FOLLOW ON: Twitter Facebook RSS
Superstore
AUCTIONS
Autostock
The last lap was the only lap Ricky Craven led at Darlington. It marked his second and last victory.

Craven win at Darlington in '03 top Cup race of decade

Nationwide: ORP in '03; Truck: Daytona opener in '05

By Official Release
December 24, 2009
05:57 PM EST
type size: + -

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Media members have selected the top races of the decade for all three national series.

The list of races for the poll was compiled following discussions with the three series directors, other longtime observers in the industry and from direct input from NASCAR fans.

Cup Series

1. The March 16, 2003, race at Darlington Raceway. In what is the closest Margin of Victory -- .002 seconds -- since the advent of electronic scoring in May 1993, Ricky Craven edged Kurt Busch to the finish line in that thriller.

2. The Oct. 14, 2000, race at Talladega Superspeedway, which marked Dale Earnhardt's final career victory, came in second.

3. March 11, 2001, event at Atlanta Motor Speedway, with Kevin Harvick getting his first Cup victory in a narrow defeat of Jeff Gordon.

Nationwide Series

1. The Aug. 2, 2003, event at O'Reilly Raceway Park at Indianapolis. Brian Vickers battled Shane Hmiel in some closely contested, side-by-side racing to pick up his first career series victory.

2. The July 2, 2004, race at Daytona International Speedway, which saw Mike Wallace navigate his way down the frontstretch to claim his first series win in 10 years, came in second.

3. The Aug. 2, 2008, event at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, where Canadian Ron Fellows won NASCAR's first national series points race on rain tires, was voted third.

Truck Series

1. The Feb. 18, 2005, event at Daytona International Speedway. The 2004 series champion, Bobby Hamilton, won by leading the last 2 feet. Jimmy Spencer mistakenly thought he had won the race and came to Victory Lane, when he, in fact, had finished second.

2. The Nov. 14, 2003, race at Homestead-Miami Speedway came in second. Heading into the season finale, any one of the top four drivers in the point standings -- Brendan Gaughan, Ted Musgrave, Travis Kvapil and Dennis Setzer -- had a shot to win the championship. Kvapil took home his first NASCAR title after Gaughan was involved in an early wreck and Musgrave jumped a restart.

3. The Feb. 16, 2007, race at Daytona, when three-time series champion Jack Sprague won following a three-wide race to the checkered flag.

The End

Also

Columnists

Remember To Check Out

All External sites will open in a new browser window. NASCAR.COM does not endorse external sites.
© 2001-2012 NASCAR | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
NASCAR.COM is part of Turner Sports Digital, part of the Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital Network.