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FireKeepers Casino 400


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FireKeepers Casino 400

FireKeepers Casino 400 logo.png

Michigan International Speedway track map.png
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
Venue
Michigan International Speedway
Location
Brooklyn, Michigan, United States
Corporate sponsor

FireKeepers Casino
First race
1969 (1969)
Distance
400 miles (640 km)
Laps
200 (Stage 1: 60
Stage 2: 60
Stage 3: 80)
Previous names
Motor State 500 (1969)
Motor State 400 (1970–1973, 1975)
Motor State 360 (1974)
Cam 2 Motor Oil 400 (1976–1977)
Gabriel 400 (1978–1983)
Miller High Life 400 (1984, 1988–1989)
Miller 400 (1985, 1996–1997)
Miller American 400 (1986–1987)
Miller Genuine Draft 400 (1990–1995)
Miller Lite 400 (1998)
Kmart 400 (1999–2001)
Sirius Satellite Radio 400 (2002)
Sirius 400 (2003)
DHL 400 (2004)
Batman Begins 400 (2005)
3M Performance 400 Presented by Post-it Picture Paper (2006)
Citizens Bank 400 (2007)
LifeLock 400 (2008–2009)
Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 (2010–2011)
Quicken Loans 400 (2012–2015)
Most wins (driver)
Cale Yarborough (6)
Most wins (team)
Hendrick Motorsports
Roush Fenway Racing
Wood Brothers Racing (6)
Most wins (manufacturer)
Ford (18)
Circuit information
Surface
Asphalt
Length
2.0 mi (3.2 km)
Turns
4

The FireKeepers Casino 400 is a 400-mile (643.737 km) Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series stock car race held annually at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan (15 of 36). It is the first of two NASCAR Cup Series races at Michigan, with the other one being the Consumers Energy 400 in mid-August.


This particular event had one of the longer title sponsorship arrangements. Miller Brewing Company sponsored the race from 1984-1998. In 2006, 3M signed a three-year agreement to sponsor the race, but after one year moved its sponsorship to the August race. Starting with the 2008 race, LifeLock had title sponsorship rights for three years pending the announcement by the speedway, but left after two. The LifeLock 400 was the name of the race formerly known as the Banquet 400 in 2007. From 2012 to 2015, Quicken Loans sponsored the race, and was replaced by FireKeepers Casino in 2016.[1]


The 1999 race, won by Dale Jarrett, went without a caution. At an average speed of 173.997 mph, it set the NASCAR all-time record for a 400-mile race. In many seasons, the race falls on Father's Day weekend.




Contents





  • 1 Past winners

    • 1.1 Notes


    • 1.2 Multiple winners (drivers)


    • 1.3 Multiple winners (teams)


    • 1.4 Manufacturer wins



  • 2 Notable races


  • 3 Television broadcasters


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links




Past winners[edit]




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Year
Date

No.
Driver
Team
Manufacturer
Race distance
Race time
Average speed
(mph)
Report
Laps
Miles (km)
1969
June 15
21

Cale Yarborough

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
250
500 (804.672)
3:35:26
139.254

Report
1970
June 7
21

Cale Yarborough

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
200
400 (643.737)
2:53:02
138.302

Report

1971
June 13
12

Bobby Allison

Holman-Moody

Mercury
197
401.88 (646.763)
2:41:13
149.567

Report

1972
June 11
21

David Pearson

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
200
400 (643.737)
2:43:40
146.639

Report

1973
June 24
21

David Pearson

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
200
400 (643.737)
2:36:22
153.485

Report

1974
June 16
43

Richard Petty

Petty Enterprises

Dodge
180*
360 (579.363)
2:48:46
127.098

Report

1975
June 15
21

David Pearson

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
200
400 (643.737)
3:02:39
131.398

Report

1976
June 20
21

David Pearson

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
200
400 (643.737)
2:50:02
141.148

Report

1977
June 19
11

Cale Yarborough

Junior Johnson &
Associates

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:57:44
135.033

Report

1978
June 18
11

Cale Yarborough

Junior Johnson &
Associates

Oldsmobile
200
400 (643.737)
2:40:28
149.563

Report

1979
June 17
28

Buddy Baker

Ranier-Lundy

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:56:44
135.798

Report

1980
June 15
27

Benny Parsons

M.C. Anderson Racing

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
3:02:05
131.808

Report

1981
June 21
28

Bobby Allison

Ranier-Lundy

Buick
200
400 (643.737)
3:03:47
130.589

Report

1982
June 20
27

Cale Yarborough

M.C. Anderson Racing

Buick
200
400 (643.737)
3:23:13
118.101

Report

1983
June 19
28

Cale Yarborough

Ranier-Lundy

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:53:00
138.728

Report

1984
June 17
9

Bill Elliott

Melling Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:58:10
134.705

Report

1985
June 16
9

Bill Elliott

Melling Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:45:48
144.724

Report

1986
June 15
9

Bill Elliott

Melling Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:53:21
138.851

Report

1987
June 28
3

Dale Earnhardt

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:41:40
148.454

Report

1988
June 26
27

Rusty Wallace

Blue Max Racing

Pontiac
200
400 (643.737)
2:36:18
153.551

Report

1989
June 25
9

Bill Elliott

Melling Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:52:38
139.023

Report

1990
June 24
3

Dale Earnhardt

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:39:46
150.219

Report

1991
June 23
28

Davey Allison

Robert Yates Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:29:09
160.912

Report

1992
June 21
28

Davey Allison

Robert Yates Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:37:12
152.672

Report

1993
June 20
5

Ricky Rudd

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:41:38
148.484

Report

1994
June 19
2

Rusty Wallace

Penske Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
3:11:58
125.022

Report

1995
June 18
18

Bobby Labonte

Joe Gibbs Racing

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:58:58
134.141

Report

1996
June 23
2

Rusty Wallace

Penske Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:24:23
166.033

Report

1997
June 15
28

Ernie Irvan

Robert Yates Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:36:31
153.338

Report

1998
June 14
6

Mark Martin

Roush Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:31:14
158.695

Report

1999
June 13
88

Dale Jarrett

Robert Yates Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:17:56
173.997

Report

2000
June 11
20

Tony Stewart

Joe Gibbs Racing

Pontiac
194*
388 (624.425)
2:41:45
143.926

Report

2001
June 10
24

Jeff Gordon

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:58:50
134.203

Report

2002
June 16
17

Matt Kenseth

Roush Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:35:01
154.822

Report

2003
June 15
97

Kurt Busch

Roush Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
3:02:54
131.219

Report

2004
June 20
12

Ryan Newman

Penske Racing

Dodge
200
400 (643.737)
2:52:18
139.292

Report

2005
June 19
16

Greg Biffle

Roush Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:39:22
150.596

Report

2006
June 18
9

Kasey Kahne

Evernham Motorsports

Dodge
129*
258 (415.21)
2:10:19
118.788

Report

2007
June 17
99

Carl Edwards

Roush Fenway Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:42:05
148.07

Report

2008
June 15
88

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
203*
406 (653.393)
2:47:34
145.375

Report

2009
June 14
5

Mark Martin

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:34:21
155.491

Report

2010
June 13
11

Denny Hamlin

Joe Gibbs Racing

Toyota
200
400 (643.737)
2:33:28
156.386

Report

2011
June 19
11

Denny Hamlin

Joe Gibbs Racing

Toyota
200
400 (643.737)
2:36:50
153.029

Report

2012
June 17
88

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:52:29
139.144

Report

2013
June 16
16

Greg Biffle

Roush Fenway Racing

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:52:19
139.278

Report

2014
June 15
48

Jimmie Johnson

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:47:19
143.441

Report

2015*
June 14
41

Kurt Busch

Stewart-Haas Racing

Chevrolet
138*
276 (444.179)
2:21:55
116.688

Report

2016
June 12
22

Joey Logano

Team Penske

Ford
200
400 (643.737)
2:58:47
134.241

Report

2017
June 18
42

Kyle Larson

Chip Ganassi Racing

Chevrolet
200
400 (643.737)
2:47:24
143.369

Report

2018
June 10
14

Clint Bowyer

Stewart-Haas Racing

Ford
133*
266 (428.085)
2:00:15
132.723

Report


Notes[edit]



  • 1974: The Race was shortened by 10% in response to the fuel crisis.


  • 2000: Race shortened due to rain/darkness.


  • 2006, 2015, and 2018: Race shortened due to rain


  • 2008: Race extended due to a NASCAR Overtime finish.


  • 2015: The race was red flagged for a record of four times, laps 13, 19, 44 and 139.


Multiple winners (drivers)[edit]































# Wins
Driver
Years Won
6

Cale Yarborough
1969, 1970, 1977, 1978, 1982, 1983
4

David Pearson
1972, 1973, 1975, 1976

Bill Elliott
1984, 1985, 1986, 1989
3

Rusty Wallace
1988, 1994, 1996
2

Bobby Allison
1971, 1981

Dale Earnhardt
1987, 1990

Mark Martin
1998, 2009

Denny Hamlin
2010, 2011

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
2008, 2012

Greg Biffle
2005, 2013

Kurt Busch
2003, 2015


Multiple winners (teams)[edit]

































# Wins
Team
Years Won
6

Wood Brothers Racing
1969, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976

Roush Fenway Racing
1998, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2013

Hendrick Motorsports
1993, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2014
4

Melling Racing
1984, 1985, 1986, 1989

Robert Yates Racing
1991, 1992, 1997, 1999

Team Penske
1994, 1996, 2004, 2016

Joe Gibbs Racing
1995, 2000, 2010, 2011
3

Ranier-Lundy
1979, 1981, 1983
2

Junior Johnson & Associates
1977, 1978

M.C. Anderson Racing
1980, 1982

Richard Childress Racing
1987, 1990

Stewart-Haas Racing
2015, 2018


Manufacturer wins[edit]



























# Wins
Manufacturer
Years Won
18

Ford
1984, 1985, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2013, 2016, 2018
15

Chevrolet
1977, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1987, 1990, 1993, 1995, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017
7

Mercury
1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976
3

Dodge
1974, 2004, 2006
2

Buick
1981, 1982

Pontiac
1988, 2000

Toyota
2010, 2011
1

Oldsmobile
1978


Notable races[edit]



  • 1969: NASCAR's debut at Michigan International Speedway was a 500-miler where the lead changed 35 times and writer Benny Phillips wrote afterward, "If they gave an Oscar for NASCAR's most exciting race, it would win hands down." Cale Yarborough escaped to the win when LeeRoy Yarbrough crashed on the final lap.


  • 1970: A scoring controversy marred Cale Yarborough's rally to edge Pete Hamilton in a four-lap battle to the flag. Yarborough had lost two laps earlier but was scored on the lead lap at the end; Hamilton's car owner Richard Petty protested, "The (scoring) cards have Cale lapping Pete (on a late caution) without the pace car lapping Pete. That's impossible." Hamilton and Petty led over 100 laps between them in high-winged Plymouth Superbirds.


  • 1971: Bobby Allison edged Bobby Isaac by a car length for his third straight win of the season, driving the Holman-Moody Mercury. The lead changed 35 times with Allison, Isaac, and Donnie Allison at times racing three abreast down the mammoth trioval and the lead changing twice on several laps between Bobby Allison and Isaac.


  • 1972: David Pearson took the second of his record nine Michigan wins, dominating in the Wood Brothers Mercury; the win was the third for the Woods in the Michigan 400's first four runnings. It was the final season the track was operated under the aegis of the defunct empire of Larry Lopatin, as Roger Penske would purchase the facility in 1973.


  • 1974: The rivalry between Richard Petty in the STP Dodge and David Pearson and the Purolator Mercury had begun intensifying in 1973 and reached a new level in 1974 as Petty won the Daytona 500 and Carolina 500 while Pearson had stormed to win the Rebel 450, Winston 500, and World 600. Petty and Pearson faced off with challenges from the Allison brothers, Cale Yarborough, and Buddy Baker, but on this June 1974 day a rookie from Alsa Craig, Ontario, Earl Ross, found himself in the fight as well. A late crash put the race under yellow in the final four laps; Pearson pitted for tires thinking the race would restart but it didn't, as Petty took the win and the Canadian rookie Ross finished second with Pearson third. The lead changed 50 times among nine drivers.


  • 1976: Pearson's superspeedway vengeance tour of 1976 hit Michigan as Cale Yarborough dominated before losing enough power to finish second to the late rally of The Silver Fox, who posted his seventh win of the season.


  • 1977: Cale Yarborough took his seventh win of the season over Richard Petty, but was upset after the race over the track surface, which had buckled after a hard winter and caused "my car (to jump) out of gear three times."


  • 1979: The lead changed 47 times among eleven drivers and the finish shook into an eight-car battle. In the final laps rookie Dale Earnhardt hit the apron of Turn Three trying a pass and nearly crashed into Neil Bonnett, Petty, and Darrell Waltrip; both Waltrip and Petty were pointedly critical of Earnhardt ("He nearly took us all out," Waltrip said afterward). Waltrip's blown transmission in the final two laps secured the win for Buddy Baker.


  • 1980: Benny Parsons, raised in Detroit, took the win at the speedway in his home state.


  • 1981: Another eight-car battle exploded with five to go when Kyle Petty blew his engine in Turn Two as the leaders were entering One; Bobby Allison was running seventh when five of the top seven spun in the oil, then down the backstretch Darrell Waltrip and Dale Earnhardt collided and crashed. The win was Allison's fourth of the 1981 season and the race turned out to be the final one for car owner Rod Osterlund as he sold his team to mysterious J.D. Stacy.


  • 1982:Televised live on CBS, the race completed 56 laps before rain delayed resumption until late in the evening. Cale Yarborough set up Darrell Waltrip for a last lap pass on the backstretch, with Waltrip aggressively blocking and making contact. Yarborough made the pass and won, while Waltrip tried to make contact with Cale after the checkered, but thought better of it and spun into the turn 1 infield. An agitated Waltrip gave a very blunt interview to CBS pit announcer Larry Nuber for the late-night race summary, as the live telecast was abandoned after the rain delay. Helped by the very late mid-June sunset in Michigan, it is probably the latest a NASCAR Cup race ever concluded (about 9:15pm EDT) at a track without night lighting.


  • 1984: Cale Yarborough's bid for a ninth Michigan win faltered and Bill Elliott ran away from Dale Earnhardt for his first Michigan win and first win on an oval.


  • 1986: Elliott posted a third straight Michigan 400 win, edging Harry Gant, who was competing despite injuries sustained at Pocono the week earlier.


  • 1987: Dale Earnhardt took the win as Tim Richmond finished fourth, what would be the final top-five of Richmond's career.


  • 1989: Rusty Wallace dominated but on a late pitstop Barry Dodson missed the peg under the door for the jack to be secured; the lengthy stop dropped Wallace too far back to challenge Bill Elliott, who took his fourth Michigan 400 win. Darrell Waltrip led late but "I had too high a gear and it was killing me off the corners."


  • 1990: Bill Elliott's blown engine opened the door to a late duel between Dale Earnhardt and fiery upstart Ernie Irvan, who finished 1-2; Irvan was driving Oldsmobiles for Morgan-McClure Motorsports and before the race it was revealed that Chevrolet would provide the team with factory backing.


  • 1991: Only one caution flew as the first half of the race erupted into a ferocious multicar duel. Geoff Bodine and car owner Junior Johnson returned to action after Johnson was suspended for several races, but the primary battle was between Earnhardt, Davey Allison, Mark Martin, and upstart Hut Stricklin, driving for Davey's dad Bobby; the foursome fought it out after a Lap 35 caution and the lead changed over 30 times officially and otherwise, with Earnhardt in particular blasting his car into the corners two full seconds deeper than anyone else and the draft kicking in to striking effect for Michigan. Past halfway the race shook into a caution-free breeze home for Allison and Stricklin and a satisfying day for Bobby Allison.


  • 1994: A slow stop put Rusty Wallace, in his first year in a Ford, well behind Dale Earnhardt, but Wallace handily clawed his way forward and stormed to his third straight win of the season.


  • 1995: Chevrolet's controversial Monte Carlo dominated as Jeff Gordon was bested by Bobby Labonte; Labonte's Joe Gibbs Racing Chevy ran Hendrick Motorsports engines, a fact that irked primary Hendrick driver Gordon afterward and led to the discontinuance of the engine lease program between Hendrick and Gibbs.


  • 1997: Ernie Irvan, two months removed from a controversial weekend and bad crash at Texas Motor Speedway, ran away for the Michigan win, his lone win of the season, final win for Robert Yates, and only career win at the track where he was gravely injured three years earlier.


  • 1999: For the first and only time at Michigan, the race goes caution-free.


  • 2001: Jeff Gordon out-duelled Ricky Rudd to score the 100th win for car owner Rick Hendrick.


  • 2008: On Father's Day and hanging around in 5th conserving fuel, Dale Earnhardt Jr. pulled off the biggest upset of the year by winning at Michigan for the first time and snapping a 76 race winless streak (his father won 76 races) and scored his first points race win with car owner Rick Hendrick in the 88 car. At the time it was Chevrolet's first win at Michigan since Jeff Gordon won there in June 2001.


  • 2012: First race on new surface. Four years and two days after scoring his first win with Hendrick Motorsports, Dale Earnhardt Jr. snapped a 143 race winless streak by leading 95 of the 200 laps to score the win for the second time on Father's Day. His last win also came at Michigan on Father's Day in 2008. The race was delayed two hours because of rain.


  • 2014: Jimmie Johnson won his first Michigan race after a streak of bad luck that included engine failures and poor fuel strategy.


  • 2015: Kurt Busch, driving in a back-up car, was declared the winner after the race was called for rain after 138 laps. The first 50 laps had seen three red flags resulting from persistent rain.


Television broadcasters[edit]

















































Year

Network

Lap-by-lap

Color commentator(s)
1978

ABC

Keith Jackson

Chris Economaki
1979

Al Michaels

Jackie Stewart
1982

CBS

Ken Squier

Tom Sneva
1983

Ned Jarrett
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

Ned Jarrett
Chris Economaki
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

Ned Jarrett
Neil Bonnett
1994

Ned Jarrett
1995

Ned Jarrett
Richard Petty
1996

Ned Jarrett
Buddy Baker
1997
1998

Mike Joy
1999
2000
2001

Fox

Darrell Waltrip
Larry McReynolds
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007

TNT

Bill Weber

Wally Dallenbach
Kyle Petty
2008
2009
2010

Adam Alexander
2011
2012
2013[2]
2014
2015

FS1

Mike Joy

Darrell Waltrip
Larry McReynolds

2016

Darrell Waltrip
Jeff Gordon

2017

2018

Fox


References[edit]




  1. ^ Broderick, Bill (October 20, 2015). "NASCAR race at MIS named FireKeepers Casino 400". Battle Creek Enquirer. Retrieved October 20, 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ "TNT to Provide "All-Access" Pass to 2013 NASCAR Summer Series". Turner Sports. May 30, 2013. Retrieved May 31, 2013.




External links[edit]


  • Ratings For NASCAR From Michigan Since 1997 (Viewership Since 2001)






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Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
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