1994–1999 (No. 24) following
Rick Mast (No. 1) at the
1994 Brickyard 400.
1994: The first running of the Brickyard 400 in 1994 saw the largest crowd to date to witness a NASCAR event, and the single largest race purse to date.
Rick Mast won the pole position, and became the first stock car driver to lead a lap at Indy. Young second-year driver
Jeff Gordon took the lead late in the race after
Ernie Irvan suffered a flat tire. Gordon drove on to a historic win in NASCAR's debut at Indy. In an effort to attract more entries, the event was concurrently included on the
NASCAR Winston West schedule. No Winston West competitors qualified on speed, but point leader
Mike Chase made the field via a Winston West provisional. Gordon's inaugural Brickyard 400 winning car (nicknamed "Booger") is on display at the
Hendrick Motorsports museum.
1995: Second-round qualification was rained out on Friday, and only a short "happy hour" practice followed. On Saturday, rain delayed the start of the race until late in the afternoon.
Dale Earnhardt cruised to victory, in a race that was slowed only once for four laps under yellow.
Rusty Wallace and
Dale Jarrett battled close over the final 20 laps for second, with Wallace holding off the challenge.
1996:
Dale Jarrett and his
Robert Yates Racing crew began the tradition of the winning driver and crew kissing the row of bricks at the start-finish line, which has carried over to the
Indianapolis 500. The race saw several blown tires after the speedway removed some rumble strips from the apron of the corners;
Kyle Petty was injured when he blew a tire, slammed into the outside and inside wall off turn four, and was T-boned by
Sterling Marlin.
Johnny Benson led the most laps (70), but faded to 8th at the finish. Jarrett became the first driver to win both the
Daytona 500 and Brickyard 400 in the same year. After injuries suffered at Talladega, defending race winner
Dale Earnhardt was relieved by
Mike Skinner on lap 7, who drove to a 15th-place finish.
1997: In the final twenty laps,
Dale Jarrett,
Jeff Gordon, and
Mark Martin held the top three spots, but none of the three would be able to make it to the finish without one final pit stop for fuel.
Jeff Burton and
Ricky Rudd also were close on fuel. On lap 145,
Robby Gordon brushed the wall, and Burton ran over debris. Burton was forced to pit under green, but as he was finishing his stop, the caution came out. Burton flew out of the pits to beat the leaders, and for a moment it appeared he was in the cat bird's seat with four fresh tires, and would be the leader after all other drivers cycled through their stops. However, he was penalized for speeding while exiting the pit lane, and dropped to 15th.
Ricky Rudd was among a few drivers who stayed out, and his gamble put him in the lead. Rudd drove the final 46 laps without a pit stop to take the victory, and is to-date, the only owner/driver ever to win the Brickyard 400.
1998:
Jeff Gordon became the first repeat winner, holding off
Mark Martin for the win.
Dale Jarrett dominated the second 100 miles of the race but lost his chance near the halfway point when he ran out of fuel, and coasted back to the pits; he lost four laps but made them up due to numerous cautions. Gordon's victory was the first in the
Winston No Bull 5 program.
1999: Late in the race,
Dale Jarrett leads, but fourth-place
Bobby Labonte is the only car in the top five that can go the distance without pitting for fuel. A caution comes out with 17 laps to go, allowing the leaders to pit, foiling Labonte's chances to steal the win. As the leaders pitted, in an unexpected move,
Dale Jarrett took on only two tires.
Jeff Burton saw this and pulled away after taking only two tires. His pit crew, however, had already tried to loosen the lug nuts on the left side. Jarrett led the rest of the way, becomes the second two-time winner, and erases his heartbreak from 1998.
2000s 2000:
Rusty Wallace led 114 laps, and was leading late in the race when
Bobby Labonte charged down the backstretch. Labonte took the lead at the stripe, and pulled away for the win. The race was slowed by only 2 cautions for 7 laps.
2001: With 25 laps to go,
Jeff Gordon passed
Sterling Marlin on a restart, and pulled away for the win. Gordon became the first 3-time winner of the Brickyard 400.
2002:
Kurt Busch and
Jimmy Spencer, locked in a burgeoning feud dating back to
Bristol, collided on lap 36. Busch hit the turn 3 wall. Veteran
Bill Elliott added the Brickyard to his long resume, and
Rusty Wallace finished second for the third time.
2003: With 16 laps to go,
Kevin Harvick used lap traffic to get by
Matt Kenseth on a restart. A huge pileup occurred in turn three, and Harvick held off over the final ten laps to become the first driver to win the race from the pole position.
2004: For the first time in NASCAR Cup Series history, the
green–white–checkered finish rule caused a race to be extended, in this case for one additional lap. On the extra lap,
Casey Mears blew a tire,
Ricky Rudd hit the wall, then
Mark Martin and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. suffered tire failures.
Jeff Gordon retained the lead to become the first four-time winner of the Brickyard. Gordon joined
A. J. Foyt,
Al Unser Sr., and
Rick Mears as four-time winners at Indianapolis.
2005: Hometown favorite
Tony Stewart won his first race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and climbed the catch fence to celebrate, in the same fashion as
Hélio Castroneves.
2006: After suffering a blown front left tire early in the race that caused some fender damage, Jimmie Johnson passed Dale Earnhardt Jr. with six laps left to win at Indy for the first time and became only the second driver to win both the
Daytona 500 and Brickyard 400 in the same year. The first was Dale Jarrett in 1996.
2007:
Juan Pablo Montoya became the first (and, to date, only) driver to race in all three of the major events hosted by the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway (
Indy 500, Brickyard 400, and the
U.S.G.P.). Montoya, a rookie in the NASCAR Cup Series, finished second to
Tony Stewart. Stewart's 2007 winning car is owned and on rotating display at the
Speedway museum.
2008: The
Car of Tomorrow was used at Indy for the first time. The
Goodyear tires suffered bad wear patterns, causing blowouts in some cases after only ten laps of green-flag racing. Lengthy competition cautions were put out at roughly 10-lap intervals for teams to change tires, which caused controversy and angered fans and media. Jimmie Johnson managed to tame the tire problems by winning for the second time in his career at Indy, holding off a mild challenge from Carl Edwards.
2009: Former
Indy 500 winner
Juan Pablo Montoya dominated most of the race, leading 116 laps. However, with 35 laps to go, Montoya was penalized (not without protest and a heated rant) for speeding in the pits. The infraction left
Jimmie Johnson holding off polesitter
Mark Martin for the victory. Johnson became the second three-time winner, and the first back–to–back winner of the Brickyard 400.
2010s 2010:
2000 Indianapolis 500 winner
Juan Pablo Montoya dominated most of the race for the second year in a row, leading a total of 86 laps. However, he gave up the lead when he took 4 tires in a late pit stop. He would restart 7th with 18 laps to go and was unable to recover. Montoya crashed with 16 to go and before the caution came out,
Kevin Harvick had passed
Jamie McMurray for the lead. On the final restart, McMurray passed Harvick to go on to win the 400. This made him become the third driver to win the
Daytona 500 and the Brickyard 400 during the same season, following
Dale Jarrett in 1996 and
Jimmie Johnson in 2006. McMurray's win also gave his team owner
Chip Ganassi wins in the
Daytona 500, the
Indianapolis 500, and the Brickyard 400 all in the same season, making him the first team owner to do so.
2011: The final caution came out on lap 121 with
Brad Keselowski out in front. With 39 laps to go, it would be difficult for the leaders to make it to the finish on fuel if they pit under the yellow. Since race laps at Indy are in the 51-second range, and a pit stop (including entering and exiting the pit lane) takes upwards of 40–45 seconds, green flag pits stops are not necessarily discouraged, unlike other circuits. Among the drivers who pitted on lap 123 was
Paul Menard. After the green came back out,
Jeff Gordon pitted on lap 134. As the leaders shuffled through their final pit stops, Menard took over the lead on lap 145. Meanwhile, Gordon, with two new tires, dramatically began charging through the field and was quickly in the top ten before moving up to 2nd position on lap 158. With now less than two laps to go, Menard stretched his fuel and held off Gordon on the last lap to score his first career Cup victory. Menard is the only driver to-date to have scored his first career Cup Series win at the Brickyard.
2012: The final caution came out on lap 130 with
Jimmie Johnson leading. Over the final 20 laps, Johnson held off
Kyle Busch and
Greg Biffle to tie Jeff Gordon with four Brickyard 400 victories. Along with Gordon in NASCAR, Johnson also joined A. J. Foyt, Al Unser Sr., and Rick Mears as the only 4-time winners in the entire history of Indianapolis
2013: During his final pit stop,
Jimmie Johnson took on four tires when a lug nut broke loose. His stop lasted 17.4 seconds.
Ryan Newman pitted a lap later. Aware of Johnson's struggles, Newman took on two tires. Newman emerged with a 7-second lead over Johnson with 16 laps to go. Johnson closed to within 2 seconds, but fell short as Newman held on for the victory.
2014: The race was served as its last air with
ESPN, With 17 laps to go,
Jeff Gordon passed
Kasey Kahne on a restart on the outside of turn one to take the lead for the final time. Twenty years after winning the
inaugural Brickyard 400, Gordon won the race for a record 5th time.
2015: The race was first aired on NBCSN.
Kyle Busch won his first Brickyard 400, holding off
Joey Logano in a
green–white–checkered finish. Busch swept the weekend, winning also the
Xfinity race on Saturday. Attention for the weekend was focused heavily on a new "high-drag" aerodynamic rules package implemented to improve competition.
Jeff Gordon, racing for the final time at the Brickyard, was involved in a spin on lap 50, brushed the wall, and placed 42nd. With Logano's second place,
Team Penske – still winless in the Brickyard 400 – finished 2nd for the fourth time.
2016:
Jeff Gordon came from retirement to fill in for
Dale Earnhardt Jr., who was recovering from a concussion,
Kyle Busch won his second Brickyard 400, holding off the field in
overtime and also winning the
Xfinity race for a second year in a row.
2017: In the first Brickyard 400 to include stage racing, the first two stages were dominated by
Kyle Busch. However, he was involved in an accident with
Martin Truex Jr. on lap 111 following a restart that took out both cars. During the final stage, darkness began to become a factor following a red flag for rain early in the race, and two additional red flags for cleaning up following multiple wrecks. It appeared that
Trevor Bayne, who was gambling on fuel mileage, was headed for his second career Cup Series win; but a caution came out at lap 150 that foiled his plan.
Kasey Kahne had just pitted for fresh tires and fuel moments before the caution came out, and used that to take the lead after everyone else pitted. Kahne was able to stay in front for the first attempt at a restart finish, but was overtaken by
Brad Keselowski on the second of these restarts. The caution came out again for Bayne and others crashing on the frontstretch. This brought another restart, but with Keselowski as the control car and Kahne second. Kahne amazingly managed to outrun Keselowski into the first corner and down the backstretch, and took the victory in overtime for his first win since 2014 when the caution came out yet again, this time for
Denny Hamlin spinning into the wall, but as they had crossed the overtime line at the end of the straight, the race was finalized under yellow. This was the tenth victory for
Hendrick Motorsports in the Brickyard 400. The race was the longest running event at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway since the
1913 Indianapolis 500 due to rain delays, red flags, and crashes that causes the lengthening of the race.
2018: Rain washed out all practice and qualifying, postponing the race until Monday. Points leader
Kyle Busch started on the pole, and the field of forty cars took the green flag without having turned a single practice lap. On fresher tires,
Brad Keselowski passed second place
Clint Bowyer on a restart with three laps to go. With less than two laps to go Keselowski caught
Denny Hamlin, going side by side down the backstretch and into turn three. Keselowski took the lead coming off of turn four, and won the first Brickyard 400 for
Penske Racing.
2019: A new format saw qualifying on Sunday morning, with the race held Sunday afternoon, and
Kevin Harvick won the pole.
Kyle Busch, who had already clinched the regular season title the previous week at Darlington, looked strong early on, but lost his engine just beyond the halfway point.
Brad Keselowski was running in the top ten when
Erik Jones dove hard to the inside causing both to hit the wall, with Keselowski hitting a tire barrier off of turn two landing almost on the passenger side.
Jimmie Johnson failed to make the Playoffs for the first time in his career after crashing late in the race. Harvick led 118 of the 160 laps to take the win.
Bubba Wallace, driving for
Richard Petty Motorsports, finished third, his second career top five finish. Most of the field suffered significant damage due to collisions on pit road early on in the race. After the race, Harvick and his owner
Tony Stewart climbed the fence. It was Harvick's second win, and Stewart's fourth victory at the event (twice as a driver, and twice as an owner).
2020s 2020: For 2020, the race was moved to July 4th weekend. Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, the race was held without spectators. Furthermore, the event became a doubleheader weekend. The
IndyCar Series GMR Grand Prix and the
Pennzoil 150 for the
Xfinity Series were held on the combined road course on Saturday, with the Brickyard 400 on the oval on Sunday. The start of the race was delayed about an hour due to lightning in the area, then a crash in the pits brought out a red flag on lap 17. In the final stage,
Denny Hamlin led
Kevin Harvick and
Matt Kenseth. In the closing laps, Hamlin's tires were starting to go away. With six laps to go, Hamlin's right front tire went down going into turn one, sending him hard into the outside wall. That set up an overtime finish between Harvick and Kenseth. Harvick got the jump on the restart, and cruised to victory, his third overall in the 400. Harvick also became the third driver to win the 400 in back-to-back years. The Bryan Clauson Classic was cancelled because of pandemic restrictions.
2024: After a three-year hiatus (during which time the race was replaced by the
Verizon 200 on the road course), the Brickyard 400 returned to the oval. The 2024 race marked the 30th anniversary of the inaugural running in 1994.
Kyle Larson, who had attempted
Double Duty earlier in the year, drove to victory. Larson grabbed the lead from
Ryan Blaney on an overtime restart.
Brad Keselowski had been leading the race, but ran out of fuel, and was forced to duck into the pits as the field was approaching the overtime restart. The Speedway also engraved Verizon 200 winners on the PPG Trophy, and it was the first since 2017 to feature the classic brick trophy that was abandoned in 2018.
2025: The Brickyard 400 was the fifth and final race of the
inaugural NASCAR In-Season Challenge. Contested over 168 laps, extended from 160 laps due to a
overtime finish,
Bubba Wallace would hold off defending race winner
Kyle Larson to win his first Crown Jewel. Indiana-native
Chase Briscoe started on pole, and winning stage one while
Ryan Blaney won stage two.
Austin Cindric led the most laps, with 40 and was the favorite before blowing a tire while leading, handing the lead to his teammate
Joey Logano, who would also blow one meanwhile. ==Past winners==