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2008 UAW-Dodge 400

Stock car race

2008 UAW-Dodge 400

Stock car race

FieldValue
TypeNAS
Race NameUAW-Dodge 400
Details ref
Fulldate
Year2008
Race_No3
Season_No36
Image2008 UAW-Dodge 400 program cover.jpeg
image-altOfficial Logo for the UAW-Dodge 400
CaptionThe 2008 UAW-Dodge 400 program cover, with artwork by Sam Bass.
Official nameUAW-Dodge 400
LocationLas Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, Nevada
Course_mi1.5
Course_km2.41
Distance_laps267
Distance_mi400.5
Distance_km644.542
WeatherTemperatures of 77 F; wind speeds of 28.9 mph
Avg127.729 mi/h
Pole_DriverKyle Busch
Pole_TeamJoe Gibbs Racing
Pole_Time29.613
Most_DriverCarl Edwards
Most_TeamRoush Fenway Racing
Most_laps86
Car99
First_DriverCarl Edwards
First_TeamRoush Fenway Racing
NetworkFox Broadcasting Company
AnnouncersMike Joy, Darrell Waltrip, Larry McReynolds
Ratings{{Plainlist
* (12.1&nbsp;million)<ref nameratings }}

| image-alt = Official Logo for the UAW-Dodge 400

  • 7.1/13 (Final)
  • 6.2/12 (Overnight)
  • (12.1 million) }}

The 2008 UAW-Dodge 400 was the third stock car race of the 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. It was held on March 2, 2008, before a crowd of 153,000 in Las Vegas, Nevada, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, an intermediate track that holds NASCAR races. The 267-lap race was won by Carl Edwards of the Roush Fenway Racing team, who started from second position. Hendrick Motorsports driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished second and Edwards's teammate Greg Biffle was third.

Kyle Busch, the pre-race Drivers' Championship leader over Ryan Newman, won the pole position with the fastest overall lap time in the qualifying session. Busch led the first twenty laps until he was passed by Edwards. He held the lead until the first green-flag pit stops and regained the position after the stops ended. Busch retook the lead on lap 81 and held it until he was passed by Matt Kenseth. Jeff Gordon took over the lead on lap 163, before Earnhardt became the leader on the 181st lap and maintained this position until Edwards regained it 14 laps later. The race was stopped for 17 minutes when Gordon crashed on lap 262, and car parts were strewn into the path of other drivers, requiring officials to clean the track. Edwards maintained the lead at the restart and held it to win the race. There were 11 cautions and 19 lead changes by nine different drivers during the race.

It was the second victory in succession that was achieved by Edwards over the course of the season, and the ninth of his career. He was later issued with a 100-point penalty after his car was found to violate NASCAR regulations, dropping him from first to seventh in the Drivers' Championship. Kyle Busch increased his lead over Ryan Newman to twenty points as a consequence. Ford took over the lead of the Manufacturers' Championship, five points ahead of Dodge. Chevrolet moved clear of Toyota in third place, with 33 races left in the season. The race attracted 12.1 million television viewers.

Background

The race logo for the 2008 UAW-Dodge 400.

The UAW-Dodge 400 was the third out of 36 scheduled stock car races of the 2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. It ran for a total of 267 laps over a distance of 400 mi, and was held on March 2, 2008, in Las Vegas, Nevada, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, an intermediate track that holds NASCAR races. The standard track at Las Vegas Motor Speedway is a four-turn 1.5 mi oval. Its turns are banked at 20 degrees and both the front stretch (the location of the finish line) and the back stretch are banked at 9 degrees.

Aerial photograph of the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, showing the full layout of the track.
Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where the race was held

Before the race, Kyle Busch led the Drivers' Championship with 335 points, six points ahead of Ryan Newman in second and nineteen points over Tony Stewart in third. Kurt Busch and Carl Edwards were fourth and fifth, respectively, and Kasey Kahne, Kevin Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Greg Biffle, Jeff Burton, Brian Vickers, and Martin Truex Jr. rounded out the top 12. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Dodge and Ford were tied for the lead with 12 points each; their rivals Chevrolet and Toyota were tied for third place with 10 points each. Johnson was the race's defending champion.

Track layout of the Las Vegas Motor Speedway: The track has four turns with one backstretch linking the turns together. The pit road splits off from the track on the inside of turn four and rejoins the track at the entry of turn one.
Track layout of Las Vegas Motor Speedway

In preparation for the race, NASCAR held the second of its two preseason tests for Sprint Cup entrants on January 28–29 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Sessions began at 9:00 am Eastern Standard Time (EST), paused from 12:00 to 1:00 pm, and concluded at 5:00 pm Sixty-seven cars participated in the January 28 morning session; Denny Hamlin was quickest with a top speed of 178.265 mph, while Kyle Busch was quickest in the afternoon session, with a top speed of 183.350 mph. Several incidents occurred during the second session; Regan Smith spun leaving turn two and damaged his car's nose after hitting the inside wall; Sam Hornish Jr. heavily damaged his car after scraping the wall hard; and Dario Franchitti heavily damaged his Dodge's rear after spinning. Jacques Villeneuve spun, but did not damage his car; David Ragan wrecked after spinning off turn two; and Mark Martin damaged the front of his vehicle when he hit a concrete piling after swerving to avoid a tow truck. During the third session with 74 cars, Edwards had the fastest speed of 184.256 mph, and Burton damaged the right side of his car after hitting the wall. Juan Pablo Montoya recorded the fastest speed of the two days, at 186.761 mph in the fourth and final session.

Edwards was looking forward to the race weekend, and felt his result would be good. Biffle was confident he could secure a top-five finishing position, and stated if his car's handling were good, he believed he could be in contention for winning the race. Having won twice at the track in the early 2000s, Kenseth said he enjoyed racing at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and hoped the Roush Fenway Racing cars would be able to contend for race victories. Johnson was considered by some bookmakers as the favorite to win the race, and in the event he succeeded, he would have become the first person to secure four consecutive victories in a NASCAR Cup Series racing event since Jeff Gordon won the Southern 500 four times between 1995 and 1998. He said it would be "great" if he took the victory, but would not approach the event differently from at a track where he had not won a race.

One change of driver happened before the race. Jon Wood, the grandson of retired driver Glen Wood, was originally scheduled to replace 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Series champion Bill Elliott in the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing car, but withdrew because of a lack of experience with the Car of Tomorrow, and former Haas CNC Racing driver Johnny Sauter took over his seat. Wood said he felt Sauter was a better qualifier when Elliott was not available to drive. Kahne developed a sinus infection two days before the event, and his team had Nationwide Series driver Jason Keller ready to replace him if he could not compete.

Practice and qualifier

Three practice sessions were held before the Sunday race, one on Friday and two on Saturday. The first session lasted 90 minutes, the second 45 minutes and the third 60 minutes. Hornish made contact with the turn-two barrier, while Reed Sorenson and Patrick Carpentier spun in turn four, but avoided damaging their cars. Montoya switched to a back-up car after heavily colliding with the turn-two wall, and Bobby Labonte did the same after he lost control in turn four and damaged his left-rear quarter. Kahne made light contact with the turn-four wall, and the car was repaired by his team.

Forty-seven drivers entered qualifying on Friday afternoon. Due to NASCAR's qualifying procedure, 43 could race. Each driver ran two laps, with the starting order determined by the competitors' fastest times. Drivers who recorded their lap times early in the session were at an advantage because the track was cooler, and thus the air was more dense and the track gave more grip. Edwards felt his car had oversteer during his run. Kyle Busch won the third pole position of his career with a time of 29.613 seconds. He was joined on the grid's front row by Edwards, who was 0.125 seconds slower and had the pole position until Kyle Busch's lap. Martin qualified third, Gordon fourth, and Mike Skinner fifth. Biffle, Scott Riggs, Earnhardt, Kurt Busch, and Sadler completed the top-10 qualifiers. The four drivers who failed to qualify were A. J. Allmendinger, Joe Nemechek, John Andretti, and Sauter (who crashed at turn two on his first qualifying lap). Burney Lamar withdrew from the race prior to qualifying.

On Saturday afternoon, Matt Kenseth was fastest in the second practice session with a time of 30.321 seconds, ahead of Clint Bowyer, Earnhardt, Travis Kvapil, David Gilliland, Biffle, Johnson, Newman, Hornish, and Edwards. Kyle Busch scraped the outside wall while driving up the track; he sustained minor damage and did not switch to a back-up car. Later that day, Kahne led the final practice session with a time of 30.580 seconds; Edwards, Paul Menard, Gordon, his Hendrick Motorsports teammates Johnson and Earnhardt, Reutimann, Biffle, Bowyer, and Dave Blaney occupied positions two through 10. Bowyer moved to the outside of the track, but was unable to steer left and hit the outside wall leaving turn two and into the backstretch; he came down the track and Kyle Petty hit Bowyer and damaged his front-left fender before Bowyer's car stopped after he made contact with the inside wall. Bowyer was required to use a back-up car, but Petty was able to repair his chassis.

Qualifying results

GridCarDriverTeamManufacturerTimeSpeed1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647
18Joe Gibbs RacingToyota29.613182.352
99Roush Fenway RacingFord29.738181.586
8Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet29.786181.293
24Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet29.795181.238
27Bill Davis RacingToyota29.815181.117
16Roush Fenway RacingFord29.817181.105
66Haas CNC RacingChevrolet29.856180.868
88Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet29.861180.838
2Penske Racing SouthDodge29.871180.777
19Gillett Evernham MotorsportsDodge29.881180.717
5Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet29.891180.656
10Gillett Evernham MotorsportsDodge29.899180.608
17Roush Fenway RacingDodge29.922180.469
00Michael Waltrip RacingToyota29.937180.379
12Penske Racing SouthDodge29.941180.355
44Michael Waltrip RacingToyota29.955180.270
29Richard Childress RacingChevrolet29.960180.240
1Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet29.961180.234
49BAM RacingDodge30.001179.994
77Penske Racing SouthDodge30.007179.958
07Richard Childress RacingChevrolet30.011179.934
55Michael Waltrip RacingToyota30.023179.862
70Haas CNC RacingChevrolet30.030179.820
31Richard Childress RacingChevrolet30.034179.976
20Joe Gibbs RacingToyota30.071179.575
22Bill Davis RacingToyota30.108179.354
11Joe Gibbs RacingToyota30.123179.265
01Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet30.124179.259
28Yates RacingFord30.132179.211
96Hall of Fame RacingToyota30.140179.164
42Chip Ganassi RacingDodge30.167179.003
7Robby Gordon MotorsportsDodge30.169178.992
48Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet30.177178.944
38Yates RacingFord30.258178.465
41Chip Ganassi RacingDodge30.271178.389
26Roush Fenway RacingFord30.278178.347
9Gillett Evernham MotorsportsDodge30.281178.330
6Roush Fenway RacingFord30.284178.312
43Petty EnterprisesDodge30.291178.271
15Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet30.352177.913
45Petty EnterprisesDodge30.433177.439
40Chip Ganassi RacingDodge30.472177.212
83Red Bull Racing TeamToyota30.029179.826
**Failed to qualify**
84Red Bull Racing TeamToyota30.174178.962
78Furniture Row RacingChevrolet30.451177.334
34Front Row MotorsportsChevrolet117.51345.952
21Wood Brothers RacingFord

Race

Live television coverage of the race began at 3:30 pm EST in the United States on Fox. Around the start of the race, weather conditions were sunny, between 54 and, and no rain was expected. Gusty winds from the north created strong headwinds on the back straight. Kenny Farmer, chaplain of Las Vegas Motor Speedway, began prerace ceremonies with an invocation. Actress Carol Linnea Johnson of the stage production Mamma Mia! performed the national anthem, and John Byers, co-director of UAW-Chrysler National Training Center, commanded the drivers to start their engines. During the pace laps, two drivers moved to the rear of the field because of unapproved changes: Bowyer had switched to a back-up car, and Kahne had changed his engine.

Fighter jets flying over the Speedway
archive-date=2021-08-09}}</ref> before the start of the race

The race started at 4:48 pm; Kyle Busch maintained his pole position advantage heading into the first corner and led the field on the first lap. Carpentier went up the track on the same lap, but avoided hitting the barriers, while Reutimann did the same and scraped the outside wall, causing right-rear damage to his car. He was black-flagged by NASCAR because debris was dangling from his vehicle. Reutimann's right-rear tire exploded while entering the pit road on lap 5, but no debris was left on the track. On lap 9, Bowyer hit the wall, causing Kahne to drive down the track. He also made contact with Jamie McMurray, who slid through the infield frontstretch grass, causing the first caution flag and the appearance of the pace car. During the caution, most drivers elected to make pit stops for tires, and 18 drivers remained on the track.

Kyle Busch stayed out and led the field back up to speed on the lap 13 restart. Three laps later, Edwards started to challenge Kyle Busch for the lead. Jeff Gordon moved up to third on lap 18, and Martin moved from third to eighth by the same lap. Kyle Busch and Edwards ran alongside each other in the battle for the first position on lap 20; the battle concluded after Edwards passed Kyle Busch on the following lap. Gordon was passed by Biffle for third place on lap 22, while Kurt Busch moved up to fifth on the same lap. By lap 28, Biffle had closed the gap to Kyle Busch and passed him for second position two laps later. Edwards had a 1.3-second lead over teammate Biffle on the same lap. Kyle Busch fell to fourth place after Gordon passed him on the 33rd lap. Kyle Busch reclaimed the third position from Gordon two laps later; Kurt Busch had moved into third after moving ahead of Gordon on the same lap. By the 42nd lap, Edwards and teammate Biffle had opened a 3.0-second lead over Kyle Busch. Riggs and Kurt Busch both moved in front of Kyle Busch for third and fourth positions on lap 45.

Green-flag pit stops began on lap 48. Edwards and Biffle made pit stops on lap 49, handing the lead to Riggs. Hornish hit the turn-two outside wall on the following lap after his right-front tire went down in the trioval, and sustained damage to his right-front quarter panel, but no debris came off his car. After the pit stops, Edwards regained the lead and held a 5.0-second lead over Kyle Busch; Martin moved into third place, Riggs regained fourth place, and Harvick moved up to fifth place by lap 65. Four laps later, a second caution was needed when debris was spotted at turn two. Most of the leaders, including Edwards, made pit stops. Jeff Burton chose to remain on the track and led on the lap-76 restart, ahead of Earnhardt and Kyle Busch. On lap 78, Kyle Busch moved ahead of Earnhardt to take second place, and began to close the gap to Burton. Kyle Busch passed Burton to reclaim the lead three laps later, and opened up a 1.3-second advantage over Burton by the 92nd lap. Earnhardt was passed by Edwards for fifth place on lap 94, and Biffle got ahead of Gordon for seventh on the same lap. Edwards gained fourth place when he passed Stewart on the 96th lap, and Burton lost second to Kenseth two laps later. On lap 102, Burton fell to fourth place after Edwards passed him.

By lap 105, Kyle Busch held a 3.1-second lead over Kenseth. Four laps later, the third caution was triggered when Stewart's car made heavy contact with the turn-two wall after his right-front tire burst. All the leaders, including Edwards, chose to make pit stops for tires and adjustments under caution. NASCAR required Edwards to fall back to the end of the longest line because one of his crew members had allowed a tire to roll away from the pit box. Kyle Busch maintained the lead at the restart on lap 115; he was followed by Kenseth and Gordon. Kenseth passed Kyle Busch to take the lead on lap 116. On the next lap, Gordon passed Busch. By lap 135, Kenseth had opened up a 2.2-second lead over Gordon. Biffle moved in front of Burton for fourth place on the 139th lap. On lap 144, Robby Gordon's right-front tire blew, causing him to hit the turn-two wall, and the fourth caution was triggered. All the leaders made pit stops during the caution.

Kenseth remained the leader at the lap-150 restart; he was followed by Gordon. The fifth caution was deployed 12 laps later, when Carpentier was squeezed towards the backstretch outside wall by Newman, causing Carpentier to slide down the track and hit the inside wall. During the caution, the leading drivers, including Kenseth, elected to make pit stops for tires. Gordon took the lead and maintained it at the lap-166 restart. Biffle and his teammate Kenseth drove alongside each other in a battle for second place on lap 166, until Biffle escaped and ran onto the apron on the next lap. Mayfield burst his right-front tire on lap 171, but no debris came off his car, avoiding the need for a caution. Six laps later, Biffle passed Kyle Busch to take fifth place. Riggs experienced oversteer in the fourth turn while running down the inside of Labonte; Franchitti ran into Riggs, causing the sixth caution on lap 179. All the leaders, including Kenseth, elected to make pit stops for tires. Earnhardt led the field on the lap-184 restart; he was followed by Harvick and Edwards. Gordon moved into fifth place by lap 188. Harvick fell to fourth place when Edwards and Kenseth passed him.

Edwards passed Earnhardt to reclaim the lead on lap 195, while Earnhardt lost a further position after Kenseth got ahead of him on the same lap. Ten laps later, Biffle moved ahead of Harvick to take fifth place, while his teammate Kenseth had a 1.5-second lead over the second-place Edwards by the 211th lap. Three laps later, the seventh caution was issued when officials located debris in the turn-two groove. The leaders, including Edwards, chose to make pit stops for tires and car adjustments. One tire from Edwards's car went outside his pit box, but he was not penalized because a cameraman blocked Edwards's crew from retrieving the tire. Kenseth led the field back up to speed on the lap-220 restart; Earnhardt was in second place and Edwards third. Casey Mears hit Vickers, who spun and triggered the eighth caution on lap 224; both drivers avoided contacting the wall. Kenseth maintained the lead on the lap-228 restart. Edwards drove up the track in an attempt to take the lead on lap 229, but Kenseth kept the position. Four laps later, the ninth caution was needed when Dale Jarrett spun and hit the turn-two outside wall. Kenseth remained the leader at the restart on lap 237. Edwards passed teammate Kenseth for the lead two laps later, and began to pull away. Earnhardt caught up to Kenseth by lap 243, and 10 laps later, he passed Kenseth for second.

Kurt Busch's right-front tire exploded, causing him to hit the wall between turns three and four, and the 10th caution happened on lap 257. Kurt Busch retired from the race because of his crash. Edwards remained in the lead for the lap-263 restart. Earnhardt spun his tires, forcing Kenseth onto the outside lane and Gordon to the inside, where he passed Earnhardt. Kenseth moved in front of Earnhardt and then made contact with Gordon, who was sent into the inside backstretch retaining wall, which had no SAFER barrier installed. Gordon's car's radiator flew out from its chassis and into the path of oncoming traffic. Kenseth slid, but was able to straighten his car and continue. The final caution was initially waved before a red flag was shown, stopping the race to allow officials to remove debris from the track. The race resumed 17 minutes later, with Edwards leading Earnhardt and Biffle. Edwards maintained the lead for the remaining two laps to secure his second consecutive win and the ninth of his career. Earnhardt finished second, ahead of Biffle in third, Harvick fourth, and Burton fifth. Ragan, Kahne, Kvapil, Hamlin, and Martin rounded out the top-10 finishers. The race had 11 cautions and 19 lead changes among 9 drivers. Edwards led four times for a total of 86 laps, more than any other competitor.

Postrace comments

Edwards appeared in Victory Lane in front of the crowd of 153,000 people to celebrate his second victory of the season, earning him $425,675. He added, "We do this to win. Winning these races is the greatest. Winning a championship would be the ultimate. What we’re trying to do is win the championship this year. That's our number-one goal." Second-place finisher Earnhardt was disappointed, saying he had his car in his chosen position, but the red-flag period prevented him from winning the race: "Carl wasn't going to get beat today. He had it in the bag. He was so strong... I was terrible on cold tires. I wish all of you knew what that felt like. I hate it."

Despite his injury, Stewart said he hoped to participate in a planned two-day test session at Phoenix International Raceway. He also said he was worried about his crash because his legs and hips were tingling and his lower back was in pain. Stewart said the crash scared him and the tingling in his legs had improved after leaving the infield care center. According to Kenseth, "I knew he was going to get a run on me, so I laid back a little bit... We came off [turn] 2 and I was up as high as I thought I could, and Jeff just came across. Whether it was on purpose or not, it just kind of wiped us out." Biffle said the circuit barriers should not have had gaps, and that all NASCAR tracks should have SAFER barriers installed.

After the race, NASCAR announced it had found a problem with the lid on the oil reservoir encasement during a postrace inspection on Edwards's car, which was later taken to the NASCAR Research and Development Center in Concord, North Carolina, for further analysis. Three days after the race, Roush Fenway Racing was given penalties for "actions detrimental to stock car racing", "car, car parts, components and/or equipment used do not conform to NASCAR rules", and a device or duct work that permitted air to pass through the car from one area of the interior of the car to another, or to the outside of the car. The penalties included a $100,000 fine and a six-race suspension for Edwards's crew chief Bob Osborne, who was suspended from NASCAR until April 30, 2008, and placed on probation until December 31, 2008. Roush Fenway Racing chief engineer Chris Andrews took over Osborne's role at the next race weekend. Edwards and car owner Jack Roush incurred the loss of 100 driver and owner points. If Edwards qualified for the Chase for the Sprint Cup, he would not receive 10 bonus points awarded to him for winning the race, which was used to determine the seeding order. he moved from first to seventh in the Drivers' Championship.

Roush Fenway Racing president Geoff Smith said a bolt that held the oil lid together did not work because of vibration harmonics generated by Edwards's car and the Las Vegas race track. Edwards's teammate Biffle and Newman agreed the penalties were justified. According to Sadler, the penalties were not severe enough; he argued that the driver should be penalized or required to miss one event.

The result meant Kyle Busch maintained his lead in the Drivers' Championship, 20 points ahead of Newman in second place. Kahne's seventh-place finish allowed him to advance into third place, 16 points in front of Harvick, who also moved up three positions. Biffle was in fifth at 427 points. Burton, Edwards, Truex, Sadler, Earnhardt, Stewart, and Kurt Busch rounded out the top 12. Ford moved into the lead of the Manufacturers' Championship, five points ahead of Dodge. Chevrolet moved three points clear of Toyota. The event had a television audience of 12.1 million viewers; it took 3:08:08 to complete the race, and the margin of victory was 0.504 seconds.

Race results

PosGridCarDriverTeamManufacturerLaps runPoints12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243
299Roush Fenway RacingFord26795
888Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet267175
616Roush Fenway RacingFord267165
1729Richard Childress RacingChevrolet267160
2431Richard Childress RacingChevrolet267160
379Gillett Evernham MotorsportsDodge267150
386Roush Fenway RacingFord267146
2928Yates RacingFord267142
2711Joe Gibbs RacingToyota267138
38Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet267139
118Joe Gibbs RacingToyota267135
1019Gillett Evernham MotorsportsDodge267127
115Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet267124
1512Penske Racing SouthDodge267121
181Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet267118
2370Haas CNC RacingChevrolet267115
3943Petty EnterprisesDodge267112
3541Chip Ganassi RacingDodge267109
3142Chip Ganassi RacingDodge267106
1317Roush Fenway RacingFord267108
1949BAM RacingDodge266100
4015Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet26697
3438Yates RacingFord26694
4383Red Bull Racing TeamToyota26691
3626Roush Fenway RacingFord26688
2622Bill Davis RacingToyota26685
3096Hall of Fame RacingToyota26682
2107Richard Childress RacingChevrolet26579
3348Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet26576
527Bill Davis RacingToyota26573
2255Michael Waltrip RacingToyota26570
4145Petty EnterprisesDodge26567
4240Chip Ganassi RacingDodge26564
2801Dale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet26461
424Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet26263
766Haas CNC RacingChevrolet26060
1400Michael Waltrip RacingToyota25852
92Penske Racing SouthDodge25549
1644Michael Waltrip RacingToyota23146
1210Gillett Evernham MotorsportsDodge18243
2077Penske Racing SouthDodge15240
327Robby Gordon MotorsportsDodge14237
2520Joe Gibbs RacingToyota10739

Standings after the race

Pos+/–DriverPoints
1[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]470
2[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]450 (−20)
3[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 3444 (−26)
4[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 3428 (−42)
5[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 4427 (−43)
6[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 4421 (−49)
7[[File:1downarrow red.svg10px]] 2391 (−79)
8[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 4371 (−99)
9[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 4368 (−102)
10[[File:1uparrow green.svg10px]] 13361 (−109)
11[[File:1downarrow red.svg10px]] 8355 (−115)
12[[File:1downarrow red.svg10px]] 8348 (−122)
Pos+/–ManufacturerPoints
1[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]Ford21
2[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]Dodge16 (−5)
3[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]Chevrolet16 (−5)
4[[File:1rightarrow blue.svg10px]]Toyota13 (−8)
  • Note: Only the top-12 positions are included for the driver standings.

References

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  35. Caraviello, David. (March 3, 2008). "Crash has Gordon wanting safety upgrades at LVMS". Turner Sports Interactive.
  36. Margolis, Bob. (March 2, 2008). "UAW‑Dodge 400 Observations". [[Yahoo! Sports]].
  37. (August 27, 2008). "Gordon's crash in spring prompts Vegas to put in SAFER barrier". ESPN.
  38. (March 2, 2008). "Edwards Doubles Down in Vegas". International Speedway Corporation.
  39. Courchense, Shawn. (March 5, 2008). "Carl Edwards and the No. 99 Team Slapped By NASCAR After Las Vegas Win". Tribune Publishing.
  40. Mejia, Diego. (March 6, 2008). "Edwards penalised, loses points lead". Haymarket Publications.
  41. Caldwell, Dave. (March 6, 2008). "Car's Failed Inspection Costs Edwards Points". [[The New York Times]].
  42. White, Ronnie. (March 12, 2008). "Roush won't appeal Edwards' penalty for failing Las Vegas inspection". [[Advance Publications]].
  43. Ryan, Nate. (March 8, 2008). "Earnhardt, other drivers weigh in on Roush Fenway's denial". Gannett Company.
  44. (March 13, 2008). "Edwards will not appeal". [[GateHouse Media.
  45. "2008 Official Driver Standings: UAW-Dodge 400". Turner Sports Interactive.
  46. (March 2, 2008). "Race Result: UAW-Dodge 400". Motorsport Stats.
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