2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup schedule announced
Quote selected text Published September 26th, 2007 in NASCAR News
The 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series schedule was announced today, a 36-race slate that kicks off with the 50th running of the Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 17 at Daytona International Speedway. The 2008 season also marks NASCAR’s 60th year as stock car racing’s longest operating sanctioning body. Following the “Great American Race” the series travels to Southern California, then to the bright lights of Las Vegas before returning to the southeast for races at Atlanta and Bristol.
The first scheduled off date for the series will be in March during the Easter holiday. Following the race in Martinsville, the series makes another swing to the southwest, racing at Texas and Phoenix in early April. The second scheduled off weekend occurs in mid-April. The series then picks back up with races at Talladega, Richmond and Darlington prior to the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Challenge at Lowe’s Motor Speedway.
“By running five consecutive points events before the first scheduled break in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, the 2008 schedule is designed to be even more fan friendly,” said NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France. Another adjustment to the 2008 schedule is that the Chicago race will be run Saturday night. “Night racing provides an additional element of intrigue and excitement,” said France. “Running under the lights at Chicagoland on a Saturday night will be even more exciting for the fans in the stands as well as those watching from home.”
Other key dates:
* The 30th annual Budweiser Shootout at Daytona will be held on Feb. 9.
* On Sunday, July 27, the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard will be held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
* On the evening of Saturday, Sept. 6, Richmond International Raceway will be the last opportunity for drivers to qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
* The week after Richmond, on Sunday, Sept. 14, New Hampshire again will have the kick-off event in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, which covers the season’s last 10 races and determines the series champion.
* On Sunday, Nov. 16, Homestead-Miami Speedway will again host the season finale, where the 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion will be crowned.
[NASCAR]
2008 Schedule:
Feb 9 Budweiser Shootout at Daytona � Daytona International Speedway*
Feb 17 Daytona International Speedway
Feb 24 California Speedway
Mar 2 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Mar 9 Atlanta Motor Speedway
Mar 16 Bristol Motor Speedway
Mar 30 Martinsville Speedway
Apr 6 Texas Motor Speedway
Apr 12 Phoenix International Raceway
Apr 27 Talladega Superspeedway
May 3 Richmond International Raceway
May 10 Darlington Raceway
May 17 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Challenge � Lowe�s Motor Speedway*
May 25 Lowe�s Motor Speedway
Jun 1 Dover International Speedway
Jun 8 Pocono Raceway
Jun 15 Michigan International Speedway
Jun 22 Infineon Raceway
Jun 29 New Hampshire International Speedway
Jul 5 Daytona International Speedway
Jul 12 Chicagoland Speedway
Jul 27 Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Aug 3 Pocono Raceway
Aug 10 Watkins Glen International
Aug 17 Michigan International Speedway
Aug 23 Bristol Motor Speedway
Aug 31 California Speedway
Sep 6 Richmond International Raceway
Sep 14 New Hampshire International Speedway
Sep 21 Dover International Speedway
Sep 28 Kansas Speedway
Oct 5 Talladega Superspeedway
Oct 11 Lowe�s Motor Speedway
Oct 19 Martinsville Speedway
Oct 26 Atlanta Motor Speedway
Nov 2 Texas Motor Speedway
Nov 9 Phoenix International Raceway
Nov 16 Homestead-Miami Speedway
*Non-championship points events Tentative-Subject to Change.
- TSN to air all 2008 Sprint Cup races
- NASCAR announces 2008 Sprint Cup broadcast schedule
- Fans to decide one driver’s entry into The Sprint All-Star Race
- Phoenix Racing announces Nationwide and Sprint Cup plans for 2008
- NASCAR releases 2008 Craftsman Truck Series schedule













Yet again NASCAR needs to expand to different parts of the country or world…kinda tired of the same places from year to year. Pretty cool that Chicago will be a night race, that’s probably the only change in it all.
“Night racing provides an additional element of intrigue and excitement,” said France. “Running under the lights at Chicagoland on a Saturday night will be even more exciting for the fans in the stands as well as those watching from home.”
Uh no.
A long boring race on a cookie cutter track in the day time, will be a long boring race at night, though it being at night, people in the stands and at home will fall asleep when it becomes borning since it’ll be dark and easier to fall alspeed.
wrote:
then do not watch it!
AND this is why the ratings are falling, Boring races at boring tracks, at times only convient to selling TV advertising time not for watching.
watching races in the eastern time zone that end at past midnight just don’t get it.
ASSCAR used to care about the fans now it just the $$$
Why not start the races all at a reasonable time then adjust for the time zones so the race starts
the same time in all zones (timed delay) ???
TV used to do this (with other types of programing) a long time ago and it worked just fine.
get rid of kansas and new hampshire; the two most boring nascar races on the season.
i think that the all star should be run with the original stock models(super bee, charger, etc)
wrote:
Well its good you dont have a say in it then.