After the meteoric rise and fall of one of Sprint Cup's burgeoning superstars, Kyle Busch, the 2008 season ended the way the previous two had - with a Jimmie Johnson championship.
This one was special. Johnson's dominating performance in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup enabled the driver of the #48 Lowe's Chevrolet to join an exclusive club that previously had only one member: Cale Yarborough. Johnson became the second driver to win three straight Cup championships, and he did so without a major mistake in the final ten races.
With a comfortable 15th-place finish in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway - a stark contrast to a very uncomfortable 15th-place finish at Texas two weeks earlier - Johnson won the title by 69 points over Carl Edwards, who won three of the final four races but couldn't over come a critical mistake at Talladega and the bizarre simultaneous failure of both ignition boxes in his #99 Ford at Lowe's Motor Speedway.
Edwards and Busch, however, were the two drivers who started the season as if they were the two who were going to battle for the championship. Busch won eight of the first 26 races, beginning with Atlanta in March and ending with his second road-course victory of the season, at Watkins Glen.
That final win was a highlight of a remarkable season that saw Busch win a record-tying ten times in the Nationwide Series and three ties in the Craftsman Truck Series, but it was also the end of the road for Busch in the Cup Series. Entering the Chase as the top seed, Busch suffered mechanical problems at New Hampshire, Dover and Kansas and fell precipitously from title contention.
Edwards won early, too, with victories in the second and third races of the season, at Auto Club Speedway and Las Vegas. An oil tank cover violation at Las Vegas, however, cost Edwards the ten Chase bonus points he would have earned for the win, in addition to a 100-point penalty. By the end of the year, he would surpass Busch for most victories in the series - nine.