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2003 Subway 400

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Second stock car race of the 2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series

2003 Subway 400
Race details[1][2]
Race 2 of 36 in the2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
Layout of North Carolina Speedway
Layout of North Carolina Speedway
DateFebruary 23, 2003 (2003-02-23)
LocationRockingham, North Carolina
CourseNorth Carolina Speedway
Course length1.017 miles (1.637 km)
Distance393 laps, 399.681 mi (643.224 km)
Average speed117.852 mph (189.664 km/h)
Attendance40,000
Pole position
DriverJasper Motorsports
Time23.669[3]
Most laps led
DriverRusty WallacePenske Racing
Laps182
Winner
No. 88Dale JarrettRobert Yates Racing
Television in the United States
NetworkFox Broadcasting Company
AnnouncersMike Joy,Darrell Waltrip,Larry McReynolds
Nielsen ratings
  • 6.3/13 (Overnight)[4]
Motor car race

The2003 Subway 400 was the secondstock car race of the2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series. It was held on February 23, inRockingham, North Carolina atNorth Carolina Speedway. 40,000 spectators attended the event.Robert Yates Racing driverDale Jarrett won the 393-lap race starting from the ninth position.Roush Racing teammatesKurt Busch andMatt Kenseth finished second and third, respectively.

Dave Blaney won the firstpole position of his career by posting the fastest lap in qualifying. He led the first eight laps beforeMark Martin passed him on lap nine.Ricky Craven took the lead eight laps later, which he lost toRusty Wallace on lap 27. Wallace led four times for a total of 182 laps, more than any other driver. On lap 220, Busch became the leader, holding the position for a total of four times over 149 laps. He was passed by Jarrett on the 384th lap. Busch retook the position five laps later before Jarrett reclaimed first place on lap 390. He maintained it for the rest of the race to win. There were sevenyellow caution flags and twenty lead changes among eleven different drivers.

It was Jarrett's second victory at North Carolina Speedway, and the 31st of his career. The result advanced him from tenth to second in theDrivers' Championship, 31points behind Busch. The latter took the points lead afterMichael Waltrip finished in 19th place; this dropped Waltrip to fifth, 15 points behind Martin. The lead of theManufacturers' Championship changed fromChevrolet toFord.Pontiac passedDodge for third with 34 races left in the season.

Background

[edit]
Further information:2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series § Teams and drivers
North Carolina Speedway(pictured in 2012), where the race was held

The 2003 Subway 400 was the second of thirty-six scheduledstock car races of the2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series. It was held on February 23, inRockingham, North Carolina, atNorth Carolina Speedway.[1] TheWinston Cup Series first came to North Carolina Speedway late in the1965 season and it hosted two events on the series calendar.[5][6] The track at North Carolina Speedway is a 1.017 mi (1.637 km) four-turnD-shaped oval. Its turns arebanked between 22 and 25degrees; both thefront stretch and the back stretch are banked at eight degrees.[7][8]

Before the race,Michael Waltrip led theDrivers' Championship with 185points, withKurt Busch in second place with 170 points.Jimmie Johnson andKevin Harvick were third and fourth with 170 and 160 points respectively.Mark Martin in fifth had 155 points. Rounding out the top ten wereTony Stewart,Robby Gordon,Jeremy Mayfield,Mike Wallace, andDale Jarrett.[9] In theManufacturers' Championship,Chevrolet led with nine points, three points ahead ofFord in the second position. Third-placedDodge, with four points, was one point ahead ofPontiac in fourth.[10]Matt Kenseth was the race's defending champion.[11]

The Subway 400 was the first round of the 2003 season to be held without the use ofrestrictor plates.[12][13] NASCAR retained a regulation it instituted at the season-openingDaytona 500 held one week earlier. A race slowed by ayellow caution flag with five or fewer laps to run would not recommence.[14]

Practice and qualifying

[edit]
Dave Blaney(pictured in 2007) had the firstpole position of his career.

Three practice sessions were scheduled before the Sunday race—one on Friday and two on Saturday. The first session lasted 120 minutes, and the final two sessions were due to run for 45 and 40 minutes, respectively.[2] Wind, rain and a tornado alert cancelled the Saturday morning practice sessions.[2] In the first practice session,Ryan Newman was the fastest driver with a lap of 23.525 seconds.Ken Schrader,Joe Nemechek, Martin, Busch,Jerry Nadeau,Mike Skinner,Ward Burton, Mayfield andJamie McMurray were in positions two to ten.[15] A forecast of rain later on Friday caused teams to concentrate onrace setup during practice.[16]

A total of 43 drivers entered the qualifying session on Friday afternoon.[1][17] Each driver ran two timed laps to determine pole position to 36th.[2] The remainder of the field qualified through the use of provisionals.[18] Rain delayed qualifying for an hour and 15 minutes; because some teams concentrated on car setups, it created a mixed starting order.[19] In his 113th race,Dave Blaney took his first careerpole position, with a time of 23.669 seconds,[3] andJasper Motorsports' first since the1994 season.[20] He was joined on thegrid's front row byJohnny Benson Jr.,[1] who was two-hundredths of a second slower. Martin qualified third,Sterling Marlin fourth, andBill Elliott fifth.Ricky Craven, McMurray, Wallace,Dale Jarrett andBobby Labonte rounded out the top ten qualifiers.[3]

During the session, afuel line detached from Newman'scarburetor on his first lap. Nadeau lost control of his car during his second lap.Jeff Burton set no qualifying lap due to a pirouette after hespun his rear tires, and had an accident against a barrier.[21] Once qualifying had concluded, Blaney said, "This was a new type of car and we hadn't done any testing with it. We didn't know what to expect. But it was really good from the start. Winning the pole only made it better."[16]

Qualifying results

[edit]
GridCarDriverTeamManufacturerTimeSpeed
177Dave BlaneyJasper MotorsportsFord23.669154.683
210Johnny Benson Jr.MBV MotorsportsPontiac23.689154.553
36Mark MartinRoush RacingFord23.708154.429
440Sterling MarlinChip Ganassi RacingDodge23.709154.422
59Bill ElliottEvernham MotorsportsDodge23.710154.416
632Ricky CravenPPI MotorsportsPontiac23.716154.377
742Jamie McMurrayChip Ganassi RacingDodge23.731154.279
82Rusty WallacePenske RacingDodge23.743152.201
988Dale JarrettRobert Yates RacingFord23.746154.182
1018Bobby LabonteJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet23.767154.046
1138Elliott SadlerRobert Yates RacingFord23.768154.039
128Dale Earnhardt Jr.Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet23.769154.033
1316Greg BiffleRoush RacingFord23.787153.916
1425Joe NemechekHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet23.792153.884
1522Ward BurtonBill Davis RacingDodge23.802153.819
1641Casey MearsChip Ganassi RacingDodge23.821153.696
1723Kenny WallaceBill Davis RacingDodge23.823153.683
1817Matt KensethRoush RacingFord23.845153.542
1931Robby GordonRichard Childress RacingChevrolet23.850153.509
204Mike SkinnerMorgan-McClure MotorsportsPontiac23.856153.471
2112Ryan NewmanPenske RacingDodge23.861153.439
2215Michael WaltripDale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet23.877153.336
2324Jeff GordonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet23.881153.310
2401Jerry NadeauMB2 MotorsportsPontiac23.924153.035
251Steve ParkDale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet23.926153.022
2629Kevin HarvickRichard Childress RacingChevrolet23.936152.958
2797Kurt BuschRoush RacingFord23.940152.932
2821Ricky RuddWood Brothers RacingFord23.959152.811
2919Jeremy MayfieldEvernham MotorsportsDodge23.961152.798
3045Kyle PettyPetty EnterprisesDodge23.962152.792
315Terry LabonteHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet23.968152.754
3243John AndrettiPetty EnterprisesDodge23.972152.728
3320Tony StewartJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet23.974152.715
340Jack SpragueHaas CNC RacingPontiac23.990152.614
3549Ken SchraderBAM RacingDodge23.991152.602
367Jimmy SpencerUltra MotorsportsDodge23.999152.556
3748Jimmie JohnsonHendrick MotorsportsChevroletProvisional
3899Jeff BurtonRoush RacingFordProvisional
3930Jeff GreenRichard Childress RacingChevroletProvisional
4054Todd BodineBelCar MotorsportsFordProvisional
4114Larry FoytA. J. Foyt RacingDodgeProvisional
4274Tony RainesBACE MotorsportsChevroletProvisional
4337Derrike CopeQuest Motor RacingChevroletProvisional
Sources:[3][22][23]

Race

[edit]

The 393-lap race commenced at 1:00 p.m.Eastern Standard Time, and was televised live in the United States onFox.[24] Around the start of the race, weather conditions were sunny and cold with blustery winds;[25][26] the ambient temperature ranged between 54–55 °F (12–13 °C) and the track temperature at 78 °F (26 °C).[26] Jim Ritter, pastor of the Marston Baptist Church inMarston, North Carolina, began pre-race ceremonies with aninvocation. Members of the ECU and the Carolina Marching Band performed thenational anthem, and the race's sponsor spokesperson Clay Henry commanded the drivers to start their engines.[26] Jet dryers were deployed to clean the track and remove paper debris.[26] NASCAR announced acompetition caution would occur on lap 45 due to the previous day's rainfall, meaning drivers would be required to make mandatorypit stops to evaluate their car's performance.[2]

Rusty Wallace(pictured in 1998) led the most laps of any driver with 182.

Blaney led the opening eight laps before Martin passed him on the ninth lap.[27] Jeff Gordon made contact withDale Earnhardt Jr.'s car on the 12th lap, pushing a chunk ofsheet metal into Earnhardt's front-left tire, and causing it to rub onto it.[28] On lap 17, Craven passed Martin to take the lead.[1][27] McMurray and Nemechek made contact with each other around the 23rd lap, causing the latter's right frontfender to detach, possibly from the collision.[2][26] Craven lost the first position to Rusty Wallace on the 27th lap.[1] Six laps later,Tony Raines cut a tire and collided with a wall; series officials did not wave a yellow caution flag.[2] It later came on the 44th lap as Earnhardt's left-rear tire burst.[29] During the caution, Earnhardt made five pit stops since his vehicle had a rubber strip lodged in its front leftrotor and possibly thesuspension. Additionally, Gordon damaged his car's right-front corner against the pit barrier.[2][27] Rusty Wallace continued to lead the field at the lap 55 restart.[1]Todd Bodine cut his right front tire on lap 88, and collided with a barrier exiting turn two, bringing out the second caution.[2][27]

The caution remained out for five laps.Kyle Petty and Martin led one and three laps, respectively. Rusty Wallace led the field back to racing speeds at the restart on the 93rd lap.[1] On lap 107,Jack Sprague hit the rear ofKenny Wallace's vehicle leaving the second turn. Kenny Wallace spun towards the outside pit road wall, and damaged the right front of his car, prompting the third caution.[2][27] The five-lap caution had Rusty Wallace retain the first position;[1] he continued to pace the field as Earnhardt, on lap 122, hit the left rear of Nadeau's vehicle and caused the latter to spin. Mayfield slowed in response andJohn Andretti struck his car, triggering the fourth caution. Martin led from the 124th to 126th laps.[1][2] Green flag racing resumed on the 127th lap with Rusty Wallace leading; he maintained it for the next 48 laps.[1] A fifth caution came out when Earnhardt spun on lap 174;[1][27] Stewart hit the rear of Petty's slower car, causing damage to both of Stewart's front fenders.[2]

Dale Jarrett took his 31st career victory and his second at North Carolina Speedway.

Martin took the lead on lap 175 and held it at the resumption of racing on lap 178. Rusty Wallace overtook Martin for first place on lap 179.[1] Busch passed Rusty Wallace for the first position on the 220th lap.[1] During laps 240 and 252, several teams elected to make green-flag pit stops.[2] Busch maintained the first position during this period and at the lap 253 restart.[1] Kenseth took the lead on lap 255. He held it until Marlin took the position and led laps 258 to 260 before Busch returned to first place.[1] On lap 275, the sixth caution came out as Earnhardt spun again. Mayfield was possibly hit by Jeff Burton andstalled after contact with a wall.[2] Kurt Busch maintained the first position at the lap 292 restart and the next seven laps.[1]

On lap 298, Gordon hit the rear of Earnhardt's car, sending him spinning into the frontstretch grass, and causing the final caution.[2][27] The majority of drivers made pit stops during the caution.[27] Labonte moved into the lead on lap 300 and led at the lap 303 restart.[1][30] Jeff Burton passed Labonte to assume the lead on the next lap. Six laps later, Busch got ahead of Jeff Burton to retake the first position.[1] During the last 30 laps, Busch and second-placed Jarrett negotiated slower traffic, as Busch led for much of that period in time and Jarrett was close by him.[31] On lap 383, Jarrett drew alongside Busch and provided him with little space between his car and the backstretch wall. Busch lost control of his car and Jarrett advanced to first place on the 384th lap.[32][33] Jarrett was delayed by Sprague's lapped car on lap 387.[32] Busch then overtook Jarrett to move into first place on the outside two laps later.[25][33]

Jarrett retook the lead on lap 390, making the pass on the approach to turn four.[32] Busch was unable to continue the challenge for the victory because he had worn out his rear tires in the process.[31] Jarrett held the first position through slower traffic during the last four laps to claim his second win at North Carolina Speedway, and the 31st of his career.[1][32][33] This extended Jarrett's run of winning at least one race every year to eleven.[29] Busch finished second, Kenseth third, Craven fourth, and McMurray fifth. Rusty Wallace, Martin, Johnson,Elliott Sadler and Blaney rounded out the top ten finishers.[1] There were a total of seven yellow caution flags, lasting a cumulative total of 46 laps. There were 20 lead changes; 11 drivers lead at least one lap during the race.[33] Rusty Wallace's 182 laps lead was the most of any competitor. Jarrett led twice for a total of nine laps.[1]

Post-race

[edit]

Jarrett appeared in Victory Lane to celebrate his 31st career win in front of the crowd of 40,000 people;[1][25][29] the win earned him $167,050.[28] Sadler tested at the track beforehand and provided Jarrett with a suspension setup for his teammate's car.[29] Jarrett's crew chief Brad Parrott stated the close collaboration between the two would helpRobert Yates Racing achieve more success during the year.[25] Jarrett also dedicated the victory to the "older generation" and said he was confident he could challenge them, "Those [young] guys are really talented and are getting some well-deserved attention. But [the veterans are] giving them a race, and I think that we can."[32] Busch commented on his second consecutive second-place finish of 2003:[28] "This one is much more difficult to swallow than the [Daytona] race. We had a great run today. I'm real upset we didn't win. I would have loved to have gotten off to Victory Lane so early in the year."[34] Third-placed Kenseth said he was happy with the work his team put in for the event and hailed his car's performance, "I'm real happy finishing third. I think we had a car that definitely could have contended for the win, we were just a little too far behind on the last restart and was a little too loose that last run to be able to get up there, but it was a great day for us."[34]

Rusty Wallace described his car as "a damn bullet" when he was leading and said, "About three-quarters of the way through the race, I could see the track getting real black. I had the thing really turning good. It just got too free on me. It got so loose you could hardly touch the throttle."[35] Earnhardt said he acknowledged Jeff Gordon's car hitting him was unintentional; he described his car's handling afterward as causing tire damage and rubbing that caused its failure, "The car would just get loose, really loose. It would just snap out from under me, and that's why I spun a couple of times. It felt to me like it was going to crash or spin out on every lap."[28] McMurray said he believed his fifth-place result increased his confidence with his crew chiefDonnie Wingo, "I think it makes me feel good. I had to work with three crew chiefs last year. Coming in I didn't even know Donnie (Wingo). I was a little bit nervous about that, and (journalists) would just tear me up if I didn't do well."[30]

The result promoted Busch to the lead of the Drivers' Championship with 345 points. Jarrett's victory advanced him from tenth to second as he had a total of 314 points. Johnson maintained the third position with 312 points, as Martin moved to fourth with 306 points. Waltrip dropped to fifth, and Kenseth stood in sixth place. Burton, Craven, Stewart were seventh to ninth. Harvick, Rusty Wallace, and Rudd tied for tenth position.[1][9] In the Manufacturers' Championship, Ford took the lead with 15 points, three points ahead of Chevrolet in the second position. Pontiac, with nine points, was one point in front of Dodge in fourth place with thirty-four races left in the season.[10] The race took three hours, 23 minutes and 29 seconds to complete, and the margin of victory was 0.966 seconds.[1]

Race results

[edit]
PosCarDriverTeamManufacturerLapsPoints
188Dale JarrettRobert Yates RacingFord3931801
297Kurt BuschRoush RacingFord3931751
317Matt KensethRoush RacingFord3931701
432Ricky CravenPPI MotorsportsPontiac3931651
542Jamie McMurayChip Ganassi RacingDodge393155
62Rusty WallacePenske RacingDodge3931602
76Mark MartinRoush RacingFord3931511
848Jimmie JohnsonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet393142
938Elliott SadlerRobert Yates RacingFord393138
1077Dave BlaneyJasper MotorsportsFord3931391
1121Ricky RuddWood Brothers RacingFord393130
1299Jeff BurtonRoush RacingFord3921321
1310Johnny Benson Jr.MBV MotorsportsPontiac392124
1412Ryan NewmanPenske RacingDodge392121
1524Jeff GordonHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet392118
1618Bobby LabonteJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet3921201
174Mike SkinnerMorgan-McClure MotorsportsPontiac392112
1822Ward BurtonBill Davis RacingDodge392109
1915Michael WaltripDale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet392106
2020Tony StewartJoe Gibbs RacingChevrolet392103
211Steve ParkDale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet392100
2216Greg BiffleRoush RacingFord39297
2325Joe NemechekHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet39294
2449Ken SchraderBAM RacingDodge39291
2529Kevin HarvickRichard Childress RacingChevrolet39188
2601Jerry NadeauMB2 MotorsportsPontiac39185
275Terry LabonteHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet39182
287Jimmy SpencerUltra MotorsportsDodge39179
2931Robby GordonRichard Childress RacingChevrolet39176
3041Casey MearsChip Ganassi RacingDodge39073
3130Jeff GreenRichard Childress RacingChevrolet39070
329Bill ElliottEvernham MotorsportsDodge39067
338Dale Earnhardt Jr.Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet39064
340Jack SpragueHaas CNC RacingPontiac39061
3545Kyle PettyPetty EnterprisesDodge389631
3614Larry FoytA. J. Foyt RacingDodge38855
3774Tony RainesBACE MotorsportsChevrolet38752
3823Kenny WallaceBill Davis RacingDodge38649
3943John AndrettiPetty EnterprisesDodge34746
4040Sterling MarlinChip Ganassi RacingDodge319481
4119Jeremy MayfieldEvernham MotorsportsDodge27140
4254Todd BodineBelCar MotorsportsFord8537
4337Derrike CopeQuest Motor RacingChevrolet3434
Sources:[1][23][36]
1 Includes five bonus points for leading a lap
2 Includes ten bonus points for leading the most laps

Standings after the race

[edit]
Drivers' Championship standings
Rank+/–DriverPoints
1 1Kurt Busch345
2 8Dale Jarrett314 (−31)
3Jimmie Johnson312 (−33)
4 1Mark Martin306 (−39)
5 4Michael Waltrip291 (−54)
6 13Matt Kenseth278 (−67)
7 4Jeff Burton262 (−83)
8 17Ricky Craven255 (−90)
9 3Tony Stewart254 (−91)
10 6Kevin Harvick248 (−97)
16Rusty Wallace248 (−97)
5Ricky Rudd248 (−97)
Sources:[1][9]
Manufacturers' Championship standings
Rank+/–ManufacturerPoints
1 1Ford15
2 1Chevrolet12 (−3)
3 1Pontiac9 (−6)
4 1Dodge8 (−7)
Source:[10]
  • Note: Only the top ten positions are included for the driver standings.

References

[edit]
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  12. ^Hinton, Ed (February 21, 2003)."Between a 'Rock' and a hard place".Sun-Sentinel. Archived fromthe original on March 3, 2003. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2019.
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  21. ^Poole, David (February 21, 2003)."Blaney scores first Cup pole on a rainy day at Rockingham".The Charlotte Observer. Archived fromthe original on March 6, 2004. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2019.
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    "2003 Nascar Cup Series Subway 400". Motorsport Stats.Archived from the original on September 2, 2020. RetrievedDecember 1, 2019.
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  26. ^abcdeNASCAR on Fox (Television production). Rockingham, North Carolina. February 23, 2003.
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  28. ^abcdSims, Neal (February 24, 2003)."Jarrett beats Busch with thrilling run to the finish".The Birmingham News. Archived fromthe original on April 21, 2003. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2019.
  29. ^abcdJenkins, Chris; Hembree, Mike (February 23, 2003)."Jarrett outduels Busch to win at Rockingham".USA Today.Archived from the original on February 13, 2019. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2019.
  30. ^abMontgomery, Lee (February 24, 2003)."Notebook: Subway 400". NASCAR. Archived fromthe original on February 26, 2003. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2019.
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