2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Chronology
Although neither Jeff Gordon nor Dale Earnhardt, Jr. qualified for the Chase portion of the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup season, fans remained captivated as the decision on the title came down to the very last race. Veteran driver Rusty Wallace also retired at the end of the 2005 season and began a new career as a commentator for ESPN.
Continuing their efforts to make NASCAR a sport with truly nationwide appeal, the International Speedway Corporation purchased land near Seattle, Washington, and on Staten Island in New York City for potential future tracks.
Revisit these important events -- and even more action on the track, including pictures -- with the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup chronology below.
February 20, 2005: Daytona 500
Jeff Gordon squeaks past Tony Stewart in the waning laps and wins the first Daytona 500 in history to go into overtime. The race is also the first for the new Dodge Charger, which replaces the Intrepid.
February 27, 2005: Auto Club 500
Greg Biffle wins the Auto Club 500 at California Speedway. Traditionally the race date for Rockingham's North Carolina Speedway, the weekend is now a second race date for California. Unlike previous events at California, this one is not a sellout.
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Tony Stewart pilots his #20 Chevrolet Monte Carlo during the June 26 Dodge/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway. Stewart passed Ricky Rudd with 10 laps to go and went on to win by 2.2 seconds over the veteran Rudd, who hung on to finish second. For Stewart, it was his first win of the season and his fourth in 13 starts on a road course. See more pictures of NASCAR. |
April 17, 2005: Samsung/Radioshack 500
Greg Biffle leads 219 of 334 laps in the Samsung/Radioshack 500 at Texas Motor Speedway in his back-up car and goes on to win. Biffle crashed his main car in practice and had to move from fifth to the back of the field. It is the Roush Racing driver's second win of the season and it puts him in second in the points race.
April 23, 2005: Subway Fresh 500
Defending champion Kurt Busch wins the Subway Fresh 500, the first night race at Phoenix International Raceway. It is also the first spring date for Phoenix, in addition to its usual late-season race.
May 7, 2005
Greg Biffle wins the first night race at Darlington Raceway. The race goes into overtime when a yellow flag comes out after Mark Martin spins with four laps to go. The caution erases Ryan Newman's four-second lead. It is Biffle's third win of the season and the fifth win in 10 races for Roush Racing.
![]() Tony Stewart and his entire crew scale the fence at Indianapolis Motor Speedway following the Aug. 7 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard. Though new to NASCAR, the spiderlike celebration was made popular by Indy Racing League driver Helio Castroneves. Stewart started 22nd but ran down the favorites to win his second consecutive race in a flourish that would see him win five out of seven NASCAR NEXTEL Cup events. |
May 14, 2005: Chevy American Revolution 400
After six career second-place finishes, Kasey Kahne scores his first career NASCAR NEXTEL Cup victory in the Chevy American Revolution 400 at Richmond International Raceway.
June 12, 2005: Pocono 500
Carl Edwards drives to victory in the Pocono 500 at Pocono Raceway. The win is bittersweet because it causes Edwards to miss a rain-delayed NASCAR Busch Series race at Nashville and thus lose his points lead in NASCAR's second highest series.
![]() Dale Earnhardt, Jr., and #22 Scott Wimmer duke it out during the July 10 USG Sheetrock 400 at Chicago Speedway. The race was the highlight of Earnhardt's disappointing season. A win at Chicago boosted Earnhardt from 16th to 13th in the standings with eight races left to qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup. Seventeenth entering The Chase, Earnhardt failed to qualify and he would drop to 19th in the final standings. |
July 14, 2005
Ford unveils the NASCAR version of its new 2006 Fusion midsize sedan. The car is set to make its racing debut at the February 2006 Daytona 500, marking the first time in 38 years that Ford has introduced a brand-new model and raced it in the same year.
August 7, 2005: Allstate 400
Indiana-native Tony Stewart calls winning the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard "The greatest day of my life." It is Stewart's fourth of five wins in a seven-race span.
September 4, 2005: Sony HD 500
Kyle Busch, 20, becomes the youngest driver ever to win a NASCAR Cup Series race when he outduels Greg Biffle in the Sony HD 500 at California Speedway.
![]() Ryan Newman buries the start/finish line under a cloud of smoke after kicking off the Chase for the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup with a win in the Sept. 18 Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire International Speedway. Newman passed Tony Stewart on the second-to-last lap, and moved from tenth to third in the points race. A tussle with Scott Riggs left reigning champion Kurt Busch with a 35th-place finish and struck a blow to his title defense. |
September 10, 2005
Ryan Newman benefits from Jamie McMurray's lap 362 crash to claim the final spot in the Chase for the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup. Fan favorites Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt, Jr., fail to qualify for The Chase.
October 15, 2005: UAW-GM Quality 500
NASCAR mandates minimum tire pressures and institutes competition cautions to check pressures during the UAW-GM Quality 500 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Twenty-two cautions had flown at the track in the May race, and 15 more followed in the fall, many due to blown tires. The track was scheduled to be repaved prior to the 2006 events. Jimmie Johnson recovers from a blown tire to win his fourth straight race at Lowe's.
November 10, 2005
NASCAR announces owners will be limited to fielding four teams during the 2006 campaign. The ruling will most affect Roush Racing, which has qualified all five of its teams for the 10-car Chase for NASCAR NASCAR NEXTEL Cup. Roush will be allowed to field five teams for the duration of existing sponsor contracts, and teams that field developmental drivers on a part-time basis will be allowed to exceed the limit.
![]() Jimmie Johnson pushes his #48 Chevrolet under the checkered flag ahead of Kyle Busch to win the Sept. 25 MBNA RacePoints 400 at Dover International Raceway. Johnson held off Kyle Busch in an overtime two-lap shootout. The win boosted Johnson from sixth to first in the points race. After the first two races in the Chase for the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup, six of the ten Chase qualifiers were within 23 points of first place. |
November 20, 2005: Ford 400
Ricky Rudd finishes 37th in the Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Raceway, then retires. The race marked Rudd's 788th consecutive start, a NASCAR NEXTEL Cup record that may never be broken. The streak started in 1981.
November 20, 2005
Tony Stewart holds on for a 15th place finish to wrap up the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup title. Greg Biffle edges out Mark Martin at the finish line and moves from fourth to second in the final standings.
December 7, 2005
NASCAR announces it has signed an eight-year, $4.48 billion television contract with ABC, ESPN, FOX, and TNT that will be effective starting with the 2007 season.
Get the final picture of the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup field with the easy-to-read standings chart on the next page.
For more information on all things NASCAR, see:
- NASCAR Home Page
- NASCAR Season Recaps
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- NASCAR Results
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- How NASCAR Race Cars Work
- How the Daytona 500 Works
2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Standings
Once Tony Stewart grabbed the lead in the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup points standings in June, he was only out of first place a total of two weeks. He spent the early part of the season chasing Jimmie Johnson, who set the early pace, then hit stride and assumed command.
![]() 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Champion Tony Stewart |
Stewart won five of seven races during the midpoint of the campaign, and took a five-point lead into the Chase for the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup. The reduced Chase points format was a mere inconvenience for Stewart as he held first place for eight of the final 10 weeks. His final margin of victory was 35 points over Jack Roush drivers Greg Biffle and Carl Edwards.
Five of the 10 players in The Chase were Roush competitors, which prompted a rules change limiting the number of teams one owner could field. Johnson, Stewart's biggest threat for the title, fell from second to fifth in the final race. Defending champion Kurt Busch was suspended for the final two races following a run-in with police in Phoenix, and fell to 10th place in the final standings. See how the other drivers fared this season with the 2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup standings chart below.
2005 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Standings
| Rank | Driver
|
Points
|
Wins
|
Earnings
|
| 1 | Tony Stewart
|
6,533 | 5 | $13,578,168 |
| 2 | Greg Biffle
|
6,498 | 6 | 8,354,052 |
| 3 | Carl Edwards
|
6,498 | 4 | 6,893,157 |
| 4 | Mark Martin
|
6,428 | 1 | 7,731,468 |
| 5 | Jimmie Johnson
|
6,406 | 4 | 8,336,712 |
| 6 | Ryan Newman
|
6,359 | 1 | 7,259,518 |
| 7 | Matt Kenseth
|
6,352 | 1 | 7,034,134 |
| 8 | Rusty Wallace
|
6,140 | 0 | 6,070,826 |
| 9 | Jeremy Mayfield
|
6,073 | 1 | 5,741,989 |
| 10 | Kurt Busch
|
5,974 | 3 | 7,930,830 |
| 11 | Jeff Gordon
|
4,174 | 4 | 6,855,440
|
| 12 | Jamie McMurray
|
4,130 | 0 | 3,923,970
|
| 13 | Elliott Sadler
|
4,084 | 0 | 5,024,120
|
| 14 | Kevin Harvick
|
4,072 | 1 | 4,970,050
|
| 15 | Dale Jarrett
|
3,960 | 1 | 4,705,440
|
| 16 | Joe Nemechek
|
3,953 | 0 | 4,223,380
|
| 17 | Brian Vickers
|
3,847 | 0 | 3,982,130
|
| 18 | Jeff Burton
|
3,803 | 0 | 4,265,670
|
| 19 | Dale Earnhardt, Jr.
|
3,780 | 1 | 5,761,830
|
| 20 | Kyle Busch
|
3,753 | 2 | 4,185,240
|
| 21 | Ricky Rudd
|
3,667 | 0 | 4,300,410 |
| 22 | Casey Mears
|
3,637 | 0 | 4,234,170
|
| 23 | Kasey Kahne
|
3,611 | 1 | 4,874,840
|
| 24 | Bobby Labonte
|
3,488 | 0 | 4,627,400 |
| 25 | Michael Waltrip
|
3,452 | 0 | 4,375,090
|
| 26 | Dave Blaney
|
3,289 | 0 | 3,342,290
|
| 27 | Kyle Petty
|
3,288 | 0 | 3,465,690
|
| 28 | Mike Bliss
|
3,262 | 0 | 3,091,110
|
| 29 | Jeff Green
|
3,241 | 0 | 4,040,430
|
| 30 | Sterling Marlin
|
3,183 | 0 | 4,080,120
|
| 31 | Ken Schrader
|
3,159 | 0 | 3,057,530
|
| 32 | Scott Wimmer
|
3,122 | 0 | 3,682,980
|
| 33 | Travis Kvapil
|
3,077 | 0 | 3,293,450
|
| 34 | Scott Riggs
|
2,965 | 0 | 4,030,680
|
| 35 | Mike Wallace
|
2,269 | 0 | 2,325,740
|
| 36 | Bobby Hamilton, Jr.
|
2,183 | 0 | 2,898,090
|
| 37 | Robby Gordon
|
2,117 | 0 | 2,271,310
|
| 38 | Jason Leffler
|
1,538 | 0 | 1,663,870
|
| 39 | Kevin Lepage
|
1,460 | 0 | 1,774,790
|
| 40 | Terry Labonte
|
1,071 | 0 | 1,202,520
|
| 41 | Denny Hamlin
|
806 | 0 | 610,030
|
| 42 | Boris Said
|
791 | 0 | 1,006,680
|
| 43 | Johnny Sauter
|
722 | 0 | 749,453
|
| 44 | Hermie Sadler
|
717 | 0 | 943,248
|
| 45 | Bill Elliott
|
695 | 0 | 809,013 |
| 46 | Jimmy Spencer
|
667 | 0 | 808,985
|
| 47 | Martin Truex, Jr.
|
589 | 0 | 929,028
|
| 48 | Mike Garvey
|
491 | 0 | 595,642
|
| 49 | Mike Skinner
|
487 | 0 | 969,109
|
| 50 | Tony Raines
|
419 | 0 | 420,500 |
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