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Homestead-Miami Speedway has hosted every NASCAR finale since 2002.

Finally, NASCAR has found lasting home at Homestead

Several tracks have hosted sport's season-ending race

By Mark Aumann, NASCAR.COM
November 20, 2008
12:15 PM EST
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Moments after Jimmie Johnson crossed the finish line to win his third consecutive Cup Series championship this past weekend, a mobile stage was rolled into place at Homestead-Miami Speedway and an expertly crafted and rehearsed celebration of the season began.

But like many traditions, the idea of a permanent season finale has evolved over time. In NASCAR's early years, not only did the season wind up at what seemed like randomly selected locations, but the last race of the season was frequently not even the last race of the year. And in a blatant attempt to thumb their nose at the calendar, the first race of the 1957 season was run before the final race of the 1956 season.

Five different tracks hosted the final race of the season in NASCAR's first five seasons, and there were five different winners. The 1949 season came to an end at North Wilkesboro, where Bob Flock took the checkered flag. In 1950, it was Lee Petty winning at Hillsboro. The 1951 season went well into late November, when Frank Moody scored the win at Mobile.

The 1952 season was a rarity, in that the year began and ended at the same track: West Palm Beach. Eventual champion Tim Flock won in January and outgoing champ Herb Thomas took the victory in November. The following year, Buck Baker took home the trophy from the season's final race at Atlanta's Lakewood Speedway.

But starting in 1954, NASCAR began to treat the racing calendar as a separate entity. Even though Oregon's Hershel McGriff won the last race of the season at North Wilkesboro, the race two weeks later -- on Nov. 7, 1954 at High Point, N.C. -- signaled the start of the 1955 season. And for the next 14 seasons, that was the rule rather than the exception.

The most unusual instance of this came in November of 1956. One week after Marvin Panch kicked off the 1957 season with a win on the oiled dirt road course at Lancaster, Calif., on Nov. 11, 1956, Buck Baker capped his 1956 championship season with a win at the Wilson (N.C.) Fairgrounds Speedway in one of Carl Kiekhafer's Chryslers on Nov. 18, 1956.

From 1955 until 1969, teams barely had a chance to catch their collective breaths before the next season. For instance, Darel Dieringer won the 1963 season finale at Riverside International Raceway in California, and the 1964 season kicked off one weekend later at Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina. That season, there were seven points races in the books before Richard Petty won the first of his seven Daytona 500s.

Season Finale

Driver wins (two or more)
Driver Wins
Bobby Allison 5
Bobby Labonte 4
Buck Baker 3
Greg Biffle 3
Bill Elliott 3
Buddy Baker 2
Dale Earnhardt 2
Ned Jarrett 2
Benny Parsons 2
David Pearson 2
Mark Martin 2
Tim Richmond 2
Rusty Wallace 2

Tracks (two or more)
Track No.
Atlanta Motor Speedway 16
Homestead-Miami Speedway 7
Ontario Motor Speedway 7
Riverside Int'l Raceway 7
Occoneechee Speedway 3
Texas World Speedway 3
Lakewood Speedway 2
North Carolina Speedway 2
North Wilkesboro Speedway 2

By 1969, the schedule had thankfully returned to some sense of normalcy, starting at Riverside and in three of the next four seasons, ending at Texas World Speedway. Richard Petty's win there on Dec. 12, 1971, remains the latest scheduled season finale in Cup history.

In contrast, the 1973 season ended at North Carolina Motor Speedway on Oct. 21, the earliest scheduled last race of the season in the Modern Era.

In 1974, NASCAR began finishing the season on the West Coast, first at Ontario Motor Speedway, and when that facility closed its doors, Riverside moved from its traditional season-opening date to the tail end of the schedule from 1981 through 1986.

Atlanta Motor Speedway, which hosted the season finale in 1960 -- the year the track opened for business -- then took ownership of the season finale through the 2000 season. Atlanta was also scheduled to host the final race in 2001, but the events following the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., on Sept. 11 forced NASCAR officials to reschedule New Hampshire's race for the weekend following the traditional season finale, which placed it after Thanksgiving.

Concerns about holding a Nov. 23 race at the northern-most track on the Cup circuit were alleviated when the weather cooperated nicely. That remains the latest calendar date for a Cup points-paying race since 1975.

The following season, the schedule was revamped, placing Homestead-Miami Speedway as the 36th race of the year. And in case you're wondering, the 2009 season is scheduled to come to a close there on Nov. 22, unforeseen circumstances not withstanding.

One statistical oddity: NASCAR's season finale has been quite partial to drivers whose first initial is B. Starting with Bob Flock in 1949, drivers named Bob or Bobby have won 13 curtain closers. Five of those went to Bobby Allison, while Bobby Labonte has won the season's last race four times.

Three-time season-finale victors include Buck and Buddy Baker, Bill Elliott and Greg Biffle, who won three consecutive Homestead events. Surprisingly, seven-time Cup champions Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt rarely fared well in the season's final race. Only one of Petty's 200 Cup victories came in the season finale -- in a year in which he won 21 times -- and the Intimidator never got to add the icing on the cake with a trip to Victory Lane in any of his championship seasons.

NASCAR's time in the sun
• Caraviello: Homestead the right place to host sport's final weekend

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Year by Year

A look at the final race in NASCAR's top series:

Year Date Track Site Winner
1949 Oct. 16 North Wilkesboro Speedway North Wilkesboro, N.C. Bob Flock
1950 Oct. 29 Occoneechee Speedway Hillsboro, N.C. Lee Petty
1951 Nov. 25 Lakeview Speedway Mobile, Ala. Frank Mundy
1952 Oct. 30 Palm Beach Speedway W. Palm Beach, Fla. Herb Thomas
1953 Nov. 1 Lakewood Speedway Atlanta Buck Baker
1954 Oct. 24 North Wilkesboro Speedway North Wilkesboro, N.C. Hershel McGriff
1955 Oct. 30 Occoneechee Speedway Hillsboro, N.C. Tim Flock
1956 Nov. 18 Wilson Speedway Wilson, N.C. Buck Baker
1957 Oct. 27 Greensboro Fairgrounds Greensboro, N.C. Buck Baker
1958 Oct. 26 Lakewood Speedway Atlanta Junior Johnson
1959 Oct. 25 Concord Speedway Concord, N.C. Jack Smith
1960 Oct. 30 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Bobby Johns
1961 Oct. 29 Occoneechee Speedway Hillsboro, N.C. Joe Weatherly
1962 Oct. 28 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Rex White
1963 Nov. 3 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Darel Dieringer
1964 Nov. 8 Jacksonville Speedway Jacksonville, N.C. Ned Jarrett
1965 Nov. 7 Dog Track Speedway Moyock, N.C. Ned Jarrett
1966 Oct. 30 North Carolina Speedway Rockingham, N.C. Fred Lorenzen
1967 Nov. 5 Asheville-Weaverville Speedway Weaverville, N.C. Bobby Allison
1968 Nov. 3 Jeffco Speedway Jefferson, Ga. Cale Yarborough
1969 Dec. 7 Texas World Speedway College Station, Texas Bobby Isaac
1970 Nov. 22 Langley Field Speedway Hampton, Va. Bobby Allison
1971 Dec. 12 Texas World Speedway College Station, Texas Richard Petty
1972 Nov. 12 Texas World Speedway College Station, Texas Buddy Baker
1973 Oct. 21 North Carolina Speedway Rockingham, N.C. David Pearson
1974 Nov. 24 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. Bobby Allison
1975 Nov. 23 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. Buddy Baker
1976 Nov. 21 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. David Pearson
1977 Nov. 20 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. Neil Bonnett
1978 Nov. 19 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. Bobby Allison
1979 Nov. 18 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. Benny Parsons
1980 Nov. 15 Ontario Motor Speedway Ontario, Calif. Benny Parsons
1981 Nov. 22 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Bobby Allison
1982 Nov. 21 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Tim Richmond
1983 Nov. 20 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Bill Elliott
1984 Nov. 18 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Geoffrey Bodine
1985 Nov. 17 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Ricky Rudd
1986 Nov. 16 Riverside Int'l Raceway Riverside, Calif. Tim Richmond
1987 Nov. 22 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Bill Elliott
1988 Nov. 20 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Rusty Wallace
1989 Nov. 19 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Dale Earnhardt
1990 Nov. 18 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Morgan Shepherd
1991 Nov. 17 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Mark Martin
1992 Nov. 15 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Bill Elliott
1993 Nov. 14 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Rusty Wallace
1994 Nov. 13 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Mark Martin
1995 Nov. 12 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Dale Earnhardt
1996 Nov. 10 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Bobby Labonte
1997 Nov. 16 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Bobby Labonte
1998 Nov. 8 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Jeff Gordon
1999 Nov. 21 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Bobby Labonte
2000 Nov. 20 Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Jerry Nadeau
2001 Nov. 23 New Hampshire Int'l Speedway Loudon, N.H. Robby Gordon
2002 Nov. 17 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Kurt Busch
2003 Nov. 16 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Bobby Labonte
2004 Nov. 21 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Greg Biffle
2005 Nov. 20 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Greg Biffle
2006 Nov. 19 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Greg Biffle
2007 Nov. 18 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Matt Kenseth
2008 Nov. 16 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Fla. Carl Edwards

The End

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