UNOH 175

The UNOH 175[1] was a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race held at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire from 1996 to 2017. Since 2013 it was held the day before the Sprint Cup Series Sylvania 300, the second event in the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

UNOH 175
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
VenueNew Hampshire Motor Speedway
LocationLoudon, New Hampshire, United States
Corporate sponsorUniversity of Northwestern Ohio
First race1996
Last race2017
Distance185.15 miles (297.97 km)
Laps175 (Stage 1: 55 Stage 2: 55 Stage 3: 65)
Previous namesPennzoil / VIP Tripleheader (1996)
Pennzoil Discount Center 200 (1997)
Pennzoil / VIP Auto Discount Tripleheader (1998)
Pennzoil / VIP Auto Discount 200 (1999)
thatlook.com 200 (2000)
New England 200 (2001–2002)
Sylvania 200 Presented by Lowe's (2004–2005)
New Hampshire 200 (2003, 2006–2007)
Camping World RV Rental 200 Driven by Winnebago Industries (2008)
Heluva Good! 200 (2009)
TheRaceDayRaffleSeries.com 175 (2010)
F.W. Webb 175 (2011)
UNOH 175 (2014–2017)
Most wins (driver)Kyle Busch
Ron Hornaday Jr. (3)
Most wins (team)Kyle Busch Motorsports (4)
Most wins (manufacturer)Chevrolet (8)
Circuit information
SurfaceAsphalt
Length1.058 mi (1.703 km)
Turns4

The race was 200 laps in length from 1996 until 2010, when the distance was shortened to 175 laps. After a two-year absence from the 2012 and 2013 Truck Series schedules, it returned to the series schedule in 2014.[2] On March 8, 2017 it was announced that Las Vegas Motor Speedway would get a second Cup date, second Xfinity date, and second Truck date. The Cup and Truck races that will be given to Vegas will come from New Hampshire, making the 2017 running the last race.

Past winners

YearDateNo.DriverTeamManufacturerRace DistanceRace TimeAverage Speed
(mph
Ref
LapsMiles (km)
1996September 816Ron Hornaday Jr.Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet206*217.948 (350.753)2:14:3897.129[3]
1997May 313Jay SauterRichard Childress RacingChevrolet200211.6 (340.537)2:10:4297.138[4]
1998August 260Andy HoustonAddington RacingChevrolet200211.6 (340.537)2:01:49104.222[5]
1999August 11Dennis SetzerK Automotive RacingDodge202*213.716 (343.942)2:05:57101.81[6]
2000July 899Kurt BuschRoush RacingFord204*215.832 (347.347)2:11:2998.491[7]
2001July 2124Jack SpragueHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet200211.6 (340.537)1:56:13109.244[8]
2002July 2029Terry CookK Automotive RacingFord207*219.006 (352.455)2:06:54103.549[9]
2003September 132Jimmy SpencerUltra MotorsportsDodge200211.6 (340.537)2:02:14103.867[10]
2004*September 1824Travis KvapilBang RacingToyota200211.6 (340.537)2:21:5389.482[11]
2005September 1714Rick CrawfordCircle Bar RacingFord200211.6 (340.537)2:05:24101.244[12]
2006September 1623Johnny Benson Jr.Bill Davis RacingToyota200211.6 (340.537)2:17:3192.323[13]
2007September 1533Ron Hornaday Jr.Kevin Harvick Inc.Chevrolet200211.6 (340.537)1:55:39109.78[14]
2008September 1333Ron Hornaday Jr.Kevin Harvick Inc.Chevrolet200211.6 (340.537)2:09:1198.279[15]
2009September 1951Kyle BuschBilly Ballew MotorsportsToyota200211.6 (340.537)1:53:15112.106[16]
2010September 1818Kyle BuschKyle Busch MotorsportsToyota175185.15 (297.97)1:50:27100.579[17]
2011September 2418Kyle BuschKyle Busch MotorsportsToyota175185.15 (297.97)1:33:35118.707[18]
2012

2013
Not held
2014September 2000Cole Custer*Haas Racing DevelopmentChevrolet175185.15 (297.97)1:43:40107.161[19]
2015September 2633Austin DillonGMS RacingChevrolet175185.15 (297.97)1:56:5095.084[20]
2016September 249William ByronKyle Busch MotorsportsToyota175185.15 (297.97)1:56:3195.343[21]
2017September 234Christopher BellKyle Busch MotorsportsToyota175185.15 (297.97)1:46:05104.72[22]
  • 1996, 1999, 2000, & 2002: This race was extended due to a NASCAR Overtime finish.
  • 2004: Race delayed 5 hours due to rain from Hurricane Ivan but eventually got underway. After a caution came out with two laps to go in the scheduled distance, an overtime finish was planned, but darkness had rolled in due to the late start. Instead of having an overtime finish, officials decided to end the race under caution at the end of the scheduled distance.[23]
  • 2014: This was Cole Custer's first truck win, making him the youngest winner in NASCAR national touring series history at 16 years, 7 months and 28 days.[24]

Multiple winners (drivers)

# WinsDriverYears Won
3Ron Hornaday Jr.1996, 2007, 2008
Kyle Busch2009, 2010, 2011

Multiple winners (teams)

# WinsTeamYears Won
4Kyle Busch Motorsports2010, 2011, 2016, 2017
2K Automotive Racing1999, 2002
Kevin Harvick Inc.2007, 2008

Manufacturer wins

# WinsMakeYears Won
8 Chevrolet1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2007, 2008, 2014, 2015
7 Toyota2004, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2016, 2017
3 Ford2000, 2002, 2005
2 Dodge1999, 2003

References

External links