Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
Championship Race: Ford EcoBoost 400
The Place: Homestead-Miami Speedway
The Date: Sunday, Nov. 18
The Time: 3 p.m. ET
TV: NBC, 2 p.m. ET
Tickets: NASCAR.com/tickets
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90)
Distance: 400.5 miles (267 laps), Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 80),
Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 160), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 267)
By The Numbers: Homestead-Miami Speedway
1 – Tony Stewart is the only driver in series history to win at the
famed 1.5-mile speedway in his first appearance (1999).
2 – Number of Busch poles at Homestead-Miami Speedway by the series
leaders: Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards, Jimmie Johnson and Kasey Kahne.
5 – Number of times the winner of the season finale at Homestead-Miami
Speedway has won the title during the Playoff Era; including the last
four seasons in the elimination-style format of the Playoffs (Tony
Stewart, 2011; Kevin Harvick, 2014; Kyle Busch, 2015; Jimmie Johnson,
2016, Martin Truex Jr., 2017).
11 – Number of Playoff races at Homestead-Miami Speedway that were won
by Playoff contenders; three times a non-Chase contender has won
season finale: Greg Biffle (2004 and 2006) and Denny Hamlin (2013).
13 – Number of different Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series winners at
Homestead-Miami Speedway; led by Greg Biffle and Tony Stewart with
three each.
14 – The most cautions in a single Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
race at Homestead-Miami Speedway (11/21/2004; the inaugural Playoff
race in Miami)
14 – Number of different Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch pole
winners at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
14 – Number of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoff races
Homestead-Miami Speedway has hosted (2004-2018).
15 – The worst finish by the eventual series champion in a Playoffs
race at Homestead-Miami Speedway (it happened three times: Tony
Stewart in 2005, Jimmie Johnson in 2008 and Brad Keselowski in 2012).
18 – Most Homestead-Miami Cup starts – Matt Kenseth
19 – Total number of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races held at
Homestead-Miami Speedway.
18-20 – The degrees of banking in all four turns of Homestead-Miami Speedway.
22 – The age of the youngest Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch
Pole Award winner at Homestead-Miami Speedway: Joey Logano (11/18/2012
– 22 years, 5 months, 25 days).
24 – The age of the youngest Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race
winner at Homestead-Miami Speedway: Kurt Busch (11/17/2002 – 24 years,
3 months, 13 days).
26 – The greatest number of lead changes in a single race at
Homestead-Miami Speedway (11/20/2011).
38 – The lowest starting position by a race winner at Homestead-Miami
Speedway (Denny Hamlin, 2009).
46 – The age of the oldest Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch Pole
Award and race winner at Homestead-Miami Speedway: Bill Elliott set
both records in 2001 (11/11/2001 – 46 years, 1 month, 3 days).
70 – Total number of NASCAR national series races held at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, second-most by a track in the state of
Florida: MENCS (19), NXS (23) and NCWTS (22).
150.0 – The highest score in driver rating scale, considered a perfect
performance, and has only been accomplished at Homestead-Miami
Speedway once, in 2010 by Carl Edwards.
267 – Number of laps scheduled for this weekend’s Ford EcoBoost 400 at
Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Happy At Homestead: Recent Title-Clinching Performances
Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR
Radio) will mark the conclusion of the NASCAR season. Below are how
the last eight season finales at Homestead-Miami Speedway turned out:
2010 – Jimmie Johnson Tracks Down Denny Hamlin For Fifth Straight Title
Denny Hamlin held a comfortable 15-point lead on Jimmie Johnson for
the championship heading into the season finale. However, Hamlin could
not close out the title. Hamlin damaged his Toyota with an early-race
spin and finished 14th as a result. Kevin Harvick, who was third in
points entering the race, finished third. Johnson placed runner-up to
take home his fifth consecutive championship.
2011 – Tony Stewart Wins Third Championship In Epic Race
Trailing leader Carl Edwards by three points entering the 2011 finale,
Tony Stewart virtually needed a win to capture the title – especially
considering that Edwards ultimately finished runner-up in the race.
Stewart drove to the front from the back of the field twice and edged
out Edwards to get to Victory Lane.
The pair finished the season tied in points, but Stewart held the
tiebreaker over Edwards of most wins during the season (five to one).
2012 – Brad Keselowski Fends Off Jimmie Johnson For First Championship
Brad Keselowski entered the 2012 season finale 20 points ahead of
second-place Jimmie Johnson in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
standings.
Keselowski, who won two Playoff races to help put himself in
championship-clinching position, didn’t produce his best performance
with a 15th-place showing.
But problems in the pits for Johnson caused the five-time champion to
finish 36th and helped Keselowski secure his first championship, as
well as the first title for Team Penske.
2013 – Jimmie Johnson Closes In On Earnhardt And Petty With Sixth Title
After building up his points lead on the strength of six wins, 16 top
fives and 23 top 10s, Jimmie Johnson needed to finish 23rd to capture
his sixth Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship.
Following an incident on a restart just shy of the 200-lap mark,
Johnson ended up 23rd when it all sorted itself out.
By the end of the race, he worked his way up to finish ninth, earning
Hendrick Motorsports a record 11th championship.
2014 – Harvick Rides To Two ‘Do Or Die’ Victories To Earn First Series Title
Kevin Harvick started the penultimate race of the 2014 season needing
a win to get into the Championship 4 race at Phoenix. He dominated the
contest, leading 264 laps to earn the victory and a spot in the
Championship 4. After playing mind games throughout Homestead week
with the rest of the field, Harvick held off runner-up Ryan Newman to
earn his first career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series title.
2015 – Kyle Busch Overcomes Injury For Improbable Comeback
Just ninth months after breaking his right leg and fracturing his left
foot, Kyle Busch edged out defending champion Kevin Harvick for the
Homestead race win and his first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
championship. Busch missed the first 11 races of the season after
sustaining his injuries in a crash in the season-opening race NASCAR
Xfinity race at Daytona. He came back to win five races and cement his
name in NASCAR history.
2016 – Johnson Ties Series Record With Seventh Championship
Jimmie Johnson proved once again to not count him out in the Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs. He won his way into the Round of 8
with a victory at Charlotte, then took the checkered flag at
Martinsville to punch his ticket to Homestead. He provided a walk-off
win at Homestead to capture his seventh championship, tying Dale
Earnhardt and Richard Petty for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
record.
2017 – Martin Truex Jr. Earns First Championship
Driving for the Denver-based Furniture Row Racing Team, Truex turned a
career best season into a championship for the ages. His victory in
the Homestead finale was a personal best eighth on the year. He led
the final 34 laps and held off a hard charging Kyle Busch by
.681-seconds to earn the trophy hoist. It was an emotional victory
with team owner, Barney Visser recovering from a recent heart attack
back in Denver and Truex’s longtime girlfriend Sherry Pollex trackside
after a year of major medical obstacles.
Familiar Faces
This will be the second consecutive year that Kyle Busch, Kevin
Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. have advanced to the Homestead-Miami
Speedway Championship 4 round. This marks the first time in NASCAR’s
Playoff era that three of the four title contenders were championship
eligible in consecutive years. It marks the third consecutive time
that three of the four drivers vying for the big trophy are former
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup champs.
Harvick won the 2014 championship, Busch in 2015 and Truex is the
reigning Monster Energy Cup champion.
A Spoiler At Homestead?
Under the “win and you’re in” elimination-style Playoff format, the
eventual champion has won at Homestead the last four years (Kevin
Harvick, 2014; Kyle Busch, 2015; Jimmie Johnson, 2016, and Martin
Truex Jr., 2017). Still, a driver out of championship contention can
win the race.
In addition to Denny Hamlin and Jimmie Johnson – two previous
Homestead winners, Chip Ganassi Racing’s Kyle Larson claims
Homestead-Miami Speedway as his favorite track.
The 26-year-old NASCAR Next alumnus finished runner-up at Homestead in
2016 after leading a race-high 132 laps and placed fifth at the
1.5-mile track in 2015. After a breakout season in 2017, when he set
career highs in wins (four), top fives (14), top 10s (19) and average
finish (13.6), Larson’s Chip Ganassi Racing team struggled this year.
He has not won a race for the first time in two seasons but arrives at
his favorite track fresh off back-to-back top-five finishes in Texas
(5th) and Phoenix (3rd) and never more motivated to finish out the
year in victory circle.
Streaks on the Line
Two other highly-motivated, would-be “spoilers” at Homestead are Denny
Hamlin and Jimmie Johnson. Both drivers have won at the track before
and both drivers are trying to extend decade-plus winning streaks.
Hamlin, a two-time Homestead winner (2009, 2013), has won a race every
season of his 13-year fulltime Cup career. The driver of the No. 11
Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota has been fast this year – claiming three pole
positions and posting six top-three finishes, including a pair of
runner-up finishes in the Playoffs (Dover, Del. and Martinsville,
Va.).
Johnson, who won at Homestead to seal his seventh Cup championship in
2016, has won at least two races every previous year in his 17-year
Cup career. He is currently riding the longest winless streak of his
time in the Cup Series. His last victory came at Dover, Del. 59 races
ago. Johnson has three top-10s in the nine playoff races, but a
seventh at Talladega, Ala. four weeks ago is his most recent. His best
showing on the season is third at Bristol, Tenn. in the Spring.
This will be Johnson’s last race paired with Chad Knaus as crew chief.
The Hendrick Motorsports team is moving team positions and in 2019,
Knaus goes to 2018 rookie William Byron while Kevin Meendering will
move to Johnson’s team.
Good Things Come In (Top) Threes
All three Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champions crowned since the
elimination-style Playoff format was introduced in 2014 earned their
title by taking the checkered flag. In three of those years (2014,
2015, 2017), second place in the standings finished second in the
race.
That means there’s a lot of pressure on this year’s Championship 4 to
win, or at least finish very close to the front, to secure the title.
Kevin Harvick leads the Championship 4 in top-five finishes in 2018
with 22, followed by Kyle Busch’s 21. Joey Logano, making his first
Playoff appearance since 2016, leads the champion foursome in average
finish during the nine playoff races. He’s averaging a 9.4 finish
compared to 9.8 by Truex, 10.8 by Busch and 12.4 by Harvick.