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2017 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series

The 2017 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series was the 23rd season of the Camping World Truck Series a pickup truck racing series sanctioned by NASCAR in North America. The season began with the NextEra Energy Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway on February 24, 2017, and ended with the Ford EcoBoost 200 at Homestead–Miami Speedway on November 17. Johnny Sauter entered the season as the defending drivers' champion. This was the final season for Brad Keselowski Racing and for Red Horse Racing.

Christopher Bell of Kyle Busch Motorsports won the driver's championship with a second-place finish in the season finale, Kyle Busch won the owner's championship for the fifth consecutive season, and Toyota won the manufacturer's championship.

This was the second year that the Truck Series (and the Xfinity Series) had a playoff system. Three of the four "championship 4" drivers (who are shown below), were the same as last year's; the only difference being Austin Cindric in it instead of Timothy Peters.

Teams and drivers

Complete schedule

Limited schedule

Notes

Changes

Drivers

Teams

Rule changes

  • On October 26, NASCAR announced that drivers with more than five years of full-time racing on the Cup level may drive a maximum of seven Camping World Truck Series races. They are also ineligible to drive in the final eight races of the season. Exceptions will be given to drivers with more than five years of full-time racing on the Cup level if they declared to run points in Truck Series.
  • On February 8, 2017, NASCAR announced a new damaged vehicle policy for all three national series. Body panels can no longer be replaced after a wreck, and a team has five minutes on pit road to fix the damage before they are eliminated.
  • As in the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series, all Truck races will be split into segments. After the first two intermediate segment finishes, the top 10 drivers will be awarded points. The race finish will air full points as usual. The first two segments have about one quarter of the race laps each, and the final segment has about half of the race laps.

Schedule

The season's schedule comprises 23 races, and was released on May 5, 2016. Fox, FS1, and Fox Business will televise every race in the United States.

Results and standings

Race results

Drivers' standings

() <span style="font-size:90%;">Bold – Pole position awarded by time. Italics – Pole position set by final practice results or owner's points. * – Most laps led. <sup>1</sup> – Stage 1 winner. <sup>2</sup> – Stage 2 winner. <sup>1-10</sup> – Regular season top 10 finishers.<br /> <span style="padding:1px 4px; color:#ffcfcf; background:#ffcfcf;">.</span>&nbsp;– Eliminated after Round of 8 <span style="padding:1px 4px; color:#efcfff; background:#efcfff;">.</span>&nbsp;– Eliminated after Round of 6</span>

Owners' championship (Top 15)

()&nbsp;<span style="font-size:90%;">Bold&nbsp;– Pole position awarded by time. Italics&nbsp;– Pole position set by final practice results or rainout. *&nbsp;– Most laps led. <sup>1</sup>&nbsp;– Stage 1 winner. <sup>2</sup>&nbsp;– Stage 2 winner. <sup>1-10</sup>&nbsp;– Owners' regular season top 10 finishers.<br /> <span style="padding:1px 4px; color:#ffcfcf; background:#ffcfcf;">.</span>&nbsp;– Eliminated after Round of 8 <span style="padding:1px 4px; color:#efcfff; background:#efcfff;">.</span>&nbsp;– Eliminated after Round of 6</span>

Manufacturers' Championship

See also

Notes

  • After a dominant win by Chase Elliott at Martinsville in a part-time team (No. 23), GMS Racing switched owner points from No. 24 and No. 23 for number 24 make the owners' playoffs.

References