2012 NASCAR Nationwide Series Top Performances
Consecutive Titles Give Stenhouse Springboard To NASCAR Sprint Cup Future
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 5, 2012) – With a second consecutive championship
in hand, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. departs the NASCAR Nationwide Series with credentials suggesting future superstardom.
Stenhouse,
who’ll join Roush Fenway Racing teammates – and past NASCAR Nationwide
champions – Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle as a full-fledged NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series competitor in 2013, is just the sixth competitor in
series history to win back-to-back titles.
The
25-year-old Olive Branch, Miss., competitor is the first to win
consecutive championships since Martin Truex Jr. in 2004-05. Dale
Earnhardt
Jr. (1998-99), Randy LaJoie (1996-97), Larry Pearson (1986-87) and Sam
Ard (1983-84) are the other back-to-back champions.
Winning
a NASCAR Nationwide Series championship is a special achievement, and
could foreshadow future greatness. Two previous champions – Brad
Keselowski
and Bobby Labonte – have gone on to win a NASCAR Sprint Cup title. Nine
of the past 10 champions are current NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers, of
which five qualified for the 2012 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Although
Stenhouse excelled, his accomplishments in the No. 6 Roush Fenway Ford
weren’t sufficient to wrest owner championship honors from the No.
18 Toyota of Joe Gibbs Racing. With multiple drivers behind the wheel –
including Joey Logano, who supplied seven victories – JGR won its
fourth owner crown in the past five seasons.
Top Drivers
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. –
Hands down,
Stenhouse had the season’s top resume among points-eligible competitors,
championship trophy notwithstanding. He went from a two-win season in
2011 to six victories and
led the points standings eight times. Stenhouse never fell out of the
top three after recovering from a three-race stretch in late May-early
June during which he finished 25th or worse. Five of his six victories
came on intermediate tracks – Atlanta, Chicagoland,
Kansas, Las Vegas and Texas. He also won for the third consecutive time
at Iowa in May and posted a top-five finish on a road course (Watkins
Glen) and superspeedway (Talladega).
Elliott Sadler/Joey Logano (Honorable Mention)
– Sadler fought the
good fight and nearly won a championship for the second consecutive
year. The driver of the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet led an
amazing 25 times during the 33-race season, never ranking lower than
second. He won four times. Logano, the NASCAR Sprint
Cup outlier who couldn’t earn driver points but literally locked up the
owner championship for Joe Gibbs Racing, won nine times in a partial
season of 22 races. In his final season with JGR, Logano also led the
series with six Coors Light Poles.
Comeback Driver of the Year
Sam Hornish Jr.
– Here’s a guy
who was without a full-time ride in 2011. And this year, he contended
for a championship for parts of the season. Hornish’s first victory in
the next-to-final race of
2011 supplied momentum that carried the former open-wheel champion to
his best season in NASCAR. The Ohioan wasn’t able to repeat that Phoenix
triumph but Hornish did the next best thing, driving the No. 12 Penske
Racing Dodge to a fourth-place championship
finish. Hornish, who became a double-duty driver midseason, benefited
from the extra track time recording second-place finishes at
Indianapolis, Montreal and Kentucky.
Michael Annett
(Honorable Mention) – The Iowan finished among the top 10 in
points for the third time in four seasons but with six top-five and 17
top-10 finishes he reached the elite level – on stage at the Champion’s
Awards banquet – for the first time. But this
wasn’t exactly a driver “comeback,” in the truest sense of the word.
But it certainly was for owner Richard Petty. Annett, driving the No. 43
Richard Petty Motorsports Ford, ranked fifth at season’s end, boosted
by a run of eight consecutive top-10 finishes
from Bristol in late August through Kansas in October. The last time
owner Richard Petty had a car in the top five in the final points
standings for any of the three national series was in 1983, when he
drove the No. 43 to a fourth-place finish in the final
NASCAR Sprint Cup points standings.
Top Team
Joe Gibbs Racing
– JGR fielded a trio of entries during the 2012
season, captured the owner championship for the fourth time and posted
nine victories and 28 top-five and 52 top-10 finishes. Four of its
drivers – Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin, Ryan Truex and Darrell Wallace Jr. –
accounted for nine Coors Light Poles.
Roush Fenway Racing (Honorable Mention)
– With only a single full-time
entry – the No. 6 of champion Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – Roush Fenway’s
presence in the series was below recent seasons. No matter. RFR battled
Joe Gibbs Racing to the final race before falling a few points short in
the owner standings. Carl Edwards added a victory
to Stenhouse’s exploits giving RFR seven wins overall in 2012.
Stenhouse and Trevor Bayne combined for five Coors Light Poles.
Top Breakthrough Performance
Austin Dillon
– Austin Dillon almost accomplished the undoable: win
both the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship and the Sunoco Rookie of
the Year in the same season, all following a year in which he became
the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series’ youngest champion. It didn’t
quite work out that way, although Dillon’s quest
in the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet went down to the final
laps at Homestead. Childress’s grandson settled for rookie honors and a
third-place overall ranking. He won both races at Kentucky Speedway and
led the series in top-10 finishes with 27.
Danica Patrick/Cole Whitt (Honorable Mention)
– JR Motorsports’ two
competitors each enjoyed success in 2012. Both recorded top-10
championship finishes. Patrick’s 10th-place performance marked the first
time a female competitor has finished among the overall top 10 in a
NASCAR national series. She’ll move to the NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series in 2013 after posting four top-10 finishes. Whitt, who
finished second in Sunoco Rookie of the Year standings, placed seventh
overall with four top fives and 14 top 10s. He opened the season with a
fourth at Daytona a finish he later matched at
Talladega and Michigan.
Top Races
Virginia 529 College Savings 250 at Richmond International Raceway (April 27)
– The finish was unbelievable. Kurt Busch and Denny Hamlin went
door-to-door on the final lap with Busch taking the victory by 0.062
seconds. The victory was the first in the series for Kyle Busch
Motorsports. The race, which featured 13 lead changes, marked
the coming out party for 18-year-old Ryan Blaney, who finished seventh
in his first series start.
Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway
(Nov. 17) – You could say they saved the best for last, giving
NASCAR Nationwide Series fans plenty on which to chew while awaiting the
beginning of the 2013 season. Regan Smith drove his No. 5 Junior
Motorsports Chevrolet to his first victory after
a five-year absence from the series. Smith was one of 10 drivers who
swapped the lead 13 times – including Kyle Busch, who won the Coors
Light Pole and finished second snapping an eight-year run in which he’d
won at least one race. All three title contenders
– Stenhouse, Sadler and Dillon – also managed to lead a lap during the
300-mile affair.
Pioneer Hi-Bred 250 at Iowa Speedway (May 20)
– Reigning champion
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. completed the trifecta in the year’s first of two
visits to the 0.875-mile short track. Stenhouse swept both Iowa events
in 2011 and won for a third consecutive time, ringing up a perfect 150.0
Driver Rating in the process. He may have
been statistically dominant but fans saw each of the top six drivers in
the standings and all four manufacturers lead a lap. In the end,
Stenhouse was out front for 209 of 250 laps and beat Elliott Sadler by
1.465 seconds in a mirror image of the season championship.
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