Alsco 300 (Kentucky)

{{Short description|Kentucky race in NASCAR Xfinity Series}}

{{distinguish|Kentucky Indy 300|VisitMyrtleBeach.com 300}}

{{redirect|Meijer 300|the Indy Racing League race|Meijer Indy 300}}

{{redirect|Alsco 300|the Xfinity Series race at Charlotte|Alsco 300 (Charlotte)|the Xfinity race at Bristol|Alsco 300 (Bristol) |the Xfinity race at Las Vegas|Alsco 300 (Las Vegas)}}

{{Infobox motor race

| Race title = Alsco 300

| Logo = Alsco 300 logo.png

| Track map = Kentucky Speedway.svg

| Series long = NASCAR Xfinity Series

| Venue = Kentucky Speedway

| Location = Sparta, Kentucky, United States

| Sponsor = Alsco

| First race = 2001

| Last race = 2020

| Distance = {{convert|300|mi|km}}

| Laps = 200 (Stage 1: 45 Stage 2: 45 Stage 3: 110)

| Previous names = Outback Steakhouse 300 (2001)
Kroger 300 (2002)
Meijer 300 (2003–2010)
Feed the Children 300 (2011–2013)
John R. Elliott HERO Campaign 300 presented by Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over (2014)
Kentucky 300 (2015)

| Most wins driver = Joey Logano
Brad Keselowski
Kyle Busch (3)

| Most wins team = Joe Gibbs Racing (6)

| Most wins manufacturer = Ford (7)

| Surface = Asphalt

| Length mi = 1.5

| Turns = 4

}}

The Alsco 300 was a NASCAR Xfinity Series race held at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Kentucky, United States. The distance of the race was 300 miles (482.803 km).

History

Kentucky Speedway, opened in 2000 by Jerry Carrol, held its first Busch Series race in 2001. Brad Paisley sang the National Anthem, and then-Cincinnati Bengals player Corey Dillon gave the command to start engines. This race saw Travis Kvapil go upside down after clipping Rich Bickle's No. 59 car off of Turn 2, and the car slid all the way down the backstretch in the turn three grass. Kevin Harvick won the inaugural event.

Hypermarket chain Meijer was the race's sponsor since 2003 after previous sponsorship from Outback Steakhouse and Kroger. Nabisco, through its Oreo and Ritz brands, had been an associate sponsor since the 2002 race. For 2011, the race was sponsored by the Nonprofit organization Feed The Children. Starting in 2016, the race was sponsored by Alsco.{{cite web|url=http://www.700wlw.com/articles/local-news-119585/new-sponsor-for-ky-speedway-race-14297447|title=New sponsor for KY Speedway race|work=WLW|date=January 21, 2016|access-date=January 21, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160127074333/http://www.700wlw.com/articles/local-news-119585/new-sponsor-for-ky-speedway-race-14297447|archive-date=January 27, 2016|url-status=dead}} In 2017, Alsco signed a multi-year agreement to continue being the sponsor of the NASCAR XFINITY Series race.{{cite web |url=http://www.kentuckyspeedway.com/fans/news/alsco-extends-partnership-with-kentucky-speedway.html |title=Alsco Extends Partnership with Kentucky Speedway {{!}} News {{!}} Fan Info {{!}} Kentucky Speedway |website=www.kentuckyspeedway.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181005031031/http://www.kentuckyspeedway.com/fans/news/alsco-extends-partnership-with-kentucky-speedway.html |archive-date=2018-10-05}} Alsco is one of only two companies to serve as entitlement sponsor of multiple Xfinity Series events. Each year Alsco provides its sponsorship partners, employees, customer and prospects with over 1,500 tickets to the race.{{Cite web |url=http://www.kentuckyspeedway.com/fans/news/alsco-celebrates-third-consecutive-nascar-xfinity-series-alsco-300-kentucky-speedway.html |title=Alsco Celebrates Third Consecutive NASCAR Xfinity Series Alsco 300 at Kentucky Speedway | News | Fan Info | Kentucky Speedway |access-date=2018-10-04 |archive-date=2018-10-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181005031034/http://www.kentuckyspeedway.com/fans/news/alsco-celebrates-third-consecutive-nascar-xfinity-series-alsco-300-kentucky-speedway.html |url-status=dead }}

The race received a doubleheader in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.{{cite news|last=Farmer|first=Keith|url=https://www.lex18.com/sports/quaker-state-rescheduled-adds-xfinity-race|title=Quaker State rescheduled, adds Xfinity races|publisher=WLEX-TV|date=June 4, 2020|access-date=June 30, 2020}} The second race, the Shady Rays 200, was held the day before the Alsco 300.{{cite press release|url=https://www.jayski.com/2020/06/30/shady-rays-to-sponsor-xfinity-race-at-kentucky-speedway/|title=Shady Rays to sponsor XFINITY race at Kentucky Speedway|work=Kentucky Speedway|publisher=Jayski's Silly Season Site|date=June 30, 2020|access-date=June 30, 2020}}

Kentucky was removed from the 2021 Xfinity schedule.{{cite magazine|last=Crandall|first=Kelly|url=https://racer.com/2020/10/30/33-races-on-tap-for-2021-nascar-xfinity-series/|title=33 races on tap for 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series|magazine=Racer|date=October 30, 2020|access-date=March 2, 2021}}

David Gilliland won here for an underfunded team in 2006 with 8 starts in his résumé. This win gave him the ride in the 38 car in mid-2006, replacing Elliott Sadler in the 38 car. Joey Logano is the first repeat winner, winning three straight years from 2008 to 2010. Also, four different drivers have won at Kentucky Speedway to claim their first Nationwide Series win. David Gilliland (2006), Stephen Leicht (2007), Joey Logano (2008), and Austin Dillon (2012).

Past winners

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
rowspan="2"|Year

! rowspan="2"|Date

! rowspan="2"|{{Tooltip|No.|Car number}}

! rowspan="2"|Driver

! rowspan="2"|Team

! rowspan="2"|Manufacturer

! colspan="2"|Race Distance

! rowspan="2"|Race Time

! rowspan="2"|Average Speed
(mph)

! rowspan="2" |Report

Laps

! Miles (km)

2001

| June 16

|align="center"| 2

| Kevin Harvick

| Richard Childress Racing

| Chevrolet

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:31:47

|align="center"|118.59

|Report

2002

| June 15/16*

|align="center"| 92

| Todd Bodine

| Herzog Motorsports

| Chevrolet

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:21:33

|align="center"|127.164

|Report

2003

| June 14

|align="center"| 25

| Bobby Hamilton Jr.

| Team Rensi Motorsports

| Ford

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:12:14

|align="center"|136.123

|Report

2004

| June 19

|align="center"| 5

| Kyle Busch

| Hendrick Motorsports

| Chevrolet

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:22:08

|align="center"|126.642

|Report

2005

| June 18

|align="center"| 60

| Carl Edwards

| Roush Racing

| Ford

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:33:42

|align="center"|117.111

|Report

2006

| June 17

|align="center"| 84

| David Gilliland

| Clay Andrews Racing

| Chevrolet

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:35:10

|align="center"|116.004

|Report

2007

| June 16

|align="center"| 90

| Stephen Leicht

| Robert Yates Racing

| Ford

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:32:56

|align="center"|117.698

|Report

2008

| June 14

|align="center"| 20

| Joey Logano

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| Toyota

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:12:50

|align="center"|135.508

|Report

2009

| June 13

|align="center"| 20

| Joey Logano

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| Toyota

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:20:51

|align="center"|127.796

|Report

2010

| June 12

|align="center"| 20

| Joey Logano

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| Toyota

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:36:08

|align="center"|115.286

|Report

2011

| July 8

|align="center"| 22

| Brad Keselowski

| Penske Racing

| Dodge

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:10.03

|align="center"|138.408

|Report

2012

| June 29

|align="center"| 3

| Austin Dillon

| Richard Childress Racing

| Chevrolet

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|1:58:42

|align="center"|151.643

|Report

2013

| June 28

|align="center"| 22

| Brad Keselowski

| Penske Racing

| Ford

|align="center"|170*

|align="center"|255 (410.382)

|align="center"|1:56:39

|align="center"|131.162

|Report

2014

| June 27

|align="center"| 5

| Kevin Harvick

| JR Motorsports

| Chevrolet

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:15:33

|align="center"|132.792

|Report

2015

| July 10

|align="center"| 22

| Brad Keselowski

| Team Penske

| Ford

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:12:18

|align="center"|136.054

|Report

2016

| July 8

|align="center"| 18

| Kyle Busch

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| Toyota

|align="center"|201*

|align="center"|301.5 (485.217)

|align="center"|2:05:24

|align="center"|144:258

|Report

2017

| July 8*

|align="center"| 18

| Kyle Busch

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| Toyota

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:30:56

|align="center"|119.258

|Report

2018

| July 13

|align="center"| 20

| Christopher Bell

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| Toyota

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:16:29

|align="center"|131.884

|Report

2019

| July 12

|align="center"| 00

| Cole Custer

| Stewart-Haas Racing with Biagi-DenBeste

| Ford

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:09:05

|align="center"|139.445

|Report

rowspan=2| 2020

| July 10

|align="center"| 22

| Austin Cindric

| Team Penske

| Ford

|align="center"|200

|align="center"|300 (482.803)

|align="center"|2:13:25

|align="center"|134.916

|Report

  • 2002: Race started on Saturday night but was finished on Sunday afternoon due to rain.
  • 2013: Race shortened due to rain.
  • 2016: Race extended due to overtime.
  • 2017: Race postponed from Friday night to Saturday afternoon due to severe weather.

=Multiple winners (drivers)=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
# Wins

! Driver

! Years Won

rowspan="3"| 3

| Joey Logano

| 2008, 2009, 2010

Brad Keselowski

| 2011, 2013, 2015

Kyle Busch

| 2004, 2016, 2017

2

| Kevin Harvick

| 2001, 2014

=Multiple winners (teams)=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
# Wins

! Team

! Years Won

6

| Joe Gibbs Racing

| 2008, 2009, 2010, 2016, 2017, 2018

4

| Team Penske

| 2011, 2013, 2015, 2020

2

| Richard Childress Racing

| 2001, 2012

=Manufacturer wins=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
# Wins

! Make

! Years Won

7

| {{flagicon|USA}} Ford

| 2003, 2005, 2007, 2013, 2015, 2019, 2020

rowspan="2"| 6

| {{flagicon|USA}} Chevrolet

| 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2012, 2014

{{flagicon|Japan}} Toyota

| 2008, 2009, 2010, 2016, 2017, 2018

1

| {{flagicon|USA}} Dodge

| 2011

Notable races

  • 2008: When Joey Logano won, he became the youngest winner in Nationwide Series history, at 18 years old, 21 days, shattering Casey Atwood's record (18 years, 313 days) that stood since 1999.
  • 2013: Rain struck Sparta as Feed the Children 300 ending short and the Quaker State 400 was moved to Sunday afternoon. Brad Keselowski won the rain-shortened race and would go on to get wrecked on Sunday as Kurt Busch turned into Keselowski. This may have started the Kurt Busch vs. Keselowski rivalry that would go on to the 2014 5-hour Energy 400.
  • 2014: Brad Keselowski overcame a speeding penalty to get a top 5 finish. Kevin Harvick held off a charging Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski.

References

{{Reflist}}