NASCAR Cup Series at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
s in the NASCAR Cup Series have been held at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire since 1993.
A second race in September was also formerly held at the track from 1997 to 2017 until it was moved to Las Vegas Motor Speedway starting in 2018.
Current race
The Mobil 1 301 is a NASCAR Cup Series stock car race held at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire.Ryan Blaney is the defending race winner, having won it in 2025.
History
The race has been traditionally run in July, but from 2007 to 2010 it was run in late June or early July as the race preceding the Coke [Zero Sugar 400|Coke Zero 400] in order to allow that race to run as close to the 4th of July as possible. In 2011, the race returned to its traditional mid-July date and it held that date every year until 2025 when the date to was moved to mid-September and the race was made the opening race of the Round of 12 in the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs. From its inaugural running in 1993 through 2007 the race was 300 laps, but after Bruton Smith and his company SMI bought the track, their first date was given the moniker of the extra mile and was increased to 301 laps. In 2008, Kurt Busch won the race after it was called due to rain after 284 laps. One year later, Joey Logano became the youngest winner in NASCAR Cup Series history after the race was also shortened because of rain after 273 laps, at the age of 19 years, 1 month, and 4 days.From 1997 to 2017, a second race was held at the track every September, which came at the expense of the fall race at North Wilkesboro Speedway; Jeff Gordon won the inaugural race. From 2004 to 2010, it was the playoff opener race before being moved to Chicagoland Speedway. Starting in 2018, the fall race would be moved to Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
During the practice for the July 2000 event, Kenny Irwin Jr. was killed after he lost control of his car, which slammed head on into the wall, causing it to flip onto its side. His cause of death, basilar skull fracture, was the same cause that killed Busch Series driver Adam Petty 2 months prior at NASCAR [Xfinity Series at New Hampshire|Busch 200] at the same track, leading NASCAR to make significant rule changes to maintain driver safety, including an experiment on using a restrictor plate for the second New Hampshire Cup race that season. Jeff Burton won the race after leading almost every lap of the race, therefore the experiment was reverted the following year. In second 2003 race, several drivers nearly collided with an immobilized Dale Jarrett who attempted to race back to the caution. NASCAR decided to ban the practice effective from the next race at Dover; instead, NASCAR would freeze the field order immediately at the caution, and allow the first lapped car to gain back a lap. This is officially called the "free pass" by NASCAR, but is widely known by fans and journalists as the "lucky dog" rule.
Race sponsorship
, through its Lenox Industrial Tools subsidiary, was the title sponsor of the first race from 2006 to 2012. Starting in 2008, organizers added an extra lap to represent that Lenox Industrial Tools "is looking for users and suppliers of industrial tools that go the extra mile, whose jobs are physically demanding, day after day, and still find time to contribute to their communities in a meaningful way." The race was dubbed "The Extra Mile at the Magic Mile." Under the Lenox Industrial Tools sponsorship, the race was in length while the fall race remained at. After Lenox Industrial Tools left as title sponsor, Camping World picked up the sponsorship of the event through its RV Sales department for 2013 and 2014, and since the 301 moniker became popular with the fans, NHMS decided to keep their July event 301 laps long. In fact, the first two races with the 301 lap distance did not go the whole distance.In 2017, the first race received sponsorship from water sports store Overton's, branding it the Overton's 301.
Starting in 2018, Foxwoods Resort Casino, located in Ledyard, Connecticut, became the title sponsor of the race after announcing a multi-year sponsorship agreement with the racetrack on May 31, 2018.
In 2022, Ambetter, which was the title sponsor of the Ambetter Get Vaccinated 200|Xfinity Series race at New Hampshire in 2021], became the title sponsor of the race, replacing Foxwoods. Before the 2022 Cup Series race at the track, it was announced that Crayon Software Experts, which replaced Ambetter as the title sponsor of the Xfinity Series race at New Hampshire in 2022, would sponsor the track's Cup Series race in 2023. It had been announced the previous week that Ambetter would move their title sponsorship to the spring Cup Series race at Atlanta in 2023. USA Today became the title sponsor for the 2024 [USA Today 301|2024 race]. Mobil 1 became the title sponsor for the 2025 race.
Trophy
Unlike other races, the trophy is in the form of an American lobster provided by Makris Lobster and Steak House of Concord, New Hampshire. The restaurant selects the largest lobster in its tank, usually weighing in at 20 lbs or more. After the winning driver poses with the lobster on victory lane, Makris pressure cooks it and sends the meat to the winning pit crew while a taxidermist reassembles the shell and mounts it on a trophy for the driver.There were some exceptions to this tradition. After winning the race in 2008, Kurt Busch donated his lobster to the New England Aquarium; it died shortly after its arrival.
Past winners
Multiple winners (drivers)
Multiple winners (teams)
Manufacturer wins
Former second date
The ISM Connect 300 was a NASCAR Cup Series stock car race held at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire. Kyle Busch was the final race winner.Past winners
- 2001: Race postponed from September 16 to November 23 due to 9/11.
- 2002: Race shortened due to rain.
- 2010: Clint Bowyer's was found to have illegal car modifications in the post-race inspection, and he was penalized 150 points, while crew chief Shane Wilson was suspended four races.
- 2014: Race extended due to a NASCAR Overtime finish.
Multiple winners (drivers)