Cup realignment highlights touring schedule changes
Iowa added to Nationwide; Chicago lands night Truck race
By Official Release
August 19, 2008
12:16 PM EDT
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- NASCAR announced on Tuesday its 2009 national series schedules, which features realigned dates for the Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Truck series.
Cup Series
There will be a three-way date swap between Atlanta Motor Speedway, Auto Club Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway.
• Atlanta's second 2009 race will be held on Sunday, Sept. 6, taking the Labor Day weekend slot now held by Auto Club Speedway.
• Auto Club Speedway's second race will be Sunday, Oct. 11 -- the fourth week of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, a slot formerly held by Talladega.
• Talladega's second event will move to Sunday, Nov. 1, making it the seventh Chase event -- the slot formerly held by Atlanta.
The season begins with a tripleheader weekend at Daytona International Speedway capped by the running of the Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 15.
In addition to that season-opening event for the Cup Series, the Truck Series starts its season on Friday night, Feb. 13, followed the next afternoon by the Nationwide Series opener.
There also will be an additional off-week for the Cup Series, prior to the Labor Day weekend event, giving teams a final break before a 12-week stretch that will end the season. Because of the way the calendar falls, Cup teams will have four off-weeks during the 2009 season.
Nationwide Series
The series will have a 35-race schedule. Changes include:
• A new event at Iowa Speedway on Aug. 1, replacing Mexico City;
• A switch of the Atlanta Motor Speedway event from March to September;
• Moving the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve event in Montreal to Sunday, Aug. 30.
Truck Series
The series again will have 25 races, with one realigned date:
• The series' late-season race at Atlanta will be replaced by a night event at Chicagoland Speedway on Friday, Aug. 28.
For all three series, the season will conclude with another tripleheader weekend, at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 20-22.
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"My wiener has never been so exhausted." - Kurt Busch
you know i'd rather see the trucks at Iowa then Chicago great now California will be in the chase way to show that track yet again nascar thinks its more important then it is and putting Dega later in the chase will be interesting
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"It's all fun and games until somebody wrecks a racecar" Larry McRenyolds
Three NASCAR tracks will swap dates on the 2009 Sprint Cup schedule released Tuesday.
Atlanta Motor Speedway will move its fall race from October to Labor Day weekend, with Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., giving up that date to move into the Chase for the championship and Talladega Superspeedway moving its second race nearer the end of the season.
Atlanta will run a Cup race at night for the first time on Sept. 6. The second race at Auto Club Speedway will be run Oct. 11, in Talladega's former slot, while the Alabama track will hold its second race of the season Nov. 1, on the date formerly held by Atlanta. All three tracks also have Cup races in the first half of the schedule.
There also will be an additional off-week for the Cup teams before the Labor Day weekend event, giving them a break before a 12-week stretch that will end the season. The 2008 schedule ends with 16 consecutive weeks of racing.
Otherwise, the 36-race Cup schedule for next year will remain the same as this season.
"The 2009 schedule reflects realigned dates that are good opportunities for everyone involved in our sport -- fans, sponsors, tracks and teams," NASCAR president Mike Helton said.
He said requests from Auto Club Speedway and Atlanta initiated the changes in the Cup schedule.
Auto Club Speedway -- formerly California Speedway -- officials have been talking to NASCAR for several years about getting away from a date that doesn't draw well in Southern California, where there is a multitude of things to do on a holiday weekend, and it is typically very hot. Last September, the Sunday night race began in temperatures approaching 106 degrees.
"The 2009 schedule is a victory for race fans," said Gillian Zucker, president of Auto Club Speedway. "From a weather standpoint, I can hardly think of a better time to visit California than early October. ... [and] we look forward to being part of the championship puzzle."
For Atlanta, the switch offers the chance to move to the traditional end-of-summer date and run under the lights.
"We've been desiring a night race in Atlanta for a number of years. We've had a number of conversations and I'm sure Mike Helton can tell you about that," said Ed Clark, president of the Atlanta track. "We're bringing Labor Day racing back to the Southeast and doing it with a nighttime event. ... It's a win-win-win situation for everybody."
Before the track in California got the Labor Day date in 2004, Darlington Raceway held the Southern 500 each year on the holiday weekend. The South Carolina track now has one Cup date in May.
Rick Humphrey, president of Talladega, said the attraction for him was moving from the fourth to seventh race in the 10-race Chase.
"We've been a big part of the championship battle and we believe that moving even deeper into the Chase makes Talladega even more significant to the championship," Humphrey said. "Also, by moving to the end of October, coupled with Atlanta's new date, that separates our two events, which is very beneficial for both parties."
The Atlanta and Talladega tracks are only about 100 miles apart.
Schedules for the Nationwide Series and the truck series, which is still awaiting a new series sponsors to replace Craftsman, were also released Tuesday.
A new event at Iowa Speedway on Aug. 1 will replace Mexico City on the 35-race Nationwide schedule, while the Atlanta event will switch from March to September, moving the race in Montreal to Aug. 30.
The Nationwide race is a coup for the 2-year-old Iowa track.
Former NASCAR star Rusty Wallace, the designer and co-owner of the track, said he believes the new race could draw as many as 70,000 fans. The problem is, the track has only 25,000 permanent seats and it's biggest crowd to date was the nearly 40,000 it drew for the IndyCar Series race in June.
"Seating is a real hot topic right now," Wallace said. "We're going to have to add seats."
In trucks, the 25-race 2009 schedule will replace the late-season event at Atlanta with a night race at Chicagoland Speedway on Aug. 28, giving the series another major market.