•
1989: Ricky Rudd won the inaugural race under King Racing which proved to be his only victory of 1989. •
1990: Rusty Wallace in his new No. 27 car won the race at Sonoma after Mark Martin got loose with 3 laps left. •
1991: After Mark Martin and Tommy Kendall clashed, Davey Allison took the lead in a huge margin against Ricky Rudd. Ricky Rudd nonetheless caught up and in the final turn with 2 laps left, he spun Allison around. Allison contended second after turning a 180 to hold on to the second spot. Ricky Rudd led the final lap and in the final turn, he waved to his pit crew and gave the victory fist but was instead shown a black-flag at the last second. His furious pit crew retorted to NASCAR that it was plain racing but nonetheless Rudd was disqualified from his victory and put in second place behind the eventual winner Davey Allison. •
1992: Ernie Irvan, who was black-flagged and given a stop-and-go penalty after the start of the race for jumping the start, wowed the fans by pulling up to the lead in the final laps to hold off Terry Labonte for the victory. The race was also notable for having been held just hours after the death of NASCAR founder
Bill France Sr. •
1993: Ernie Irvan dominated but in the final 3 laps he was passed by NASCAR veteran and popular driver, Geoff Bodine who held him off to win the race. This would be the last victory for the
Bud Moore Engineering team and one of the last races for Bodine driving for the team before becoming a driver-owner after purchasing the assets of what had been
Alan Kulwicki's team following the defending Winston Cup champions'
death in an April 1, 1993 plane crash. •
1994: Ernie Irvan dominated again and went on to win his second victory at Sonoma. •
1995: Dale Earnhardt dominated the race and held off a close friend and rival Mark Martin to take the victory. This victory at Sonoma put Earnhardt in the lead of the championship standings which gave him popularity at Sonoma. It was Earnhardt's much sought after, first-ever (and only), Cup Series win on a road course. •
1996: Again Mark Martin dominated but suffered heartbreak to fierce rival Rusty Wallace when Wallace passed Martin on a final restart to win the race. •
1997: Mark Martin dominated and won the race after Jeff Gordon got loose in the final 5 laps. •
1998: Jeff Gordon started on the front row, dominated nearly the entire race, and won his first Sonoma victory. •
1999: Jeff Gordon again started on the front row and won after domination. •
2000: Jeff Gordon started in 5th place which caused the fans to think his hopes of victory would not work. However, Gordon rushed up to the top spot on a first restart and dominated to win the race for a third consecutive time. •
2001: This race was one of the first races in NASCAR where
road course aces were among the Cup drivers who were serious threats to win. Jeff Gordon won the pole and led the early portions of the race. After pitting, Canadian road ringer
Ron Fellows led the most laps of the race, leading over 20 laps. However, Fellows lost his shot at the win through an untimely yellow with less than 57 laps to go. The final 30 laps found one-off road course ringer Robby Gordon (The two Gordons are not related) dominating. Robby Gordon had been fired from his team in spring 2001 and was racing only on rare occasions. Robby Gordon hoped to win in order to find a new ride. After Gordon spent too much time battling a lapped
Kevin Harvick to keep Harvick a lap down, Tony Stewart got by Robby Gordon for the lead and stole away the victory. •
2002: Jeff Gordon dominated, but under a final caution he pitted and
Jerry Nadeau took the lead by not pitting with 19 laps to go. Nadeau led 22 laps driving for
Petty Enterprises. With 2 laps to go his car engine blew and he stalled in a pullover-site to avoid causing a caution. Ricky Rudd crossed the finish line first and this time he got to keep his victory, and it was also his final Cup win of his career. Nadeau finished 34th after another near-miss in less than 9 months (Nadeau ran out of gas on the final lap of the 2001 NAPA 500 at Atlanta). •
2003: Robby Gordon ended Jeff Gordon's domination streak by dominating the race in his No. 31 team he had driven for since 2001. On lap 43, Robby Gordon and his RCR teammate Kevin Harvick got loose racing side-by-side which nearly gave the win away to
Ron Fellows. Fellows controlled the race from then until an untimely caution at lap 72 and losing any shot at winning with a spin with less than 20 laps left. Coming to the caution on lap 72, Robby Gordon passed Kevin Harvick in turn 11, violating a non-written gentlemen agreement to not pass under yellow. Robby Gordon went on to win. •
2004: Jeff Gordon dominated again and won the race with help from his teammate/student driver Jimmie Johnson who had pushed him on a late restart. The win was overshadowed by an altercation between Tony Stewart and Brian Vickers. Tony Stewart had retaliated against Brian Vickers on lap 85 for prior contact and on pit road, Tony Stewart smacked Vickers. For his part, Tony Stewart was fined $50000 and put on probation for the rest of the year. •
2005: Tony Stewart showed his skills at Sonoma and held off Sonoma's favorite, Ricky Rudd to take his second Sonoma victory. Stewart later became the next person after Robby Gordon to win both road course races in one NSCS season. Road ringer
Brian Simo drove in this race for
Richard Childress Racing and recorded his only top-ten finish, finishing 10th. •
2006: Jeff Gordon again amazed the audience by dominating and winning his 5th Sonoma race. The biggest highlight was
Terry Labonte finishing 3rd in a new single-car team-the No. 96 for
Hall of Fame Racing. •
2007: Jamie McMurray won the pole position and Robby Gordon led the most laps. However, the final laps saw Jamie McMurray back on the lead. With 8 laps to go Jamie McMurray was passed by a bitter rival; the cup rookie Juan Pablo Montoya. The final 10 laps both McMurray and Montoya were in fuel mileage drama and RCR driver Kevin Harvick (The Daytona 500 winner of 2007) who had enough fuel to make it; was gaining on them. McMurray later ran out of gas, in turn, one with 3 laps to go and slowed down giving up second place and ending up 37th because he ran out of gas just past pit road. Montoya never gave up his lead and amazed the racing world by stretching off his fuel crisis to win the race. RCR finished an amazing 3 in a row with Harvick in second place, Jeff Burton in third, and Clint Bowyer in fourth place. •
2008: Kyle Busch started a road course sweep in 2008 by winning at Sonoma for his first road course victory. He later became the next person after Tony Stewart to sweep both road course races with a victory.
Marcos Ambrose had his first NSCS start in this race and had contention to win but crashed with Elliott Sadler with 25 laps left.
David Gilliland matched his best career finish, finishing second behind Busch. •
2009: Kasey Kahne dominated the race and held off Tony Stewart and Marcos Ambrose for his first road course victory in NASCAR. •
2010: Due to fuel concerns, leader
Marcos Ambrose stopped in turn 1 during a late caution. He drove back to the lead but was discovered to have violated the rule of maintaining speed under caution causing him to be reset by NASCAR in 7th costing him a shot at his first Cup victory; he finished 6th. Jimmie Johnson nabbed the lead thanks to the debacle and scored his first career road course win. As a result of his loss, Ambrose announced his decision to leave JTG-Daughtery Racing after 2010 to race under the renamed Petty Enterprises; Richard Petty Motorsports.
Boris Said had his first top-ten finish since 2007's Sonoma race, finishing 8th in the new
Latitude 43 Motorsports car. •
2011: In one of the most action-filled races of the event, after a repeat of history from 2004; a vicious fight between Tony Stewart and Brian Vickers (in which Vickers' retaliation on Smoke saw the number 14 propped on the tire wall at the hairpin), Kurt Busch dominated and won his first road course victory leading 76 laps in total. •
2012: Clint Bowyer dominated the race and won his first road course victory and one of Michael Waltrip Racing's first biggest victories in their career. It was also the first victory on a road course for MWR. This victory and a few others in 2012 showed that Bowyer would be a contender for victory even though he left legendary RCR to an underrated MWR team. Phoenix Racing had its greatest NSCS finish since its first win in 2009 at Talladega, with
Kurt Busch the defending race winner who ended up in third place for his first top-five of 2012's NASCAR season. Kurt almost got second but Tony slipped by Kurt on the final lap for the second place his first top-five since his 2011 fall Dover win. celebrates his second Cup Series win. •
2013: Marcos Ambrose led the first quarter against pole-sitter Jamie McMurray. After pit stops and penalties for other drivers,
Martin Truex Jr. went upfront. Eventually, the lead was traded with Juan Pablo Montoya, among other drivers. With 22 laps left, Martin Truex Jr. went back up front and held off Jeff Gordon to win his second NSCS win and his first since Dover in 2007. While Truex celebrated an emotional victory MWR got two in a row owner wins at Sonoma, and Kurt Busch was praised by the drivers for recovering from two speeding penalties to finish in the top five. Drivers such as
Ron Fellows,
Boris Said, and
Jacques Villeneuve returned to NASCAR to race at Sonoma. •
2014: A. J. Allmendinger led the most laps of 35 and appeared to probably have a sure victory in his hand. He was driving the No. 47 car which nearly won the 2010 race. However, he got tapped from behind by
Dale Earnhardt Jr. which put him out of chances of a win.
Carl Edwards ended up going on to win the race against Jeff Gordon who finished second for the second consecutive time.
Boris Said and
Tomy Drissi were the only road ringers who raced in this event. •
2015: The race was aired on
FS1 for the first time after eight years on TNT,
A. J. Allmendinger won the pole.
Kurt Busch and
Jimmie Johnson both dominated the race. With 5 laps to go, Kyle Busch, driving while recovering from a broken leg from the Xfinity series event at Daytona, drove past Johnson and pulled away from brother Kurt. Kurt was unable to close the gap and Kyle won, the first 1–2 finish for the Busch brothers.
Boris Said was the only road course ringer in the event. •
2016: Carl Edwards put his car on pole and led the early laps. Allmendinger, who started second, ran up front for most of the first 40 laps, leading 20 of the first 40 laps. However, a pit road penalty for an uncontrolled tire cost Allmendinger his shot at victory.
Denny Hamlin led the midpoint of the race while
Tony Stewart anticipated a caution and pitted with less than 30 laps to go. Tony's pit stop paid off as the caution came out just after he pitted and he went up front to lead the final 20 laps and hold off a hard-charging Hamlin for the win, ending a 3-year winless streak. The only road course ringer in the race was semi-retired
Patrick Carpentier who was driving the #32 Can-Am car. It would be one of the most popular wins of 2016 as it was Stewart's final year of NASCAR competition as a driver, as it became his 49th and final win. •
2017: For the first time since 2014, the field involved multiple road course ringers such as
Billy Johnson,
Kevin O'Connell,
Alon Day,
Tommy Regan,
Boris Said, and
Josh Bilicki, although they were not serious threats to win. The race was primarily a duel between guys such as
Martin Truex Jr.,
Kevin Harvick,
Brad Keselowski,
Jimmie Johnson,
Kyle Busch, and
Denny Hamlin, with Truex leading the most laps. After Truex's engine blew up on lap 86 while leading the race, the lead went to
Kevin Harvick who led the final 22 laps to win the race over teammate
Clint Bowyer. •
2018: Martin Truex Jr. and
Kevin Harvick were the dominant cars.
Kyle Larson won the pole but Harvick and Truex were the class of the field. Truex went on to win the race for his 2nd Sonoma victory, in a mostly caution-free race.
Tomy Drissi and
Justin Marks were the only
road course ringers in the race. •
2019: Truex defended his 2018 win in NASCAR's return to running the full-length course, holding off
Kyle Busch for the win. This was the first Sonoma race since
1995 that there were no "
road course specialists" in the race. This was also the final race to feature Darrell Waltrip as color commentator, as he left the FOX booth following the 2019 season. •
2022: After the previous two races were held on the full course, NASCAR returned to using the club circuit layout.
Daniel Suárez dominated the second half of the race to claim his first ever NASCAR Cup Series win. ==References==