
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – Stenhouse not only defended his 2011 Nationwide Series championship, he trumped it. He won a total of six races, led the championship standings on eight different occasions during a see-saw battle with eventual runner-up Elliott Sadler, Austin Dillon and others, and never fell out of the top three after early June. That kind of performance gets a guy promoted, and Strenhouse will race full-time on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in 2013, replacing Matt Kenseth in Jack Roush’s potent No. 17 Ford.
Joey Logano – Stenhouse may have won the Nationwide war, but Logano claimed most of the battles. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver almost singlehandedly won the 2012 owners’ championship, claiming a season-high nine victories and six poles in just 22 starts. Many of those wins came in dominant fashion, despite announcing with three months left in the season that he would leave JGR for a new ride with Penske Racing in 2013.

Sam Hornish Jr. – After going without a full-time ride a year ago, the former Indianapolis 500 champion made the most of his steady seat in Roger Penske’s No. 12 Alliance Truck Parts Dodge, contending for the Nationwide Series championship for much of the season before eventually settling for fourth in the final rundown. He also filled the void admirably when AJ Allmendinger was ousted from the No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Dodge, doing double-duty in the Sprint Cup and Nationwide garages during the second half of the season. Look for Hornish to make even more noise as a Nationwide title contender in 2013.
Michael Annett – In mid-February, Annett found himself unemployed when Rusty Wallace Racing abruptly closed its doors. Two weeks before the season-opener at Daytona, he forged an eleventh-hour deal to drive for the new Richard Petty Motorsports Nationwide Series team, and nine months later, he stood onstage at the NASCAR Nationwide Series Awards Banquet after enjoying the most successful season of his NASCAR career. Annett collected six Top-5 and 17 Top-10 finishes en route to fifth in the final series standings, including eight consecutive Top-10s in August, September and October.

IRWIN Tools Night Race, Bristol (Aug. 25) – The Bristol Motor Speedway of old returned in August, after a million-dollar facelift resurrected the kind of fender-bending, bump-and-running, finger-flipping emotions fans have grown to expect of Bruton Smith’s modern-day Roman Colliseum. Thirteen different drivers led at least one lap, and a record 13 caution flags punctuated the evening’s festivities. Before Denny Hamlin wheeled his Fed-Ex Toyota to Victory Lane, Danica Patrick gave Regan Smith the finger (no, not thatone) and Tony Stewart rifled his helmet off the hood of Matt Kenseth’s Ford. Just another night at “Thunder Valley.”
Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami (Nov. 17) –Regan Smith got a head-start on the 2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series season, returning to the series after a five-year absence and driving the No. 5 JR Motorsports Chevrolet straight to Victory Lane. The race was competitive from start to finish, with 10 different leaders and 13 lead changes, with Smith’s late charge denying polesitter Kyle Busch a visit to Nationwide Victory Lane for the first time in eight years. All three title contenders – Stenhouse, Elliott Sadler and Austin Dillon – led the race, with Stenhouse prevailing for the title.
Photos: Terry Renna/AP, Stew Milne/US Presswire, Jerry Markland/Getty Images For NASCAR