Location | Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina |
Date | May 21, 2011 |
Laps | 100 |
Distance | 150 miles (240 km) |
Winner | Carl Edwards |
Showdown Winners | David Ragan Brad Keselowski |
Fan Vote | Dale Earnhardt Jr. |
Winners average speed | 127.841 miles per hour (205.740 km/h) |
Polesitter | Kyle Busch |
Most Laps Led | Greg Biffle(46) |
Television | |
Network | Speed |
Announcers | Mike Joy, Darrell Waltrip and Michael Waltrip |
The NASCAR Sprint Showdown and Sprint All-Star Race XXVII was the 27th running of NASCAR's special non-points race involving winners of the 2010 and 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races through the 2011 FedEx 400 as well as Sprint All-Star Race XVII-XXVI winners, when the event was known as "The Winston" and the "Nextel All-Star Challenge", and past Sprint Cup champions from the decade covering 2001 to 2010, including the "Winston Cup" (2001–2003) and "Nextel Cup" (2004–2007) eras. The event was run at the 1.5 miles (2.4 km) Charlotte Motor Speedway in the Charlotte, North Carolina suburb of Concord on May 21, 2011. Speed provided television coverage in the United States while MRN (over-the-air/terrestrial) and Sirius XM Radio (satellite) had radio rights.
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The format of the race was similar to the 2010 event, broken down as follows:
The qualifying session for eligible drivers consisted of three laps instead of the standard two, including a pit stop after either of the first two laps, slowing to the speed limit of 45 mph entering pit road, but going full throttle as they exit.
The following drivers qualified for the race in these categories:
The following five drivers fit into the Past Champions category:
The following four drivers are eligible as a past winner of the event in the last decade:
The following ten drivers are eligible by winning a Sprint Cup points race in 2010 or 2011:
For those not listed above, a special race, The Sprint Showdown, consisting of two halves of 20 laps [30 miles (48 km)] each was held prior to the main event. The top two finishers and a driver chosen by a fan poll were promoted to the main event:
Only winning drivers, not teams, are eligible to race in the All-Star Race; previously a team could qualify for the race even if the driver who won a race for the team was no longer employed by them.
* - Trevor Bayne was scheduled to run in the All Star Race, but the Wood Brothers team withdrew him due to him still recovering from an illness.
The formal inductions for the second class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame, made up of Bobby Allison, Ned Jarrett, Bud Moore, David Pearson, and Lee Petty, was held the day after the race on Sunday, May 22. This became the last year the inductions will take place in May; beginning in 2012, the ceremonies will be held in January following a June election.
The annual Craftsman All-Star Pit Crew Challenge competition was held on the Thursday prior to the race at the Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte. The #11 Joe Gibbs Racing team, led by Mike Ford, won the competition over the #48 of Hendrick Motorsports. As a result, the #11, driven by Denny Hamlin, received the first selection of pit stalls for the All-Star Race.
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