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NASCAR Sprint All Star Betting OddsNASCAR Betting Online: The latest results and betting positions on this year's NASCAR Sprint All Star, for the Nascar Sprint Cup title. Join BookMaker Sportsbook and get the best NASCAR betting odds on the Web, along with sports betting lines, promotions and prop bets for all major sporting events around the world.

2014 Sprint All Star Race Winner - Jamie McMurray wins $1 million All-Star Race

Streaking away from an intense battle with polesitter Carl Edwards to open the final 10-lap segment Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Jamie McMurray won the Sprint All-Star Race-and the million-dollar-plus prize that goes with the victory-for the first time in his career.

McMurray held off fast-closing Kevin Harvick, who crossed the finish line .696 seconds behind the race winner.

Matt Kenseth ran third, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr., Edwards and Jimmie Johnson.

2013 Sprint All Star race Winner - Jimmie Johnson Cliams His Fourth Victory

It rained, but it didn't pour on the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

The night started with an, uh, interesting National Anthem. It ended with another runaway victory by Jimmie Johnson-the man they call Five Time, who became the first four-time champion in the history of the event. In between, there was a 45-minute rain delay and a reasonable if not overwhelming amount of action.

There were subplots all over the place: boyfriend battling girlfriend; brother fending off brother (Kurt Busch and Kyle Busch each won two of the first four segments before surrendering the fifth that was worth $1 million to Johnson); and a new format that seemed at times to confuse everyone trying to explain it on television.

As with most All-Star Races, there was good to go along with the bad, and vice versa.

2012 Sprint All Star Race Winner - Jimmie Johnson Claims Third All-Star Victory

Jimmie Johnson became the third three-time champion of the Sprint All-Star Race Saturday night, joining Dale Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon as drivers to three-peat. Johnson also won in 2003 and 2006. Johnson led every lap of the final ten-lap dash to pick up the $1 million payday. It continues a terrific week for Johnson, who won last Saturday's Southern 500 at Darlington to give Rick Hendrick his 200th win. His team then claimed the win in Thursday's Pit Crew Challenge.

It is the seventh All-Star win for Hendrick. The legendary car owner easily leads his peers in that category.

Brad Keselowski finished second, ahead of Matt Kenseth, Kyle Busch, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Kevin Harvick, Marcos Ambrose, Kurt Busch, Kasey Kahne, and Ryan Newman rounded out the top-10. A.J. Allmendinger, who contended all night after transferring with his runner-up finish to Earnhardt in the Sprint Showdown, took 11th-place.

All but two drivers finished the race. Defending race champ Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle each blew their Roush-Fenway Ford engines in a spectacular fireball.

2011 Winner

the 2011 NASCAR All-Star Race didn't live up to the hype. That's disappointing, although it doesn't mean there's necessarily anyone to blame.

Every race has a winner, but not every race can be a winner. This one wasn't – unless you're a fan of All-Star champ Carl Edwards, of course.

Just last year, the All-Star Race was one of the more memorable events of the season. There were wrecks, flared tempers, hurt feelings and drama – enough to fill not only newspaper columns and highlight reels, but a flood of television commercials that relentlessly hyped this year's edition.

In one ad, NASCAR President Mike Helton dressed up like a sheriff with the drivers acting as gun-toting outlaws. Another commercial replayed crashes and aired the raw, angry radio chatter between teammates over and over – a reminder to anyone that the All-Star Race was a time for drivers to go all out, with no points on the line. Track president Marcus Smith even offered to pay any driver fines for fighting.

The buildup was immense. But if the drivers were willing to mix it up a bit, there was a good chance the race could deliver.

In the end, though, as runner-up Kyle Busch acknowledged, the race was "tame."

2010 Winner

Kurt Busch survived two late restarts and sped away from the field to win the Sprint All-Star race at Charlotte Motor Speedway Saturday night.

"It's an unbelievable experience," Busch said. "It's something that you sit there and you look at the greats that have won this race, the ones that have had so many years go by in between the wins, just to have an opportunity to go for it tonight" was a treat.

Busch appeared to have the dominant car early on, but his rim-riding saw him slip into the outside wall twice and drop out of the top five as Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin emerged as the top contenders.

"Way to go, boys!" Busch shouted on his radio after winning the race and the $1 million first place prize. "Woooo! A million cool ones!"

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