Originally published on Jan. 15, 2025
By Zane Miller
First round
(8) #12 Ryan Newman v. (1) #6 Mark Martin
(7) #9 Bill Elliott v. (2) #40 Sterling Marlin
(6) #2 Rusty Wallace v. (3) #48 Jimmie Johnson
(5) #24 Jeff Gordon v. (4) #20 Tony Stewart
The playoffs got underway at Dover, with rookie Jimmie
Johnson taming the Monster Mile with a race win after leading 170 laps. Rusty
Wallace finished a lap down in 15th, as his teammate in rookie Ryan
Newman also fell behind in his series against Mark Martin with an eighth-place
run to Martin’s second. Meanwhile, four-time Dover winner Bill Elliott
struggled with an 18th-place finish, but was still able to hold off
competitor Sterling Marlin, who continued his worst slump of the year in 21st.
Speaking of slumps, Jeff Gordon finished outside the top-10 for the third
straight race, crashing out in the early laps and ending up 37th, while
reigning champ Tony Stewart took fifth.
The first round continued at Kansas, where Gordon
bounced back in a big way by leading 116 laps on the way to the race win with
Stewart trailing in eighth. Newman also stayed around the top-five throughout
the entire event, eventually scoring a runner-up finish while Martin ended the
day in 25th after suffering a late blown engine. Marlin’s
once-promising shot at a title was over on lap 149, crashing into the outside
wall while Elliott avoided trouble to finish fifth and advance to the semifinal
round. Wallace kept his championship hopes alive with a third-place result as
Johnson finished a lap down in 10th.
In a caution-free race at Talladega, Stewart would get
the best of Gordon with a runner-up finish, though both Gordon and Johnson’s
fates were sealed before the end of the race as all four Hendrick Motorsports
cars suffered terminal engine failures. Gordon’s engine expired on lap 125, while
Johnson fell victim with 15 laps to go as the last Hendrick-owned car still in
the field. Wallace finished a solid 13th to advance, while Newman
pulled off the massive upset over Martin in the seventh spot. Martin had never
fully recovered from a bizarre incident on the opening pace laps, as his
steering had locked up and sent him careening down the track and into the
infield grass. The green flag dropped with Martin’s crew still repairing the
car on pit road, and Martin could only muster 30th place. With the top
three seeded drivers now out of the picture in a shocking first round, it was
anyone’s game starting at Lowe’s Motor Speedway.
Semifinal
(8) #12 Ryan Newman v. (4) #20 Tony Stewart
(7) #9 Bill Elliott v. (6) #2 Rusty Wallace
In Charlotte, a topsy-turvy semifinal field would be
met with an equally topsy-turvy race, as newcomer Jamie McMurray scored the
race win in just his second career Cup start, before his official rookie season
had even started. As far as the playoffs were concerned, though, Stewart
claimed a strong third-place finish ahead of Newman in eighth, while the battle
between the established veterans of Wallace and Elliott saw Wallace come out on
top in fifth after Elliott received serious damage from a blown tire before the
halfway mark. Elliott was able to return to the track, but was relegated to a
35th-place finish.
Moving on to Martinsville, Newman was ultimately
unable to overtake his future team owner, ending up in 15th despite
leading 33 laps, as Stewart picked up a solid 11th to go for
back-to-back championships. Wallace fared much better than his teammate, as he
proved once again why he was still one of the best in the business on short
tracks. The St. Louis native led 41 laps on the way to a ninth-place finish, while
Elliott, who had been running just outside the top-10 with 75 laps to go, spun
off the left side of Joe Nemechek before pounding the inside wall, effectively
ending his run at a second championship.
Final
(6) #2 Rusty Wallace v. (4) #20 Tony Stewart
At North Carolina Speedway, otherwise known as The
Rock, longtime Cup racer Johnny Benson would score his first and only career
victory, distracting from an unremarkable start to the finals for Wallace. The
two-time champ took the checkered flag two laps down in 27th, while
Stewart and company put together a good enough 14th-place run to put
the wily veteran on the ropes at Phoenix.
Needing an excellent run to stay alive for the title,
Wallace’s weekend did not get off to a promising start as he would begin the
race 29th on the grid. However, Wallace and crew battled back
throughout the afternoon, making continued adjustments to begin working their
way towards the front. At the end of the day, Wallace finished in the runner-up
spot, which was enough to hold off Stewart in eighth and force the championship
to be decided at Homestead.
The flat 1.5-mile oval of Homestead-Miami Speedway would
see its final Cup Series event before reconfiguration into a high-banked track,
though this would work Wallace’s favor. Despite starting the race in sixth,
Stewart quickly fell back through the field with the team failing to find speed,
even losing a lap at one point. Wallace was unable to do much better, but still
stayed ahead of the Rushville Rocket. Stewart eventually got his lap back and
finished 18th, but it wouldn’t be enough as Wallace crossed the line
in 14th. Despite beginning the playoffs with the #6-seed, Wallace defied
the odds to claim his third career championship and first since 1993.
Rusty Wallace’s stats for 2002 were no victories,
seven top-fives and 17 top-10s, claiming seventh in the standings to real-life
champion Tony Stewart.

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