by Steve Holmes » Thu May 16, 2013 4:16 am
Then, on lap 164, the massive spectator embankments erupted into life as Yarborough pulled out of the draft and moved past Foyt for second. And, as had been the case at the beginning, the three cars at the head of the field were the two Allison brothers, albeit, with Bobby still three laps down, with Yarborough right behind.
The two Allison brothers then pitted together for fuel and tyres, signalling the final round of pit stops. Amazingly, with all the cautions, this was the first time all race that the front runners made green flag stops. A few laps later Petty was in followed by Yarborough, Scott, Foyt, and Waltrip.
Now began the final sprint for the finish. In 1979, cautions weren’t thrown towards the end of the race to bunch the field up and produce a close finish, so these guys had the hammer down. By lap 178, with 22 to go, as the field cleansed itself, it was Donnie Allison who resumed the lead, and now had Yarborough biting down hard on his back bumper. These two had dropped everyone else off behind them, and gradually drew away to fight over the win between them.
Back in third, running on his own, was Waltrip, while behind him, and gaining were Foyt and Petty, running nose to tail. With 15 laps to run, Allison and Yarborough were a full 15 seconds ahead of Foyt, who’d pushed Waltrip down to fifth, behind Petty. The best any of this trio could hope for was third.
With ten laps to run, and now almost 20 seconds ahead, Allison and Yarborough continued to reel off the laps. Yarborough was happy to just sit behind, waiting, pulling out of the draft every couple of laps to provide his engine some cool air. Nascar were double and triple checking their photo-finish camera was working, fully expecting it would be required. Petty had now moved ahead of Foyt, taking Waltrip with him, but these guys were fighting for third.
The laps continued to count down: 5, 4, 3, and the 100,000 spectators in attendance were on their feet with 2 laps to run. Allison was still in front, Yarborough lurking just a few meters off his back bumper as they swept into the tri-oval, across the stripe to receive the white flag, with one lap to run. This was it, time to put it all on the line. Both drivers had overcome heavy early race set-backs, both badly wanted this win. For Allison, who’d been trying to win the Daytona 500 since 1967, this was his best shot yet.
They fired into turn one, Allison still in front, but then through turn two, Yarborough began to reduce the gap. Sling-shotting off Turn 2, Yarborough used the slip-stream off Allison’s car to begin reeling him in along the back straight, and halfway down the straight, pulled out of the draft and to the bottom of the track, to draw alongside, but as he did, Allison moved down, Yarborough got two wheels on the wet, slippery grass, and spun hard right, straight into the left rear quarter of Allison’s Oldsmobile. They bounced off each other, then slammed together once again, both cars getting at least two wheels off the deck in the impact. By now both drivers were just passengers, and the two cars locked together, and fired straight into the outside wall at Turn 3, crunching hard, then sliding back down the steep embankment, dropping down the track, into the infield, still spinning, before they finally came to rest in the grass, both pointing back towards the track, both destroyed.
The cameras held position on the two smoking, junked Oldsmobiles for several seconds, before switching back to the battle between Petty, Waltrip, and Foyt, who were so far behind they were only now just entering Turn 3, long after stunned television viewers had grasped what had just happened. At that, Petty ducked and dived, and did everything he could manage to hold out the hard charging Waltrip, and crossed the line just fractions ahead, to win his sixth Daytona 500.
But the drama wasn’t over. Petty celebrated his cool-down lap, and Waltrip and Foyt pulled alongside down the back straight to signal their congratulations. Petty completed his lap, pulled into pit lane, and his crew jumped on the car as he drove slowly enjoying this most unexpected win. As he headed towards victory lane, on the other side of the track, Bobby Allison stopped in Turn 3 to check on his brother, and suddenly a brawl broke out between the Allison’s and Yarborough. There were fists flailing everywhere, punching and kicking, and the fight went to ground, still continuing as frayed tempers boiled over. Eventually, officials pulled the drivers apart, but the fight was caught on camera, and aired to millions of viewers all across America.
It had been an epic race, full of drama and tension throughout, with a finish no one could ever have imagined. And it was all caught on camera, live to air, throughout. That Allison and Yarborough got into a brawl following their pile-up further added to the excitement, as viewers could see this was a sport full of emotion, in which people they could fully relate to, gave 100% of themselves to the cause. Nascar proved itself to be a blue-collar sport, which its followers were already full aware of. But now the rest of America got to see it too.
Nascar has since gone on to become a super-power, a multi-billion dollar marketing machine, with a fan-base far exceeding that of virtually every other motor racing category in the world. And that day, on February 18, 1979, proved a major turning point for the sport, directing it on the path to what it has become today. Nascar won a lot of new race fans that day.
Then, on lap 164, the massive spectator embankments erupted into life as Yarborough pulled out of the draft and moved past Foyt for second. And, as had been the case at the beginning, the three cars at the head of the field were the two Allison brothers, albeit, with Bobby still three laps down, with Yarborough right behind.
The two Allison brothers then pitted together for fuel and tyres, signalling the final round of pit stops. Amazingly, with all the cautions, this was the first time all race that the front runners made green flag stops. A few laps later Petty was in followed by Yarborough, Scott, Foyt, and Waltrip.
Now began the final sprint for the finish. In 1979, cautions weren’t thrown towards the end of the race to bunch the field up and produce a close finish, so these guys had the hammer down. By lap 178, with 22 to go, as the field cleansed itself, it was Donnie Allison who resumed the lead, and now had Yarborough biting down hard on his back bumper. These two had dropped everyone else off behind them, and gradually drew away to fight over the win between them.
Back in third, running on his own, was Waltrip, while behind him, and gaining were Foyt and Petty, running nose to tail. With 15 laps to run, Allison and Yarborough were a full 15 seconds ahead of Foyt, who’d pushed Waltrip down to fifth, behind Petty. The best any of this trio could hope for was third.
With ten laps to run, and now almost 20 seconds ahead, Allison and Yarborough continued to reel off the laps. Yarborough was happy to just sit behind, waiting, pulling out of the draft every couple of laps to provide his engine some cool air. Nascar were double and triple checking their photo-finish camera was working, fully expecting it would be required. Petty had now moved ahead of Foyt, taking Waltrip with him, but these guys were fighting for third.
The laps continued to count down: 5, 4, 3, and the 100,000 spectators in attendance were on their feet with 2 laps to run. Allison was still in front, Yarborough lurking just a few meters off his back bumper as they swept into the tri-oval, across the stripe to receive the white flag, with one lap to run. This was it, time to put it all on the line. Both drivers had overcome heavy early race set-backs, both badly wanted this win. For Allison, who’d been trying to win the Daytona 500 since 1967, this was his best shot yet.
They fired into turn one, Allison still in front, but then through turn two, Yarborough began to reduce the gap. Sling-shotting off Turn 2, Yarborough used the slip-stream off Allison’s car to begin reeling him in along the back straight, and halfway down the straight, pulled out of the draft and to the bottom of the track, to draw alongside, but as he did, Allison moved down, Yarborough got two wheels on the wet, slippery grass, and spun hard right, straight into the left rear quarter of Allison’s Oldsmobile. They bounced off each other, then slammed together once again, both cars getting at least two wheels off the deck in the impact. By now both drivers were just passengers, and the two cars locked together, and fired straight into the outside wall at Turn 3, crunching hard, then sliding back down the steep embankment, dropping down the track, into the infield, still spinning, before they finally came to rest in the grass, both pointing back towards the track, both destroyed.
The cameras held position on the two smoking, junked Oldsmobiles for several seconds, before switching back to the battle between Petty, Waltrip, and Foyt, who were so far behind they were only now just entering Turn 3, long after stunned television viewers had grasped what had just happened. At that, Petty ducked and dived, and did everything he could manage to hold out the hard charging Waltrip, and crossed the line just fractions ahead, to win his sixth Daytona 500.
But the drama wasn’t over. Petty celebrated his cool-down lap, and Waltrip and Foyt pulled alongside down the back straight to signal their congratulations. Petty completed his lap, pulled into pit lane, and his crew jumped on the car as he drove slowly enjoying this most unexpected win. As he headed towards victory lane, on the other side of the track, Bobby Allison stopped in Turn 3 to check on his brother, and suddenly a brawl broke out between the Allison’s and Yarborough. There were fists flailing everywhere, punching and kicking, and the fight went to ground, still continuing as frayed tempers boiled over. Eventually, officials pulled the drivers apart, but the fight was caught on camera, and aired to millions of viewers all across America.
It had been an epic race, full of drama and tension throughout, with a finish no one could ever have imagined. And it was all caught on camera, live to air, throughout. That Allison and Yarborough got into a brawl following their pile-up further added to the excitement, as viewers could see this was a sport full of emotion, in which people they could fully relate to, gave 100% of themselves to the cause. Nascar proved itself to be a blue-collar sport, which its followers were already full aware of. But now the rest of America got to see it too.
Nascar has since gone on to become a super-power, a multi-billion dollar marketing machine, with a fan-base far exceeding that of virtually every other motor racing category in the world. And that day, on February 18, 1979, proved a major turning point for the sport, directing it on the path to what it has become today. Nascar won a lot of new race fans that day.