New Hampshire Motor Speedway Explained

New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Nicknames:"The Magic Mile"
Coordinates:43.3623°N -71.4613°W
Location:1122 Route 106 North
Loudon, New Hampshire 03307
Time:UTC−5 (UTC−4 DST)
Broke Ground:as New Hampshire Motor Speedway:
Opened:as Bryar Motorsports Park: 1964
as New Hampshire Motor Speedway:
Owner:Speedway Motorsports, Inc. (November 2007–present)
Operator:Speedway Motorsports, Inc. (November 2007–present)
Former Names:New Hampshire International Speedway (1990–2007)
Bryar Motorsports Park (1964–1989)
Events:Current:
NASCAR Cup Series
USA TODAY 301 (1993–present)
ISM Connect 300 (1997–2017)
NASCAR Xfinity Series
SciAps 200 (1990–2019, 2021–present)
NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour
Whelen 100 (1990–present)
Loudon Classic (1965–present)
Former:
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
UNOH 175 (1996–2011, 2014–2017)
ARCA Menards Series East
Apple Barrel 125 (1990–2019)
NASCAR Pinty's Series
Visit New Hampshire 100 (2018–2019)
IndyCar Series
New Hampshire Indy 225 (1992–1998, 2011)
AMA Superbike Championship (1976–1989)
Trans-Am (1966–1972)
IMSA GT (1972)
Capacity:76,000 (seated)[1] [2]
Layout1:Oval (1990–present)
Surface:Asphalt and Granite
Miles First:True
Length Mi:1.058
Length Km:1.703
Banking:Turns: 2-7°
Straights: 1°
Record Time:0:22.3481
Record Driver: Scott Dixon
Record Car:Dallara IR-05
Record Year:2011
Record Class:IndyCar
Layout2:New Hampshire Road Course (1991–present)
Miles First2:True
Length Mi2:1.600
Length Km2:2.575
Layout3:Bryar Motorsports Park Road Course (1964–1989)
Miles First3:True
Length Mi3:1.600
Length Km3:2.575
Record Time3:1:12.100
Record Driver3: George Follmer
Record Car3:Ford Mustang Boss 302
Record Year3:1971
Record Class3:Trans-Am (TO)
Website:https://www.nhms.com/

New Hampshire Motor Speedway is a 1.058miles oval speedway located in Loudon, New Hampshire, which has hosted NASCAR racing annually since 1990, as well as the longest-running motorcycle race in North America, the Loudon Classic. Nicknamed "The Magic Mile", the speedway is often converted into a 1.6miles road course, which includes much of the oval.

The track was originally the site of Bryar Motorsports Park before being purchased and redeveloped by Bob Bahre. The track is currently one of eight major NASCAR tracks owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports.

History

The track opened as New Hampshire International Speedway in June 1990, after nine months of construction following the Bahre family's purchase of the Bryar Motorsports Park. The existing road circuit was redeveloped into a multi-purpose track, with NASCAR-sanctioned races added to the popular Loudon Classic motorcycle, WKA go-kart and SCCA races on the complex. Upon completion it became the largest speedway in New England, and later expansion has made it the largest sports and entertainment venue of any type in the region. Its construction was extremely unusual for a race track, in that it was designed and constructed without consulting engineers, and using just one surveyor (whose primary job was to plant stakes) to help. NASCAR made its debut at the track in July 1990, with a Busch Series race won by Tommy Ellis. For three years, the Busch Series hosted a pair of races at the track each year.

The Busch races were successful. Loudon gained a spot on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule in 1993. Rusty Wallace won the inaugural Slick 50 300 in July of that year. That race was also Davey Allison's final race: the next day, Allison was fatally injured in a helicopter crash.

In 1996, Ernie Irvan captured the win in the Cup race, making it one of the more emotional victories in NASCAR history. The win came less than two years after Irvan suffered a near-fatal crash at Michigan International Speedway, where he was given less than a 10% chance of survival.

After the 1996 season Bahre and Bruton Smith bought North Wilkesboro Speedway and moved one of its Cup dates to New Hampshire. The second race was held in September. From 2004 to 2010, it was the site of the first event of the Chase for the Championship. In 2011, the date was shifted to the second race in the Chase, serving as one of three races in the Challenger Round, and remaining in the NASCAR Playoff rounds through 2017, after which the fall Cup date was eliminated.[3]

The speedway was the first for NASCAR to start the field in two groups under the warm-up laps to help set pit speed.

The track also hosted open-wheel racing for seven years, hosting CART from 1992–1995, then the Indy Racing League from 1996–1998. One of the open wheel winners was Tony Stewart, who later won three NASCAR Cup Series races at the track as well.

In 2000, the track was the site of a pair of fatal collisions which took the lives of two promising young drivers. In May, while practicing for a Busch Series race, Adam Petty perished when his throttle stuck exiting the second turn, resulting in a full speed crash head-on in the middle of the third and fourth turns. When the NASCAR Cup Series made their first appearance of the season, a similar fate befell 1998 Rookie of the Year Kenny Irwin Jr. For safety reasons, track owners decided to run restrictor plates on the cars during their return trip to the speedway in September 2000. This resulted in an uneventful Dura Lube 300 won by Jeff Burton, which had no lead changes. It was the first wire-to-wire race since the 1970s.

The 2001 New Hampshire 300 was originally scheduled for September 16, the Sunday after the September 11 terrorist attacks. NASCAR initially announced that the race would be held as scheduled, but the event was postponed until November 23 of that year, which was the Friday after Thanksgiving. There was much concern about the weather, but race day turned out to be unseasonably mild. Robby Gordon won that race.

In 2002, in an effort to increase competitive racing, the track's corners were turned into a progressive banking system, as the apron was paved and became part of the track, and the track's banking was varied from 4 degrees in the lower two lanes to 12% grade (about seven degrees). The addition of SAFER barriers to the corner walls was made in 2003.

During the September 2003 SYLVANIA 300, an incident occurred at this track involving Dale Jarrett where his wrecked race car brought out a caution flag. At the time, NASCAR's policy was for its drivers to race back to the start-finish line to begin the caution period. This policy allowed drivers who were one or more laps down to pass the leader and get back one lap, but during the 2003 season there were several incidents which involved drivers racing back to the caution nearly causing collisions. Jarrett's car had stalled on the front stretch— in fact, directly in the path of oncoming cars— and he was in danger of being hit by cars that were trying to get laps back. Although Jarrett avoided contact, the incident was enough for NASCAR to act and beginning with the next race, NASCAR outlawed racing back to the caution flag and instead froze the field after a caution, and a "free pass" rule (popularly referred to as "the lucky dog") was put in place in which the first car behind the leader not on the lead lap would get their lap back during each caution period in all of NASCAR's national and regional series.

In mid-May 2006, Loudon was one of many New England communities which experienced damaging floods after a week of near-record rainfall. Several roads and bridges were washed out near the speedway. The infield was flooded, as was the track itself (while a road racing event was going on). The facility also experienced flooding in October 2005.[4] In June 2009, the Lenox Industrial Tools 301 NASCAR Cup Series race was ended early by a storm which caused flooding at various locations around the track, including the infield tunnel: however in that case the post-race activities were not interrupted.

Before the 2008 racing season, Speedway Motorsports purchased NHIS and other racing-related assets from the Bahre family for $340 million cash. The name of the speedway changed to New Hampshire Motor Speedway. One of the assets included in the sale was a 50% interest in North Wilkesboro Speedway. The other 50% was still owned by Bruton Smith, the CEO of Speedway Motorsports.NHMS representatives made a heavy push to reintroduce open-wheel racing in the form of IndyCar Series to the track in the 2009 season. In 2011, the series returned to the track. However, the race failed to meet attendance expectations and controversial decisions made by race officials at the end of the race caused the race to be left off the 2012 schedule.

After the 2012 Sylvania 300, Bruton Smith stated he wants to install permanent lighting at the speedway, just like the other SMI ovals. However, Bob Bahre signed a legal agreement with the town of Loudon and several neighbors when the track opened that nighttime races were prohibited. The agreement is binding on the current owners. In an October 2012 poll in Loudon, however, 58% of those who responded said they did not mind a night race. This poll also included plans to build a casino at the track, if approved by the New Hampshire Legislature.[5]

In 2018, the fall race weekend, consisting of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and Camping World Truck Series, was moved to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It was replaced with what they called Full Throttle Weekend.[6] With NASCAR local and International series stopping by, races included the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour with the Musket 250, NASCAR K&N Pro Series East with the Apple Barrel 125 and NASCAR Pinty's Series Visit New Hampshire 100.[7]

For the 2019 Musket 250 it was announced that Whelen Engineering Company will sponsor the Musket 250 now being called Musket 250 presented by Whelen.[8]

Track mascot

In 2009, the track introduced its first mascot, Milo the Moose. He wears a fire suit with the Speedway Motorsports logo and the track's name around it and is often seen wearing an open-faced helmet with a dark visor. He is seen on race weekends shaking hands with the drivers during driver introductions and hanging out with fans.

Track length of paved oval

The track length is disputed by the two major series that run at New Hampshire. The NASCAR timing and scoring use a length of 1.058miles.[9] The IRL timing and scoring use a length of 1.025miles.

Dirt track

In 2018 New Hampshire Motor Speedway announced the construction of a quarter-mile dirt oval track behind the New England Motorsports Hall of Fame and the southern entrance to the Speedway. It was to be for the American Flat Track racing on Laconia Motorcycle Week 2019.[10] It hosted the USAC Dirt Midget Granite State Legends Cars race on Friday of NASCAR weekend in July 2019, with NASCAR drivers Corey LaJoie and Daniel Hemric participating.[11] In 2020 Snocross came to the track for an event in February.[12]

NASCAR statistics

Current NASCAR events

NASCAR records

NASCAR Cup Series records

(As of 2/12/23)

Most wins 4 Jeff Burton, Kevin Harvick
Most top fives 16 Jeff Gordon
Most top tens 24 Jeff Gordon
Starts 42 Jeff Gordon
Poles 7 Ryan Newman
Most laps completed 12267 Jeff Gordon
Most laps led 1373 Jeff Gordon
Avg. start* 9.3 Kyle Busch
Avg. finish* 9.5 Denny Hamlin
* from minimum 10 starts.

Open-wheel race winners

New Hampshire Indy 225

Other racing series

Bryar Motorsports Park hosted Round 3 of the inaugural Trans-Am Series season in 1966. The race was held over 250 mi and was won outright by Canadian-born Australian Allan Moffat in an under 2.0 liter Lotus Cortina. The speedway hosted a round of the 2012 Global RallyCross Championship, and it hosts the annual Northeast Classic which includes American Canadian Tour and Pro All Stars Series races. It has both mini oval and road course Legends car races,[13] as well as the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, Bandolero racing, and other local series races.

Since 2011, the track has also hosted a race for the amateur 24 Hours of Lemons race series. The Loudon Annoying was a spring event held in 2011 and 2012, and the fall Halloween Hooptiefest has taken place since 2012.[14]

Since 2013, the New England Road Cycling League has hosted bicycle races for high school students at the track, using both the central oval and the adjoining "frontier course."[15]

Lap records

The all-time outright track record is 0:21.466 seconds, set by Andre Ribeiro in a Reynard 95I, during qualifying for the 1995 New England 200.[16] As of June 2024, the fastest official lap records at New Hampshire Motor Speedway are listed as:

CategoryTimeDriverVehicleEvent
Oval: 1.704 km (1990–present)[17]
0:22.3481[18] 2011 MoveThatBlock.com Indy 225
0:22.968[19] 1995 New England 200
0:25.038[20] 1995 Loudon Indy Lights round
0:29.862[21] 2021 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301
0:30.663[22] 2024 SciAps 200
Bryar Motorsports Park Road Course: 2.575 km (1964–1989)
1:12.100[23] 1971 Bryar Trans-Am round
1:14.312[24] 1972 Bryar 3 Hour
1:16.200[25] 1965 S.C.C.A. National Bryar
1:17.500[26] 1972 Bryar Trans-Am round

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Track Facts . New Hampshire Motor Speedway . January 13, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130714164339/http://www.nhms.com/speedway/track_facts/ . July 14, 2013 . mdy-all .
  2. Web site: Jayski's? NASCAR Silly Season Site - Sprint Cup Race Track Attendance . July 3, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160704211452/http://www.jayski.com/pages/tracks-seating.htm . July 4, 2016 . dead.
  3. Web site: 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Schedule NASCAR.com. www.nascar.com. January 5, 2016.
  4. http://roadracingworld.com/news/article/?article=25748 Sunday Races At NHIS Flooded Out
  5. Web site: unionleader.com.
  6. Web site: Full Throttle Fall Weekend. www.nhms.com. 2019-02-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20190203143554/https://www.nhms.com/nascar/full-throttle-fall-weekend/. February 3, 2019. dead.
  7. Web site: September Brings Inaugural Full Throttle Fall Weekend To NHMS. racedayct.com. August 30, 2018 . 2019-02-03.
  8. Web site: Whelen to Sponsor Musket 250 at New Hampshire – NASCAR Home Tracks. hometracks.nascar.com. 2019-03-11.
  9. Web site: Home. Official Site Of NASCAR.
  10. Web site: American Flat Track Comes to NHMS, New Facility Opens Spring 2019. Release. NHMS PR Official. www.nhms.com. 2020-02-10.
  11. Web site: NASCAR Stars to Bring Night Racing to New NHMS Flat Track. Staff Report. June 12, 2019. Race Day CT.
  12. Web site: Snocross at The Flat Track. www.nhms.com. 2020-02-10.
  13. Web site: U.S. Legend Cars International | National Schedule . 2017-07-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130921053643/http://www.uslegendcars.com/handler.cfm/template,schedule/cat_id,42510?state=NH&order=race_date . September 21, 2013 . mdy-all .
  14. Web site: 24 Hours of Lemons: Halloween Hooptiefest. New Hampshire Motor Speedway. October 25, 2013. January 9, 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150109154255/http://www.nhms.com/media/headlines/hours-lemons-halloween-hooptiefest.html. January 9, 2015. mdy-all.
  15. Web site: New England Road Cycling League: Race Info. New England Road Cycling League . August 20, 2023.
  16. Web site: New Hampshire - Motor Sport Magazine . . 27 May 2022.
  17. Web site: New Hampshire Motor Speedway - Racing Circuits . RacingCircuits.info . 9 October 2022.
  18. Web site: 2011 New Hampshire Indycars . . 14 August 2011 . 16 July 2023.
  19. Web site: 1995 New Hampshire Indycars . . 20 August 1995 . 16 July 2023.
  20. Web site: 1995 New Hampshire Indy Lights . . 20 August 1995 . 16 July 2023.
  21. Web site: 2021 New Hampshire NASCAR . . 18 July 2021 . 16 July 2023.
  22. Web site: 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series SciAps 200 Race Statistics . Motorsportstats . 22 June 2024 . 23 June 2024.
  23. Web site: Trans-Am Bryar [Two-Five] 1972 ]. 31 May 1971 . 9 October 2022.
  24. Web site: 3 h Bryar 1972 . 24 September 1972 . 9 October 2022.
  25. Web site: SCCA National Bryar Park [CM+DM+EM+FM+AP+BP+CP+DP] 1965 ]. 7 August 1965 . 9 October 2022.
  26. Web site: Trans-Am Bryar [Two-Five] 1972 ]. 29 May 1972 . 9 October 2022.