DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- In a change that further cements the NASCAR Toyota
All-Star Showdown as the "Daytona 500 of short-track racing," NASCAR has
announced that the sixth edition of the postseason special event will be held
Jan. 23-24, 2009 at the Toyota Speedway at Irwindale, Calif.
In its five-year history, the NASCAR Toyota All-Star Showdown -- held at one
of NASCAR's premier racing facilities -- has quickly become a showcase of top
short-track racing.
The race includes protected starting spots for the champions of each of the
NASCAR developmental series. The move of the race from the fall to January
allows for increased preparation and provides greater exposure for the teams and
drivers.
"This is the weekend that launches major U.S. motorsports each year," said
George Silbermann, NASCAR managing director of racing operations. "This move
represents a tremendous opportunity to build upon the successes of past NASCAR
Toyota All-Star Showdowns, broaden the scope of potential participants, and
allow competitors additional time to gear up for this huge event."
In addition, the all-star weekend will include a pair of NASCAR Whelen
All-American Series races: the 150-lap Super Late Model race and, new this year,
a 75-lap Late Model race that will be run under common West Coast rules.
Toyota and the track also announced a sponsorship agreement for naming rights
to the facility as the Toyota Speedway at Irwindale.
"Toyota is proud to continue its long-term partnership with NASCAR and the
Toyota Speedway to feature stars of American short-track racing," said Les
Unger, national motorsports manager, Toyota Motors Sales, U.S.A. Inc.
Last season's NASCAR Toyota All-Star Showdown featured Joey Logano, a rising
star for Joe Gibbs Racing, holding off the challenge of another top young
driver, Peyton
Sellers, in a green-white-checkered finish.
Logano's victory added to a growing legacy of the NASCAR Toyota All-Star
Showdown that started with Austin
Cameron's emotional win in the inaugural event in 2003 that capped a season
in which he missed four races while undergoing cancer treatments.
In 2004, eventual race winner Mike
Johnson drove from 24th starting spot to the front. David
Gilliland's victory in 2005 started him on a road that has led to a seat
with Yates Racing's Sprint Cup Series team. In the 2006 classic, two-time
Showdown runner-up Matt
Kobyluck emerged the victor of a spirited duel over the final laps with
young driver Sean Caisse
and West champion Eric Holmes.
Former NASCAR Whelen All-American Series national champion Greg Pursley added
to the legacy last year when he went door-to-door with Irwindale track champion
Rip Michels en route to winning the Super Late Model race.
"We're not only honored to host the NASCAR Toyota All-Star Showdown but we
are extremely excited that the event will be held in January," said Bob DeFazio,
Toyota Speedway at Irwindale track operator. "It's a prestigious event. It's
important to us, and we know it's important to NASCAR, and we can't think of a
better way for race fans and NASCAR short-track racing's elite to spend their
winter."
The exciting competition on the fast half-mile has become a staple of the
NASCAR Toyota All-Star Showdown. The graduated banking -- between 6 and 12
degrees -- at the Toyota Speedway in Irwindale produces multiple racing grooves
that make for thrilling side-by-side racing.
The NASCAR Toyota All-Star Showdown weekend features two nights of live
coverage on SPEED, which has broadcast the event in each of its first five
years. It will be part of a packed weekend on SPEED that includes the Rolex 24
at Daytona sports-car event.
The NASCAR Toyota All-Star Showdown main event -- contested in NASCAR Camping
World Series cars -- is open to any driver approved to drive on a half-mile or
longer tracks in the NASCAR Camping World Series.
Current Sprint Cup Series drivers such as Kevin
Harvick, Martin Truex
Jr. and Gilliland launched their careers in the NASCAR Camping World Series.
The series is the top development step for drivers looking to make the jump to
one of NASCAR's national series.
Each race winner during the 2008 NASCAR Camping World Series season will
become eligible for a protected starting spot in the sixth running of the NASCAR
Toyota All-Star Showdown.
The 2008 series champions of NASCAR's regional touring series
-- the NASCAR Camping World Series
East, NASCAR Camping World Series West, NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, NASCAR
Whelen Southern Modified Tour, NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, and NASCAR Mexico
Series -- and the 2008 national champion for the NASCAR Whelen All-American
Series are also eligible for protected starting spots.
Last year's expanded eligibility format drew a record entry of 106 cars for
the two races. It also drew drivers from across North America, including 2007
NASCAR Canadian Tire Series champion Andrew Ranger and 2006 NASCAR Mexico Series
Rookie of the Year Antonio
Perez.
In addition to eligible 2008 race winners and series champions, the starting
lineup will be determined through time trials, limited provisionals for NASCAR
Camping World Series regulars, and the last-chance "Open" race that provides
drivers one final chance to make the final starting grid for the "Daytona 500 of
short-track racing."