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| TRACK PROFILE |
| At The Third Turn, we cover thousands of races and dozens of sanctioning bodies. That means plenty of short tracks, superspeedways, road course, bullrings, and cookie-cutters have seen action. Tracks, of course, are an integral part of racing. Edit this page and give us a brief overview and history of this racing facility. |
| RACE LISTING |
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| Date | Sanction | Winner | Laps |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 September 1992 | NASCAR Winston Modified Tour | Reggie Ruggiero | 150 |
| 31 May 1997 | NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series | Jay Sauter | 200 |
| 8 July 2000 | NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series | Kurt Busch | 204 |
| 12 May 2001 | NASCAR Busch Series | Jason Keller | 200 |
| 12 May 2001 | NASCAR Busch North Series | Ted Christopher | 125 |
| 21 July 2001 | NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series | Jack Sprague | 200 |
| 11 May 2002 | NASCAR Busch North Series | Brad Leighton | 130 |
| 20 July 2002 | NASCAR Busch North Series | Brad Leighton | 125 |
| 20 July 2002 | NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series | Terry Cook | 207 |
| 14 September 2002 | NASCAR Busch North Series | Tracy Gordon | 137 |
| 23 July 2004 | NASCAR Featherlite Modified Series | Ted Christopher | 108 |
| 20 September 2004 | NASCAR Featherlite Modified Series | Ted Christopher | 100 |
| 15 July 2005 | Whelen Modified Tour | Ted Christopher | 100 |
| 16 September 2005 | NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour | Ted Christopher | 100 |
| 14 July 2006 | NASCAR Busch East Series | Mike Olsen | 125 |
| 15 July 2006 | NASCAR Busch Series | Carl Edwards | 200 |
| 16 September 2006 | NASCAR Busch East Series | Kelly Moore | 104 |
| 29 June 2007 | NASCAR Busch East Series | Joey Logano | 126 |
| 13 September 2007 | NASCAR Busch East Series | Joey Logano | 125 |
| 28 June 2008 | NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour | Chuck Hossfeld | 100 |
| 13 September 2008 | NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour | Ted Christopher | 100 |
| 19 September 2009 | ACT Late Model Tour | Eddie MacDonald | 50 |
| 23 May 2010 | Amsoil NELCAR Legends Tour | Shawn Buffington | ??? |
| 25 July 2010 | NASCAR K & N Pro Series East | Ryan Truex | 125 |
| 17 September 2010 | NASCAR K & N Pro Series East | Ryan Truex | 136 |
| 18 September 2010 | ACT Late Model Tour | Joey Polewarczyk, Jr. | 60 |
| 18 September 2010 | Whelen Modified Tour | Ryan Newman | 102 |
| 18 September 2010 | Camping World Truck Series | Kyle Busch | 175 |
| 19 September 2010 | Amsoil NELCAR Legends Tour | Anthony Flannery | ??? |
| 16 April 2011 | Amsoil NELCAR Legends Tour | Shawn Buffington | ??? |
| 15 July 2011 | NASCAR K & N Pro Series East | Max Gresham | 125 |
| 16 July 2011 | Whelen Modified Tour | Todd Szegedy | 100 |
| 16 July 2011 | NASCAR Nationwide Series | Kyle Busch | 206 |
| 17 July 2011 | NASCAR Sprint Cup Series | Ryan Newman | 301 |
| 13 August 2011 | Whelen Modified Tour | Mike Stefanik | 105 |
| 13 August 2011 | ACT Late Model Tour; Serie ACT-Castrol | Brian Hoar | 75 |
| 23 September 2011 | NASCAR K & N Pro Series East | Brett Moffitt | 78 |
| 24 September 2011 | Whelen Modified Tour | Ronnie Silk | 100 |
| 24 September 2011 | NASCAR Camping World Truck Series | Kyle Busch | 175 |
| 25 September 2011 | NASCAR Sprint Cup Series | Tony Stewart | 300 |
| New Hampshire International Speedway | |
| Loudon, The Magic Mile | |
| Facility statistics | |
|---|---|
| Location | 1122 Route 106, Loudon, New Hampshire 03307 |
| Broke ground | August 13, 1989 |
| Opened | June 5, 1990 |
| Owner | Bob and Gary Bahre |
| Operator | New Hampshire International Speedway, Inc. |
| Construction cost | $? million USD |
| Architect | |
| Former names | |
| Bryar Motorsport Park | |
| Major events | |
| NASCAR Sprint Cup Lenox Industrial Tools 301, Sylvania 300
NASCAR Nationwide Series | |
| Seating capacity | |
| 100,000 (NASCAR) | |
| Current dimensions | |
| Track shape | Oval |
| Track length | 1.058 miles |
| Track banking | Turns - 12 degrees Straights - 2 degrees |
New Hampshire International Speedway is a 1.058 mile oval track which has hosted NASCAR racing since the 1990s. It is commonly referred to by its location, Loudon. (Turn 4 and the north grandstand are actually in the neighboring community of Canterbury.)
The track was opened in June 1990, after 9 months of construction after the Bahre family purchased the Bryar Motorsports Park in the region and redeveloped the popular motorcycle circuit into a multi-purpose track, with NASCAR added to the popular motorcycle and SCCA races on the complex. It was the largest speedway in New England, and later expansion has made this the largest sports venue of any type in the region. NASCAR made its debut at the track in July 1990, with a Busch Series race won by Tommy Ellis. For 3 years, the Busch Series hosted a pair of races at the track each year.
These races were successful and led to Loudon earning a spot on the Winston Cup schedule in 1993. Rusty Wallace won the inaugural Slick 50 300 in July of that year.
A second 300 mile race was added to the schedule in 1997, taking one of the spots that North Wilkesboro once had on the schedule after that track was sold in an estate sale. The race is held in the middle of September, and in 2004, Loudon became the first race in NASCAR's Chase for the Cup "playoff" series.
The track also hosted open wheel racing for 7 years, hosting CART from 1992-1995, then the Indy Racing League from 1996-1998.
In 2000, the track was the site of a pair of fatal accidents which took the lives of promising young drivers. In May, while practicing for a Busch Series race, Adam Petty perished when his throttle stuck in the middle of a turn. When Winston Cup made their first appearance, 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, making it the first track outside of Daytona and Talladega to use them. It would be the last one as well; a boring race won by Jeff Burton, which had no lead changes, was the result of the experiment. It was the first wire-to-wire race since the 1970's.
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 finally the event was postponed until the Friday after Thanksgiving. There was much concern about the weather, but race day turned out to be unseasonably mild.
Two changes were made. 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 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 car was stuck in the middle of the race track and was in danger of getting hit while other cars raced back to the caution flag. As a result, NASCAR banned racing back to the caution flag, resulting in a "free pass" (popularly referred to as "the lucky dog") 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.[1]
Recently, the track has expanded its infield care center and remodeled its radio and television booths. Sylvania sponsors the latter of the two race dates at Loudon and has done so since 2003. Lenox sponsors the first race.
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