belmont (No. 59), Randy LaJoie (No. 64), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Chad Chaffin (No. 92), Carl Long (No. 80), Paul Menard (No. 15), Stanton Barrett (No. 95)

Auto Club 500

Body styles and engines were the story for the second race of the Nextel Cup season, the Auto Club 500 at California Speedway on February 26. Kurt Busch won the pole (187.086 mph) using a 2004 Dodge Intrepid-styled body, as opposed to the new Dodge Charger, which his Penske Racing team believed was aerodynamically superior. Bobby Labonte and the No. 43 team drove the Intrepid as well. Others, including Evernham Motorsports drivers Jeremy Mayfield and Kasey Kahne, drove the Charger.

On race day, Greg Biffle dominated, leading 168 of the first 218 laps. Biffle won the previous year's spring race at California, finished second in the fall, and had won the Busch race the day before. Tony Stewart was the fastest Chevy in the early going. He overcame the car falling off the jack on a pit stop and an unscheduled stop for a flat tire to claw his way back among the leaders only to have an engine failure at lap 215, ending a string of 30 straight races without a DNF. Biffle continued up front until lap 226. He reported to the crew that his engine had lost a cylinder and a few laps later, he retired to the garage. This left Matt Kenseth to take the lead and only a late-race caution kept him from pulling away. Smoke and oil from the No. 4 car of Scott Wimmer brought out a yellow with three laps to go. Kenseth easily held off Jimmie Johnson in the green-white-checkered finish to earn his 11th career win.

Top ten results: (Race distance extended to 502 miles/251 laps due to green-white checkered rule.)

  1. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  2. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  3. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  4. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  5. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  6. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  7. No. 42 Casey Mears
  8. No. 18 J. J. Yeley *
  9. No. 6 Mark Martin
  10. No. 5 Kyle Busch

Failed to qualify: Travis Kvapil (No. 32), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Randy LaJoie (No. 34), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89)

UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400

After a week off, the Nextel Cup series returned to action at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 12, 2006 for the UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400. Greg Biffle clocked the fastest lap in qualifying at 172.403 mph.

In the third consecutive race to require a green-white-checkered finish, Jimmie Johnson blew past Matt Kenseth on the last corner of the day to get his 20th career victory and second of the season. Kenseth looked like a good bet to cruise to victory before Denny Hamlin and Kenny Wallace wrecked three laps from the end, bunching the field and leading to the overtime finish. Before the lap 268 restart, Kenseth told his crew that his engine felt weak, but he was able to protect the lead until the last corner, where Johnson, who had not led all day, overtook the 17 car on the high side to take the win by a half a car length. This was the first time that a green-white-checkered finish occurred in the first three races of the season.

Top Ten Results: (Race distance extended to 270 laps/405 miles due to green-white-checkered rule.)

  1. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  2. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  3. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  4. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  5. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  6. No. 6 Mark Martin
  7. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  8. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  9. No. 42 Casey Mears
  10. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *

Failed to qualify: Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Brandon Ash (No. 02), Mike Skinner (No. 37), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Randy LaJoie (No. 92)

Golden Corral 500

There were no extra laps in race four of the Nextel Cup season, the Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, but there was an extra day, as rain showers forced the green flag to be moved to Monday, March 20 at 11 am Television coverage moved to cable's FX channel for the race (with some exceptions).

Kasey Kahne sat on the pole with a speed of 192.553 mph, edging Ryan Newman by .002 seconds. Bill Lester qualified 19th in the No. 23 Dodge Charger, becoming the first African-American to start a NASCAR Nextel Cup race since 1986. He finished 38th, six laps down. Last year's Atlanta winner, Carl Edwards eliminated himself from contention early. He damaged the front end of the 99 car after hitting Dave Blaney on pit road on lap 45 during a caution to address the stopped car of Kyle Busch. Bobby Labonte ran in the top 10 for the first 50 laps before his engine failed on lap 55. Another scary incident took place on pit road during the sixth caution of the day (laps 189–197), when Reed Sorenson hit John Slusher, catch can man for Robby Gordon's crew, as he pulled out of his pit stall. Slusher was attached to a backboard but was treated at the infield care center.

Several rookies had good days at Atlanta. Paul Menard and Reed Sorenson finished in the top ten, and Denny Hamlin led 16 laps. He was forced to make an unscheduled pit stop because of a loose condition, and finished 31st.

On the track, the 9 car was near the front all day. Kahne took the lead from Greg Biffle with 79 laps to go. Despite a charge from Mark Martin, Kahne was not seriously challenged down the stretch and visited victory lane for the second time in his career. Kahne was the first driver to win from the pole since Matt Kenseth in the 2005 Sharpie 500.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  2. No. 6 Mark Martin
  3. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  4. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  5. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  6. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  7. No. 15 Paul Menard *
  8. No. 45 Kyle Petty
  9. No. 88 Dale Jarrett
  10. No. 41 Reed Sorenson *

Failed to qualify: Mike Garvey (No. 51), Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Chad Chaffin (No. 34), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Travis Kvapil (No. 32), Mike Skinner (No. 37), Greg Sacks (No. 13), Chad Blount (No. 92)

Food City 500

The fifth race of the season, the Food City 500, was held at Bristol Motor Speedway on March 26, 2006. Qualifying was cancelled on March 24 due to snow, sleet and rain, and the field was set with top 35 owners points from 2005, the Champion's Provisional (for Terry Labonte) and seven others, based on qualifying attempts in 2006. As a result, 2005 champion Tony Stewart sat on pole.

The race featured 18 cautions, and over 100 of the 500 laps were run under the yellow flag. Points leader Jimmie Johnson made contact with the car of Reed Sorenson which caused a flat tire and put the 48 car multiple laps down. He finished 30th. Lap 188 saw the most notable wreck of the first half of the race, as Clint Bowyer spun Dave Blaney, causing a chain reaction that collected David Stremme, Brian Vickers and Michael Waltrip and brought out a red flag to clean up.

Jeff Gordon spun Martin Truex Jr. out on lap 415 in an incident that collected Jeff Burton, Robby Gordon and J. J. Yeley. Kurt Busch, who had made up two laps lost earlier in the day due to tire problems, used the "bump-and-run" to nudge Matt Kenseth out of the lead with four laps to go. Jeff Gordon used the same tactic to take third, but on the final lap, Kenseth used the bump and run to spin Gordon out as Busch raced to victory. Gordon finished 21st and was involved in a shoving match with Kenseth.

The win was Busch's fifth in 11 career races at the Tennessee track and the fifteenth in his career. It was Dodge's first win at Bristol since Richard Petty in 1975.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  2. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  3. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  4. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  5. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  6. No. 6 Mark Martin
  7. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  8. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  9. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  10. No. 9 Kasey Kahne

Failed to make field: Chad Chaffin (No. 34), Mike Skinner (No. 37), Mike Garvey (No. 51), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Chad Blount (No. 92).

DirecTV 500

The sixth race of the season, the DirecTV 500, was held at Martinsville Speedway on April 2, 2006. Jimmie Johnson won the pole.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  2. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  3. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  4. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  5. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  6. No. 38 Elliott Sadler
  7. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  8. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  9. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  10. No. 10 Scott Riggs

Failed to qualify: Derrike Cope (No. 74), Kevin Lepage (No. 61), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Jimmy Spencer (No. 49), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Hermie Sadler (No. 00).

Samsung/Radio Shack 500

The Samsung/Radio Shack 500, the seventh race of the season was held at Texas Motor Speedway on April 9, 2006. Kasey Kahne won the pole.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  2. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  3. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  4. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  5. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  6. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  7. No. 10 Scott Riggs
  8. No. 1 Martin Truex Jr. *
  9. No. 6 Mark Martin
  10. No. 43 Bobby Labonte

Failed to qualify: Brent Sherman (No. 49), Chad Blount (No. 92), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Chad Chaffin (No. 34), Stanton Barrett (No. 95).

Subway Fresh 500

The Subway Fresh 500, the eighth race of the season was held at Phoenix International Raceway on April 22, 2006. Kyle Busch won the pole.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  2. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  3. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  4. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  5. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *
  6. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  7. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  8. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  9. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  10. No. 24 Jeff Gordon

Failed to qualify: Chad Chaffin (No. 34), Mike Garvey (No. 51), Chad Blount (No. 92), Kevin Lepage (No. 61), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Steve Portenga (No. 52)

Aaron's 499

The ninth race of the season, the Aaron's 499, was scheduled to be held at Talladega Superspeedway on April 30, 2006. However, due to rain starting one lap prior to the green flag, the event was postponed until the following day. Television coverage was moved from Fox to FX except for several Fox stations which elected to carry the race. Elliott Sadler won the pole. The Aaron's 499 was one of five impound races this year in the Nextel Cup Series.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  2. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  3. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  4. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  5. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  6. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  7. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  8. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  9. No. 10 Scott Riggs
  10. No. 7 Robby Gordon

Failed to qualify: Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Mike Wallace (No. 09), Chad Blount (No. 92), Brent Sherman (No. 49), Kenny Wallace (No. 78)

Crown Royal 400

The Crown Royal 400, NASCAR's tenth race of the season was held at Richmond International Raceway on May 6, 2006. Greg Biffle won the pole. This was the second impound race of the 2006 season.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  2. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  3. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  4. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  5. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  6. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  7. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  8. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  9. No. 14 Sterling Marlin
  10. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *

Failed to qualify: Kertus Davis (No. 89), Chad Chaffin (No. 34), Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Hermie Sadler (No. 00)

Dodge Charger 500

The Dodge Charger 500, the eleventh race of the season was held at Darlington Raceway on May 13, 2006. Kasey Kahne won the pole.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  2. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  3. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  4. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  5. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  6. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  7. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  8. No. 6 Mark Martin
  9. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  10. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *

Failed to qualify: Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Carl Long (No. 37), Chad Blount (No. 34)

Nextel Open

The first of two non-points doubleheader races was held May 20, 2006, at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Scott Riggs won the pole, and would go on to win after having led every single lap.

Top Ten Results

  1. 10- Scott Riggs
  2. 66- Jeff Green
  3. 25- Brian Vickers
  4. 11- Denny Hamlin*
  5. 18- J. J. Yeley*
  6. 40- David Stremme*
  7. 31- Jeff Burton
  8. 14- Sterling Marlin
  9. 7- Robby Gordon
  10. 21- Ken Schrader

Nextel All-Star Challenge

The second non-points race was held May 20, 2006, at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Kasey Kahne won the pole in the unique three-lap qualifier that included a required four-tire pit stop.

Top Ten Results

  1. 48- Jimmie Johnson
  2. 29- Kevin Harvick
  3. 24- Jeff Gordon
  4. 99- Carl Edwards
  5. 12- Ryan Newman
  6. 43- Bobby Labonte
  7. 88- Dale Jarrett
  8. 45- Kyle Petty +
  9. 8- Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  10. 10- Scott Riggs §

+ – Was selected by fans in a poll to participate following Nextel Open.

§ – Winner of Nextel Open.

Coca-Cola 600

The twelfth points-paying race, the Coca-Cola 600, NASCAR's longest race in terms of distance, was run on May 28, 2006 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Scott Riggs won the pole.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  2. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  3. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  4. No. 6 Mark Martin
  5. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  6. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  7. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  8. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  9. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  10. No. 41 Reed Sorenson *

Failed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (No. 49), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Michael Waltrip (No. 55)+, Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Mike Garvey (No. 51), Chad Blount (No. 34), Carl Long (No. 37), Kirk Shelmerdine (No. 27), and Kertus Davis (No. 72).

  • Jimmie Johnson would come up one spot short on his quest to win 5 straight races at Charlotte Motor Speedway. He would also fail to break out of a 3-way tie with Bill Elliott and Dale Earnhardt Jr. by trying to win 5 straight superspeedway races at one track.

+ Michael Waltrip failed to qualify, but he bought Derrike Cope's 43rd starting spot (No. 74).

Neighborhood Excellence 400 presented by Bank of America

The thirteenth race of the season, the Neighborhood Excellence 400 presented by Bank of America, was held at Dover International Speedway on June 4, 2006. Ryan Newman won the pole for this race.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  2. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  3. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  4. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  5. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  6. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  7. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  8. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  9. No. 6 Mark Martin
  10. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Failed to qualify: Carl Long (No. 34), Donnie Neuenberger (No. 52), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), and Stanton Barrett (No. 95).

Note: Tony Stewart was injured at Charlotte and needed relief from Ricky Rudd, who was taking a year off from racing.

Pocono 500

The Pocono 500, the fourteenth race of the season was held at Pocono Raceway on June 11, 2006. Denny Hamlin sat on pole and led 49 of the first 50 laps before crashing and coming back from 40th place to become the first rookie to win in 2006.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  2. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  3. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  4. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  5. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  6. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  7. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  8. No. 10 Scott Riggs
  9. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  10. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson

Failed to qualify: Scott Wimmer (No. 4), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Greg Sacks (No. 34), Brent Sherman (No. 72)

3M Performance 400

The fifteenth race of the season, the 3M Performance 400, was held at Michigan International Speedway on June 18, 2006. Kasey Kahne won the pole.

Top Ten Results: (Race called after 129 laps/258 miles because of rain.)

  1. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  2. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  3. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  4. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  5. No. 41 Reed Sorenson *
  6. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  7. No. 42 Casey Mears
  8. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  9. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  10. No. 29 Kevin Harvick

Failed to qualify: Carl Long (No. 37), Mike Garvey (No. 51), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Jimmy Spencer (No. 78)

Dodge/Save Mart 350

Race number sixteen on the 2006 schedule was the Dodge/Save Mart 350, the 100th road race in Cup history. The race was held at Infineon Raceway on June 25, 2006. Kurt Busch won the pole.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  2. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  3. No. 96 Terry Labonte *
  4. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr
  5. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  6. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  7. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  8. No. 38 Elliott Sadler
  9. No. 60 Boris Said *
  10. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson

Failed to qualify: Johnny Miller (No. 34), Chris Cook (No. 49), Travis Kvapil (No. 78), Stanton Barrett (No. 95), Brian Simo (No. 61)

  • Tom Hubert in this race, had his third-consecutive 43rd-place finish at Sonoma going back to 2003.
  • Final career Top 5 for Terry Labonte.

Pepsi 400

The Pepsi 400, the traditional "halfway point" of the season, and the seventeenth race of the season, was held at Daytona International Speedway on July 1, 2006. Veteran driver Boris Said won the pole, his first on an oval. He had a great run as he ran in the top ten nearly the entire race. Because of a strategy call by his crew chief with three laps to go Said led the race but Tony Stewart got by Said for the win just before the white flag waved. Said ended up fourth and emotionally said after the race that his performance was the highlight of his career. This race was the third impound race of the season.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  2. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  3. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  4. No. 60 Boris Said
  5. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  6. No. 38 Elliott Sadler
  7. No. 42 Casey Mears
  8. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  9. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  10. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *

Failed to qualify: Scott Wimmer (No. 4), Kevin Lepage (No. 49), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Chad Blount (No. 34), Kertus Davis (No. 72)

USG Sheetrock 400

The USG Sheetrock 400, the Nextel Cup Series' eighteenth race of the season, was held at Chicagoland Speedway on July 9, 2006. Jeff Burton won the pole. Jeff Gordon won his second race of the year after the race was extended to 270 laps due to a green-white-checkered finish after spinning out leader Matt Kenseth with three laps remaining.

Top Ten Results: (Race distance extended to 270 laps/405 miles due to green-white-checkered rule.)

  1. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  2. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  3. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  4. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  5. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  6. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  7. No. 41 Reed Sorenson *
  8. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  9. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *
  10. No. 18 J. J. Yeley *

Failed to qualify: Paul Menard (No. 15), Kevin Lepage (No. 61), Chad Blount (No. 61), Brent Sherman (No. 04), Mike Garvey (No. 51), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Carl Long (No. 34)

Lenox Industrial Tools 300

The nineteenth race of the season, the Lenox Industrial Tools 300, was held at New Hampshire International Speedway on July 16, 2006. Ryan Newman won his second pole of the season. Kyle Busch got his first win of 2006 in a race extended by the green-white-checkered finish rule in which a caution setting up the green-white-checkered finish was extended due to another crash under caution involving Michael Waltrip and Robby Gordon just before the green flag was to have flown on lap 304.

Top Ten Results: (Race distance extended to 308 laps/308 miles due to green-white-checkered rule.)

  1. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  2. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  3. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  4. No. 6 Mark Martin
  5. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  6. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  7. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  8. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  9. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  10. No. 10 Scott Riggs

Failed to qualify: Ted Christopher (No. 61), Joey McCarthy (No. 34), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89)

Pennsylvania 500

The twentieth race of the season, the Pennsylvania 500, was held at Pocono Raceway on July 23, 2006. Denny Hamlin took the pole in qualifying and went on to win the race, earning his second career win and sweeping both races at Pocono. Hamlin led 151 of the race's 200 laps.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  2. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  3. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  4. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  5. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  6. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  7. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  8. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  9. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  10. No. 1 Martin Truex Jr. *

Failed to qualify: Greg Sacks (No. 34), Stanton Barrett (No. 52), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Jimmy Spencer (No. 78)‡

  •  Chad Chaffin originally qualified in the No. 61 car, but his time was disqualified due to failing a post-qualifying inspection. Spencer took his place in the grid as he was the fastest of the four who failed to qualify on time.
  • Last career start for Jmmy Spencer.

Allstate 400 at the Brickyard

The Allstate 400 at the Brickyard, the twenty-first race of the season and the second richest race on the Nextel Cup circuit, was held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on August 6, 2006. Jeff Burton won the pole. Jimmie Johnson came back from 38th place to become the second driver to win both the Daytona 500 and the Allstate 400 in the same season, first accomplished by Dale Jarrett in 1996.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  2. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  3. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  4. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *
  5. No. 6 Mark Martin
  6. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  7. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  8. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  9. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  10. No. 2 Kurt Busch

Failed to qualify: Paul Menard (No. 15), Michael Waltrip (No. 55), Johnny Sauter (No. 70), Kevin Lepage (No. 49), Stephen Leicht (No. 90), Bobby Hamilton Jr. (No. 04), Derrike Cope (No. 61)

  • The caution flag came out after Jimmie Johnson took the white flag, officially ending this race under caution.

AMD at The Glen

The AMD at The Glen, NASCAR's second and final road course race of the season and the twenty-second race on the season, was held at Watkins Glen International on August 13, 2006. Kurt Busch won the pole.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  2. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  3. No. 26 Jamie McMurray
  4. No. 7 Robby Gordon
  5. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  6. No. 40 Scott Pruett
  7. No. 38 Elliott Sadler
  8. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  9. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  10. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *

Failed to qualify: Chris Cook (No. 49), Max Papis (No. 78), Tom Hubert (No. 27), David Murry (No. 37), Dale Quarterley (No. 72), Johnny Miller (No. 92), Brandon Ash (No. 02)

  • This would be the last race for Sadler in the No. 38 car. As of August 20, he became the driver of Evernham Motorsports' No. 19 Dodge.

GFS Marketplace 400

The GFS Marketplace 400, the twenty-third race of the season was held at Michigan International Speedway August 20, 2006. Jeff Burton won his fourth pole of the year. Matt Kenseth held off Jeff Gordon in the closing laps to earn his third victory of the season.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  2. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  3. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  4. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  5. No. 6 Mark Martin
  6. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  7. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  8. No. 41 Reed Sorenson
  9. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  10. No. 19 Elliott Sadler

Failed to qualify: Scott Wimmer (No. 4), Mike Skinner (No. 34), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Kenny Wallace (No. 78)

Sharpie 500

One of the most popular races on the circuit, the Sharpie 500, NASCAR's twenty-fourth race of the season was held on August 26, 2006 under the lights on the 0.533-mile Bristol International Speedway. Kurt Busch won the pole for this event. Matt Kenseth won his second straight Nextel Cup race and, along with points leader Jimmie Johnson, clinched a berth in the Chase for the Nextel Cup.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 17 Matt Kenseth +
  2. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  3. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  4. No. 10 Scott Riggs
  5. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  6. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  7. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  8. No. 12 Ryan Newman
  9. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  10. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson +

Failed to qualify: Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Mike Wallace (No. 09), Mike Skinner (No. 37). NOTE: Morgan Shepard (No. 89) and Stanton Barrett (No. 30) withdrew from qualifying.

+ – Clinched a spot in the Chase for the Nextel Cup.

Sony HD 500

The twenty-fifth race, and the penultimate race prior to the Chase for the Nextel Cup was the Sony HD 500, held at California Speedway on September 3, 2006. Kurt Busch won the pole.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  2. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  3. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *
  4. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  5. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  6. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *
  7. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  8. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  9. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  10. No. 88 Dale Jarrett

Failed to qualify: Todd Kluever (No. 06), Kertus Davis (No. 34), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Bill Lester (No. 23)

Chevy Rock and Roll 400

The twenty-sixth and final race prior to the Chase, the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 was held at Richmond International Raceway on September 9, 2006. Following this race, the top ten drivers in point qualified for the ten-race Chase. Richmond-area native Denny Hamlin won the pole in front of his hometown fans, and clinched a spot in the Chase for the Nextel Cup. This was the season's fourth impound race.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 29 Kevin Harvick +
  2. No. 5 Kyle Busch +
  3. No. 9 Kasey Kahne +
  4. No. 22 Dave Blaney
  5. No. 6 Mark Martin +
  6. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  7. No. 21 Ken Schrader
  8. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  9. No. 31 Jeff Burton +
  10. No. 10 Scott Riggs

Failed to qualify: Derrike Cope (No. 74), Mike Wallace (No. 09), Michael Waltrip (No. 55), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Ted Christopher (No. 27)

+ – Clinched spots in the Chase for the Nextel Cup.

Making The Chase - The following 10 drivers made the Chase for the Cup field in 2006:

  1. 17 - Matt Kenseth
  2. 48 - Jimmie Johnson
  3. 29 - Kevin Harvick
  4. 5 - Kyle Busch
  5. 11 - Denny Hamlin
  6. 8 - Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  7. 6 - Mark Martin
  8. 31 - Jeff Burton
  9. 24 - Jeff Gordon
  10. 9 - Kasey Kahne

Chase for the Nextel Cup

With the top ten positions all locked in, the playoff began.

In the top ten results, a • indicates one of the 10 drivers who made the Chase for the Nextel Cup.

Sylvania 300

The Sylvania 300, the first race in the 2006 Chase for the Nextel Cup, was held September 17 at New Hampshire International Speedway. Kevin Harvick won the pole and the race, becoming the overall points leader for the first time in his career.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  2. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  3. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  4. No. 11 Denny Hamlin * •
  5. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  6. No. 19 Elliott Sadler
  7. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  8. No. 18 J. J. Yeley *
  9. No. 22 Dave Blaney
  10. No. 17 Matt Kenseth

Failed to qualify: Stanton Barrett (No. 30), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Carl Long (No. 46), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Chad Blount (No. 34)

Dover 400

The Dover 400, the second race of the 2006 Chase, was held September 24 at Dover International Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole. Jeff Burton broke a 175-race winless streak after getting alongside Matt Kenseth several times between Laps 385–395. Kenseth ran out of fuel at the white flag.

Top Ten results:

  1. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  2. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  3. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  4. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  5. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  6. No. 1 Martin Truex Jr.
  7. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  8. No. 07 Clint Bowyer
  9. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *•
  10. No. 17 Matt Kenseth

Failed to qualify: Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Chad Blount (No. 34), Donnie Neuenberger (No. 52)

Banquet 400 presented by ConAgra Foods

The third race of the 2006 Chase, the Banquet 400, was held October 1 at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. Kasey Kahne won the pole. Tony Stewart captured his third win of the year despite running the last half of the final lap with no fuel.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  2. No. 42 Casey Mears
  3. No. 6 Mark Martin
  4. No. 88 Dale Jarrett
  5. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  6. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  7. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  8. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  9. No. 07 Clint Bowyer *
  10. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Failed to qualify: Scott Wimmer (No. 4), Kevin Lepage (No. 49), Chad Blount (No. 92), Carl Long (No. 46)

  • This marked the first time that NBC broadcast in 1080i (HDTV) provided by Sony as the official HDTV sponsor of NASCAR on NBC in the next 8 races of the chase until the 2006 Ford 400, which was the last race of NASCAR on NBC broadcast until 2015.
  • Final career Top 5 for Dale Jarrett.

UAW-Ford 500

Considered the wild card track of the Chase, the fourth race on the 2006 Chase, the UAW-Ford 500 was held on the newly repaved Talladega Superspeedway Sunday, October 8, 2006. The repaving was the first on the 2.66-mile trioval since 1979. David Gilliland won his first career pole. This race was the fifth and final impound race of the season. Brian Vickers won his first Nextel Cup race when he was declared the winner after he, Jimmie Johnson, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. made contact on the final lap.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 25 Brian Vickers
  2. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  3. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  4. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  5. No. 1 Martin Truex Jr. *
  6. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  7. No. 66 Jeff Green
  8. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  9. No. 6 Mark Martin
  10. No. 99 Carl Edwards

Failed to qualify: Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Todd Bodine (No. 4), Kirk Shelmerdine (No. 27), Travis Kvapil (No. 32), Kevin Lepage (No. 34), Chad Chaffin (No. 61)

Bank of America 500

Race number five on the 2006 Chase, and the halfway point of the playoff, the Bank of America 500, was held on Saturday, October 14, 2006 at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. The event was the only Saturday night race in the Chase. Scott Riggs won the pole, and Kurt Busch had his 3rd-place run disqualified due to an unapproved right rear shock absorber. It cost him 50 points (along with a similar deduction for Penske Racing) and $25,000 (US) in fines as well as a four race suspension for his crew chief.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  2. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  3. No. 31 Jeff Burton
  4. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  5. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  6. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  7. No. 96 Tony Raines
  8. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  9. No. 01 Joe Nemechek
  10. No. 25 Brian Vickers

Failed to qualify: Bill Elliott (No. 83), Kevin Lepage (No. 34), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Kirk Shelmerdine (No. 27), Carl Long (No. 46), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89)

Subway 500

The sixth event on the Chase, the Subway 500, was held on October 22, 2006 at Martinsville Speedway outside Martinsville, Virginia. The .526-mile track is the shortest in the Nextel Cup series and the Chase as well. Kurt Busch won his sixth pole of the season. Ward Burton, the 2002 Daytona 500 champion, returned to the circuit to drive the Morgan-McClure No. 4 Chevy after a two-year absence.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  2. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *•
  3. No. 43 Bobby Labonte
  4. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  5. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  6. No. 42 Casey Mears
  7. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  8. No. 66 Jeff Green
  9. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  10. No. 45 Kyle Petty

Failed to qualify: Mike Bliss (No. 49), Hermie Sadler (No. 00), Chad Chaffin (No. 61), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Ted Christopher (No. 27), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Stanton Barrett (No. 30)

Bass Pro Shops 500

The seventh Chase event, the Bass Pro Shops 500 was held at Atlanta Motor Speedway, located in Hampton, Georgia, on October 29. Qualifying was rained out, and the starting order was set by owner points, with Matt Kenseth sitting on the pole. Tony Stewart captured his second race win in a 2006 Chase race.

Top ten results:

  1. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  2. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  3. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  4. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  5. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  6. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  7. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  8. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *•
  9. No. 01 Joe Nemechek
  10. No. 7 Robby Gordon

Failed to make field: Derrike Cope (No. 74), Kirk Shelmerdine (No. 27), Mike Skinner (No. 72), A. J. Allmendinger (No. 84)

  • In a video replay shown by NBC after the race, it was determined that Robby Gordon deliberately and willfully caused a late-race caution by throwing out his rollbar padding (for which he got the free pass to the lead lap). For that, he was docked 50 owner and driver points, fined $15,000 and placed on probation until December 31.

Dickies 500

The eighth Chase race, the Dickies 500, was run on November 5, 2006 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. Brian Vickers won the pole for this race. Tony Stewart won his third race of the chase.

Top Ten Results: (Race distance extended to 339 laps/508.5 miles due to green-white-checkered rule.)

  1. No. 20 Tony Stewart
  2. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  3. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  4. No. 5 Kyle Busch
  5. No. 07 Clint Bowyer
  6. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  7. No. 42 Casey Mears
  8. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  9. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  10. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *•

Failed to qualify: Chad Chaffin (No. 34), Bill Elliott (No. 37), David Ragan (No. 60), Kevin Lepage (No. 61), Mike Skinner (No. 72), Derrike Cope (No. 74), A. J. Allmendinger (No. 84)

  • Following this race, Craig Curione, the front tire carrier for the No. 10 Evernham Dodge driven by Scott Riggs, shoved Kevin Harvick, his wife Delana and NASCAR official John Sacco to the pavement after Harvick was blamed for a late race incident that led to the green-white-checkered finish. Curione was suspended indefinitely and fined $10,000 by NASCAR and fired from Evernham, while Sacco suffered a sprained ankle.

Checker Auto Parts 500

The ninth race on the Chase for the Nextel Cup, the Checker Auto Parts 500, was held at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Arizona on November 12, 2006. Kevin Harvick won the race.

Top Ten Results:

  1. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  2. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson
  3. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *•
  4. No. 24 Jeff Gordon
  5. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  6. No. 6 Mark Martin
  7. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  8. No. 2 Kurt Busch
  9. No. 8 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  10. No. 31 Jeff Burton

Failed to qualify: Jason Leffler (No. 71), Todd Kluever (No. 06), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Brandon Ash (No. 02), Kevin Lepage (No. 34), Kenny Wallace (No. 78), Derrike Cope (No. 74), Jeremy Mayfield (No. 09)

Ford 400

The final race of the season, and the last race in the 2006 Chase for the Nextel Cup, the Ford 400, was run on November 19, 2006, at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida. Kasey Kahne won the pole, and won the Bud Pole Award overall championship for 2006, while for the second straight week, Bill Elliott used the Championship Provisional. Juan Pablo Montoya, making his Nextel Cup debut, qualified 29th, but finished 34th after his car hit the wall after being clipped by Ryan Newman and caught fire on lap 251. This would be the final year that Kyle Petty ran every race in a season. Jimmie Johnson clinched his first Nextel Cup Championship, winning the title by 56 points over Matt Kenseth. This was the final race to be broadcast by NBC until the 2015 Coke Zero 400, as well as the final race to be commentated by Benny Parsons who died less than 2 months after this event in early 2007.

Top ten results: (Race extended to 268 laps/402 miles due to green-white-checkered rule.)

  1. No. 16 Greg Biffle
  2. No. 1 Martin Truex Jr. *
  3. No. 11 Denny Hamlin *•
  4. No. 9 Kasey Kahne
  5. No. 29 Kevin Harvick
  6. No. 17 Matt Kenseth
  7. No. 10 Scott Riggs
  8. No. 99 Carl Edwards
  9. No. 48 Jimmie Johnson •°
  10. No. 07 Clint Bowyer

° – Clinched 2006 Nextel Cup Championship

Failed to qualify: Michael Waltrip (No. 55); Todd Kluever (No. 06); Ward Burton (No. 4); Brandon Whitt (No. 72); Kenny Wallace (No. 78); Mike Skinner (No. 27); Derrike Cope (No. 74); Kevin Lepage (No. 61); Carl Long (No. 46); Chad Chaffin (No. 34); Casey Atwood (No. 95); David Ragan (No. 60). Note: Morgan Shepherd (No. 89) withdrew after his only car crashed during practice.

Championship standings

2006 Chase Top 10

These ten drivers competed in the Nextel Cup Championship.

Pos Driver Car Team Starts Poles Wins Top 5s Top 10s Points (behind) Note
1 Jimmie Johnson No. 48 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Hendrick Motorsports 36 1 5 15 24 6470 Champion
2 Matt Kenseth No. 17 Ford Fusion Roush Racing 36 1 4 15 21 -56
3 Denny Hamlin * No. 11 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Joe Gibbs Racing 36 1 2 15 20 -63 2006 Raybestos Rookie of the Year
4 Kevin Harvick No. 29 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Richard Childress Racing 36 3 5 8 20 -73
5 Dale Earnhardt Jr. No. 8 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Dale Earnhardt, Inc. 36 0 1 10 17 -147
6 Jeff Gordon No. 24 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Hendrick Motorsports 36 2 2 14 18 -224
7 Jeff Burton No. 31 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Richard Childress Racing 36 4 1 7 20 -242
8 Kasey Kahne No. 9 Dodge Charger Evernham Motorsports 36 5 6 12 19 -297
9 Mark Martin No. 6 Ford Fusion Roush Racing 36 0 0 7 15 -302
10 Kyle Busch No. 5 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Hendrick Motorsports 36 1 1 10 18 -448

Non-chase participants

11. Tony Stewart
12. Carl Edwards
13. Greg Biffle
14. Casey Mears
15. Brian Vickers
16. Kurt Busch
17. Clint Bowyer*
18. Ryan Newman
19. Martin Truex Jr.*
20. Scott Riggs
21. Bobby Labonte
22. Elliott Sadler
23. Dale Jarrett
24. Reed Sorenson*
25. Jamie McMurray
26. Dave Blaney
27. Joe Nemechek
28. Jeff Green
29. J. J. Yeley*
30. Robby Gordon
31. Ken Schrader
32. Kyle Petty
33. David Stremme*
34. Sterling Marlin
35. Tony Raines
36. Travis Kvapil
37. Michael Waltrip
38. Scott Wimmer
39. Jeremy Mayfield
40. Kevin Lepage
41. Terry Labonte
42. David Gilliland*
43. Kenny Wallace
44. Bill Elliott
45. Paul Menard
46. Chad Chaffin*
47. Boris Said
48. Mike Bliss
49. Brent Sherman*
50. Derrike Cope
51. Mike Wallace
52. Stanton Barrett
53. Hermie Sadler
54. Ward Burton
55. Scott Pruett
56. Todd Kluever
57. Mike Skinner
58. Mike Garvey
59. Kirk Shelmerdine
60. Todd Bodine
61. David Ragan
62. Jimmy Spencer
63. Ron Fellows
64. Bill Lester
65. Johnny Sauter
66. Brandon Ash
67. Chad Blount
68. Morgan Shepherd
69. Eric McClure
70. Stephen Leicht
71. Juan Pablo Montoya
72. P. J. Jones
73. Brian Simo
74. Carl Long
75. Ted Christopher
76. Marc Goossens
77. Tom Hubert
78. Brandon Whitt

* – Denotes rookie.

Rookies

The battle for ROTY was not expected to be fierce, as many predicted that two time Busch Series champion Martin Truex Jr. would handily win the award, and possibly be a Chase contender. However, this was not to be as Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin shocked the NASCAR world the previous year by winning his first career pole at Phoenix while driving a part-time schedule. Hamlin again got everyone's attention by not only having won the Bud Shootout in his first attempt, but became the first rookie to sweep a racetrack (Pocono Raceway) since Jimmie Johnson accomplished that same feat at Dover. As Hamlin ran away with ROTY, his other competitors had up and down years. Although Clint Bowyer scored a surprising Top 10 finish at Daytona, he was not a factor. Hamlin's teammate, J. J. Yeley struggled mightily. Ganassi rookie Reed Sorenson had an up and down year, scoring his first top five at Michigan but was plagued by bad breaks. David Stremme was constantly fighting to stay within the top 35 in owners points throughout the year, and Brent Sherman was released from his ride with BAM Racing 1/3 into the year.

NASCAR Hall of Fame

Until March 6, 2006, NASCAR was without a recognized Hall of Fame. Charlotte, North Carolina, where most NASCAR teams are based near, was chosen as the location over six other candidates, which included Atlanta, Georgia; Talladega, Alabama; Kansas City, Kansas; Detroit, Michigan; Richmond, Virginia and Daytona Beach, Florida. The NASCAR Hall of Fame is located in the Charlotte Convention Center, and opened in 2010. Unlike other sports' halls of fame, which are run mainly by nonprofit organizations, NASCAR will own and operate its HOF directly. Winston Kelley, a longtime motorsports broadcaster and vice president of Duke Energy, a Charlotte-based electrical provider, was named the hall's executive director on June 29.

Television

The 2006 season marked the final year of television contracts with Fox / FX / Speed and NBC / TNT. NBC aired the Daytona 500 to officially start the season on February 19, with Fox/FX picking up coverage the following week in California up to the Pepsi 400 July 1. For 2007, Fox and TNT began new eight-year contracts while ESPN / ABC joined in, taking over for NBC.

See also

References

  1. "Standings: 2006 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. Retrieved September 12, 2009.
  2. "Wood Brothers/JTG Racing press conference". Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. November 19, 2005. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
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