Venue | New Hampshire Motor Speedway |
---|---|
Location | Loudon, New Hampshire, United States |
First race | 1997 |
Last race | 2017 |
Distance | 317.4 miles (510.8 km) |
Laps | 300 (Stage 1: 75 Stage 2: 75 Stage 3: 150) |
Previous names |
CMT 300 (1997) Farm Aid on CMT 300 (1998) Dura Lube/Kmart 300 (1999) Dura Lube 300 sponsored by Kmart (2000) New Hampshire 300 (2001–2002) Sylvania 300 (2003–2015) Bad Boy Off Road 300 (2016) New England 300 (2017) |
Most wins (driver) |
Clint Bowyer Jeff Gordon Kevin Harvick<bf> Matt Kenseth Ryan Newman (2) |
Most wins (team) |
Hendrick Motorsports Richard Childress Racing (4) |
Most wins (manufacturer) | Chevrolet (11) |
Surface | Asphalt |
Length | 1.058 mi (1.703 km) |
Turns | 4 |
The New England 300 is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series that is 317.4 miles (510.8 km), traditionally held in mid-September at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire, the other one being the New Hampshire 301 in July.
The Bad Boy Off Road 300 also has the distinction of being the only NASCAR Cup Series race outside of Daytona and Talladega to run a restrictor plate race since the adoption of the current 358 cubic inch formula. After Adam Petty's fatal crash in the Busch Series practice on May 12, 2000, and Kenny Irwin, Jr.'s fatal crash in the Cup Series practice on July 7, 2000, NASCAR decided to run restrictor plates, already used for the Whelen Modified Tour races at the circuit, for the 2000 Cup race, then known as the Dura Lube 300 sponsored by Kmart. Adding restrictor plates did have the desired result of slowing down the cars drastically, but at the same time, restricted passing so much that Jeff Burton led all 300 laps. This lack of passing was so noncompetitive, that for Cup cars only, the restrictor plates were gone for the very next race, the 2001 New England 300.
From 2004 until 2010, the race served as the opening round of the Chase for the Championship, a ten-race "playoff" designed among the top ten (twelve as of 2007) drivers in the standings of the series following the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 to spur interest in a championship series while NASCAR faces competition from the start of the NFL season and college football, the pennant races and post-season of Major League Baseball and the outset of the NHL and NBA seasons. Beginning with the 2011 Chase, the race became the second race in the ten-race playoff; as in part of a new round of schedule realignment the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 400 at Chicagoland Speedway moved from its traditional early July race date. On March 8, 2017 it was announced that the fall NHMS date would move to Las Vegas Motor Speedway starting in 2018.