2013 O'Reilly Series Results

Complete race results with winners, margins, and laps led — 33 races. Data current through the 2025 season; 2026 results added as races complete.

NASCAR Cup Series results from 1949 through 2026 — 78 seasons of racing history, plus 44 seasons of O'Reilly Auto Parts Series results and 31 seasons of Craftsman Truck Series results. Every race on this page includes finishing order, stage points, laps led, and margin of victory.

Cup history splits into distinct eras: the strictly-stock and Grand National era (1949-1971) raced on dirt bullrings and new paved superspeedways with schedules as dense as 62 events; the Winston Cup modern era (1972-2003) standardized the schedule at 28-36 races per season; the Chase era (2004-2013) introduced a 10-race points-reset postseason; the elimination playoffs era (2014-2025) used four rounds of cuts to crown a Homestead-Phoenix winner-take-all champion; and the 2026+ Chase format brings back a cumulative-points Chase decided at Homestead-Miami. Modern races (2017+) have full stage breakdowns; historic races carry finishing order and laps led, since stages were not introduced until 2017.

Need the season opener? The Daytona 500 kicks off every modern Cup schedule. For postseason context, see The Chase.

# Date Race Winner
1 Feb 23 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Daytona Tony Stewart
2 Mar 2 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Phoenix Kyle Busch
3 Mar 9 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Las Vegas Sam Hornish Jr.
4 Mar 16 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Bristol Kyle Busch
5 Mar 23 TreatMyClot.com 300 Kyle Busch
6 Apr 12 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Texas Kyle Busch
7 Apr 26 ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Brad Keselowski
8 May 4 NNS at Talladega Pres. By Victory MotorCycles Regan Smith
9 May 10 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Darlington Kyle Busch
10 May 25 History 300 at Charlotte Kyle Busch
11 Jun 1 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Dover Joey Logano
12 Jun 8 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Iowa Trevor Bayne
13 Jun 15 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Michigan Regan Smith
14 Jun 22 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Road America A.J. Allmendinger
15 Jun 28 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Kentucky Brad Keselowski
16 Jul 5 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Daytona Matt Kenseth
17 Jul 13 NASCAR Nationwide Series at New Hampshire Kyle Busch
18 Jul 21 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Chicago Joey Logano
19 Jul 27 NASCAR Nationwide Series at the Brickyard Kyle Busch
20 Aug 3 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Iowa Brad Keselowski
21 Aug 10 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Watkins Glen Brad Keselowski
22 Aug 17 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Mid-Ohio A.J. Allmendinger
23 Aug 23 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Bristol Kyle Busch
24 Aug 31 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Atlanta Kevin Harvick
25 Sep 6 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Richmond Brad Keselowski
26 Sep 14 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Chicago Kyle Busch
27 Sep 21 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Kentucky Ryan Blaney
28 Sep 28 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Dover Joey Logano
29 Oct 5 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Kansas Matt Kenseth
30 Oct 11 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Charlotte Kyle Busch
31 Nov 2 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Texas Brad Keselowski
32 Nov 9 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Phoenix Kyle Busch
33 Nov 16 NASCAR Nationwide Series at Homestead-Miami Brad Keselowski

Frequently Asked Questions

When was the first NASCAR Cup Series race?
The first NASCAR Cup Series race — then called the Strictly Stock Division — was held on June 19, 1949 at the three-quarter mile Charlotte Speedway dirt oval in North Carolina. Jim Roper was declared the winner after Glenn Dunnaway was disqualified for illegal rear springs, making it the first of 200 sanctioned points races in Cup history's inaugural season of eight events.
How many NASCAR Cup races are there per season?
The modern NASCAR Cup Series runs 36 points-paying races per year plus 2 non-championship exhibition events (the Cook Out Clash and the All-Star Race). The regular season covers 26 races, followed by a 10-race Chase in 2026. Historic Cup schedules varied wildly — 1964 had 62 races, while 1949 had just 8.
What is a NASCAR stage?
Stages were introduced in 2017 to split each Cup race into three scoring segments. Drivers earn stage points (10 down to 1 for the top 10 at each stage break) plus a playoff point for winning a stage. Stage breaks also create competition cautions that reset strategy. Races before 2017 have no stage data — only finishing order, laps led, and margin of victory are available.
Who has the most NASCAR Cup Series wins?
Richard Petty holds the all-time Cup Series wins record with 200 victories across a career from 1958 to 1992. David Pearson is second with 105, followed by Jeff Gordon (93), Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip (84 each), and Cale Yarborough (83). No active driver has crossed 100 wins.
What was the first NASCAR race at Daytona?
The inaugural Daytona 500 was held on February 22, 1959 at the brand-new 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway. Lee Petty was declared the winner three days after the race in a photo-finish review over Johnny Beauchamp. The race has opened every Cup Series season since and is the most prestigious event on the schedule.
Where can I find historical NASCAR race results?
NASCAR Reference has complete race results from 1949 to 2026 for the Cup Series, 1982-2026 for the O'Reilly (Xfinity) Series, and 1995-2026 for the Craftsman Truck Series. Each result includes finishing order, laps led, margins of victory, and driver stats.

Explore More