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List of NASCAR Manufacturers' champions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromNASCAR Manufacturers' Championship)
Car manufacturers' award scheme

TheNASCAR Manufacturers' Championship is awarded byNASCAR to the most successful manufacturer over a season, as determined by a points system based on race results. The Manufacturers' Championship was first awarded in 1952, toHudson.

Different car make/engine combinations are considered to be different manufacturers for the purposes of the Championship. Up to the 2013 season, the Manufacturer's Championship points were calculated by adding points scored in each race by the highest finishing driver for that manufacturer. The winning manufacturer earns nine points, while the second-highest finishing manufacturer earns six points. The third-highest manufacturer earns four points, and the fourth-highest three points.[1] For the 2014 season, NASCAR made the decision to mirror the points structure of the Owner's Championships. Under this system, the highest finishing driver for each manufacturer earns the same number of points the representing team earned during the race, including bonus points for wins and laps led.[2]

History

[edit]

Dozens of vehicle manufacturers have had cars in one of the three top NASCAR series since the inception of the Manufacturers' Championship title, only nine have won a title. To date, all butToyota have been American-owned companies.

Championship winners (totals)

[edit]
ManufacturerTotal
Wins
Cup

Wins

NXS

Wins

Truck

Wins

Chevrolet81432612
Ford231742
Toyota183414
Buick523
Dodge5203
Pontiac514
Hudson33
Oldsmobile312
Plymouth11
Chrysler00
Mercury000

  Active in 2025

Manufacturer representation

[edit]

In the beginning, teams received little support from the car companies themselves, but by the mid-1960s, teams began creating partnerships with American manufacturers to provide factory support.Chrysler,Ford andGeneral Motors were the primary, if not only, competitors for much of NASCAR's history.Plymouth achieved some success during the 1960s, but abandoned the sport in 1977. In the next decade, Ford's Mercury brand left, as did Chrysler's remaining brand in Dodge. General Motors had been using four different brands in NASCAR up to 1991, but within three years, Buick and Oldsmobile were no longer represented on the grid. Pontiac survived until 2004, leaving only Chevrolet as the lone General Motors division. In 2007 when Japanese manufacturer Toyota joined, it became the first new manufacturer since 1971. Chrysler's Dodge brand returned after a 15-year hiatus in 2001, but departed after 2012, leaving just Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota.

ManufacturerMakeModelCup yearsNXS YearsTruck years
Alfa RomeoItalyAlfa RomeoGiulietta1962[3]
American MotorsUnited StatesNashAmbassador1949-1956
Rambler1956
Unknown model1961
RamblerUnknown model1957
HudsonHornet1949-1956
AMCMatador1971–1978
Javelin1971
Aston MartinUnited KingdomAston MartinUnknown model1953
Austin-HealeyUnited KingdomAustin-HealeyA70 Hereford1951
Unknown model1954, 1958
Sprite1961–1962
ChryslerUnited StatesDeSotoUnknown model1952, 1959
DodgeUnknown model1951-1952
Coronet1953–1957, 1965–1968
4401964
Charger/Charger Daytona1966–1977, 2005–20072005–2007
Magnum1978–1980
Mirada1981–1984
Ram2000–2013, 2026
Intrepid2001–20042003–2004
Avenger2007 (COT)
Charger R/T2008–20122008–2010
Challenger2010-2018
ChryslerUnknown model1949-1953
3001954–1956
Imperial1981–1985
PlymouthBelvedere1959–1967
Road Runner/Superbird1968–1977
Savoy1949-
Valiant1960
CitroënFranceCitroënID 191958
Ford Motor CompanyUnited StatesFordF-Series2000–present
Fairlane1955–1959, 1966–1967
Fusion2006–20182006–2010
Galaxie1960–1966
Mustang1971, 2019–present2010–present
Taurus1998–20051998–2005
Torino/Torino Talladega1968–1977
Thunderbird1959–1961, 1977–1997
Unknown model1949-1954
MeteorCanadaUnknown model1953
MercuryMonterey1949–1962
Marauder1963–1966
Comet/Cyclone1966–1967
Cyclone/Montego1968–1979
Cougar1970s-1980
LincolnUnknown model1949–1955, 1957
EdselUnknown model1959
General MotorsUnited StatesBuickRegal1981–1985, 1988–1992
Century1976–1980
Gran Sport1970s
LeSabre1986–1987
Somerset1980s
Unknown model1949-1958
CadillacUnknown model1949–1952, 1954-1955
ChevroletUnknown model1950-
Bel Air1955–1958
Chevelle/Malibu1964–1982
Chevelle Laguna1973–1977
Corvair1961
Corvette (C1)1960-1963
Impala1979–1980, 2010–2012[4]2009–2012
Impala SS (COT)2007–2009
Lumina1989–1994
Monte Carlo/SS1971–1988, 1995–20071999–2008
Silverado2000–present
SS2013–2017
Camaro19712013–present
Camaro ZL12018–present
Beretta1980s
Oldsmobile881949–1960
Cutlass/Cutlass Supreme/4421960s–1994
Delta 881986–1987
PontiacUnknown model1950-1951
Chieftain1956-1958
Catalina1959–1963
Firebird1970-1971
Grand Prix1981–20041983–2004
Le Mans1970s
Tempest1960s
GTO1960s
Goliath-Werke Borgward & Co.GermanyGoliath11001958
JaguarUnited KingdomJaguarXK1201953–1954, 1956
Kaiser-FrazerUnited StatesHenryJ1949–1954
MGUnited KingdomMGT-Type1954
MGA1960–1963
Morgan Motor CompanyUnited KingdomMorganMorgan +41954
PackardUnited StatesPackardUnknown model1950–1956
PorscheGermanyPorsche3561953–1954
RenaultFranceRenaultUnknown model1958
StudebakerUnited StatesStudebakerUnknown model1949–1959, 1961-1962
ToyotaJapanToyotaCamry2007–present2007–2018
Supra2019–present
Tundra2004–present
Leyland MotorsUnited KingdomTriumphUnknown model1960
TuckerUnited StatesTuckerSedan1950
VolkswagenGermanyVolkswagenBeetle1953
WillysUnited StatesWillysUnknown model1952–1954

Cup Series

[edit]

Results by season

[edit]
SeasonManufacturerWinsNotes
1952Hudson27
195322
195417
1955Oldsmobile10Chrysler had 27 wins, but lost the points title
1956Ford14Chrysler had 22 wins, but lost the points title
195726
1958Chevrolet25
195916Ford also had 16 wins, but lost the points title
196013Ford had 15 wins, but lost the points title
196111Pontiac had 30 wins, but lost the points title
1962Pontiac22Pontiac's only manufacturer's title
1963Ford23
196430
196548Ford ran unopposed most of the season due to a boycott by Chrysler Corporation
196610Plymouth had 31 wins and Dodge had 18; both lost the points title
196710Plymouth had 31 wins, but lost the points title
196821
196926
1970Dodge17Plymouth and Dodge cars ran unopposed most of season after Ford dropped out, had 21 wins, but lost the points title
1971Plymouth22
1972Chevrolet10
19737Mercury had 11 wins, but lost the points title
197412
1975Dodge14Dodge's second and last manufacturer's title
1976Chevrolet13
197721
197810Oldsmobile had 11 wins, but lost the points title
197918
198022
1981Buick22
198225
1983Chevrolet15
198421
198514Ford also had 14 wins, but lost the points title
198618
198715
19888Ford had 9 wins, but lost the points title
198913
199013
199111
1992Ford16Ford's first manufacturer's title in 23 seasons
1993Chevrolet9Pontiac had 11 wins, but lost the points title
1994Ford20
1995Chevrolet21
199617[1]
1997Ford19[5]
1998Chevrolet16[6]
1999Ford13[7]
200014[8]
2001Chevrolet16[9]
2002Ford14[10]
2003Chevrolet19[11]
200422[12]
200517[13]
200623[14]
200726[15]Modern Era record for wins in a season
200811[16]
200911[17]
201018Won championship after the2010 Pepsi Max 400
201118
201215TheTeam Penske No. 2 Dodge driven byBrad Keselowski won the driver's championship
201317
201420[18]
201515
2016Toyota16Chevrolet's 13-season streak ended as Toyota won its first manufacturer's title
201716
2018Ford19Ford's first manufacturer's title in 16 seasons
2019Toyota19[19]Won championship after the2019 Bluegreen Vacations 500
2020Ford18Won championship after the2020 Xfinity 500
2021Chevrolet19Won championship after the2021 Xfinity 500
202219Won championship after the2022 Xfinity 500
202318Won championship after the2023 Xfinity 500
202415Won championship after the2024 Xfinity 500

Xfinity Series

[edit]

Results by season

[edit]
SeasonManufacturerWinsNotes
1982Pontiac21
1983Oldsmobile13Pontiac had 18 wins, but lost the points title
1984Pontiac18
198519
198620
1987Chevrolet9
1988Buick18
198915
199011
1991Oldsmobile10
1992Chevrolet9Oldsmobile had 10 wins, but lost the points title
199311
199420
1995Ford14First win for a non-GM manufacturer
1996Chevrolet18
199720
199823
199924
200023
200119
2002Ford16
2003Chevrolet19
200421
200514
200622
200722
2008Toyota20
200915
201015
2011Ford13
2012Chevrolet13
2013Ford14Toyota also had 14 wins, but lost the points title
2014Chevrolet15
201511Ford and Toyota also had 11 wins, but lost the points title
2016Toyota19
2017Chevrolet12Toyota also had 12 wins, but lost the points title
201815
201910Toyota had 13 wins, but lost the points title
202010Ford had 15 wins, but lost the points title
202116
202224
202317
202418

Truck Series

[edit]

Results by season

[edit]
SeasonManufacturerWinsNotes
1995Chevrolet16
199618
199716
199815
1999Ford12
200012
2001Dodge15
2002Chevrolet11
2003Dodge13
200411Toyota enters the series
2005Chevrolet9
2006Toyota12First win by an international manufacturer in any series
200713
200813
200914
201015
2011Chevrolet15
201212
2013Toyota14
201418
201514
201614
201712
2018Chevrolet11
2019Toyota12
2020Chevrolet10
2021Toyota15
202212
2023Chevrolet14
202412

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Standings: 1996 Manufacturer Standings".NASCAR;Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  2. ^"NASCAR simplifies manufacturer points system".
  3. ^Racing-reference.info 1962 International 200 results, Retrieved May 18, 2009
  4. ^NASCAR.com Chevrolet working hard on its car of the future, Retrieved January 20, 2011
  5. ^"Standings: 1997 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  6. ^"Standings: 1998 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  7. ^"Standings: 1999 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  8. ^"Standings: 2000 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  9. ^"Standings: 2001 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  10. ^"Standings: 2002 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  11. ^"Standings: 2003 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  12. ^"Standings: 2004 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  13. ^"Standings: 2005 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  14. ^"Standings: 2006 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2009.
  15. ^"Standings: 2007 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 11, 2009.
  16. ^"Standings: 2008 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedSeptember 11, 2009.
  17. ^"Standings: 2009 Manufacturer Standings". NASCAR; Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network. RetrievedAugust 7, 2010.
  18. ^"2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Manufacturer Standings & Stats".Jayski's Silly Season Site. Archived fromthe original on December 4, 2014. RetrievedNovember 16, 2014.
  19. ^Page, Scott (November 10, 2019)."Toyota clinches 2019 Manufacturer's Championship".Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. RetrievedNovember 12, 2019.

External links

[edit]
Chairmen and presidents
Major national racing series
NASCAR Regional
ARCA Menards Series
Whelen Modified
Weekly short track racing
International series
NASCAR Brazil
NASCAR Canada
NASCAR Europe
NASCAR Mexico
Online racing series
eNASCAR Series
Former series
NASCAR Australia
AutoZone Elite Division
Other series
Special events
Television and radio
Lists
Topics
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