1983 Daytona 500

The 1983 Daytona 500, the 25th running of the event, was held February 20 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida as the first race of the 1983 NASCAR Winston Cup season. A crowd of 115,000 people watched the lead change 58 times among 11 drivers. A total of six cautions were handed out by NASCAR officials for a duration of 36 laps.

1983 Daytona 500
Race details
Race 1 of 30 in the 1983 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season
Track map of Daytona International Speedway showing mainly the speedway.
Date February 20, 1983 (1983-02-20)
Location Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida
Course Permanent racing facility
2.5 mi (4.02336 km)
Distance 200 laps, 500 mi (804.672 km)
Weather Temperatures reaching up to 70 °F (21 °C); wind speeds approaching 13 miles per hour (21 km/h)[1]
Average speed 155.979 miles per hour (251.024 km/h)
Attendance 115,000[2]
Pole position
Driver Richard Childress Racing
Qualifying race winners
Duel 1 Winner Dale Earnhardt Bud Moore Engineering
Duel 2 Winner Neil Bonnett RahMoc Enterprises
Most laps led
Driver Joe Ruttman Benfield Racing
Laps 57
Winner
No. 28 Cale Yarborough Ranier-Lundy
Television in the United States
Network CBS
Announcers Ken Squier and David Hobbs
Nielsen Ratings 8.7/26
(11 million viewers)

Dale Earnhardt drove a Ford vehicle because of how aerodynamically advanced it was supposed to be in 1983, but got beaten out by Bobby Allison that same year. While the 1983 Ford Thunderbird was a very aerodynamic car for the early-1980s, Dale Earnhardt just couldn't figure the Thunderbird out as a race car. Eventually, Earnhardt had moved on to Richard Childress Racing's team with its Chevrolet vehicles later in the 1980s.

Summary

Cale Yarborough was the first driver to run a qualifying lap of more than 200 miles per hour (320 km/h) at the 1983 Daytona 500 in his #28 Chevrolet Monte Carlo. However, on his second of two qualifying laps, Yarborough crashed and flipped his car in turn four. The car had to be withdrawn, and the lap did not count (unlike current rules). Despite the crash, Yarborough drove a Hardee's Show Car (a Pontiac LeMans) in second-round qualifying and made the field.

Ricky Rudd wound up with the pole, driving Richard Childress' Chevrolet in what would become a breakthrough season for the longtime independent driver Childress. The early laps were a battle between Geoff Bodine, Richard Petty, Dale Earnhardt, Kyle Petty, and a resurgent Dick Brooks. Richard broke away from the field before his engine failed after 47 laps and the race became a showdown between Bodine, Yarborough, Joe Ruttman, Brooks, Neil Bonnett, Buddy Baker, and little-noticed Bill Elliott, while former Talladega 500 winner Ron Bouchard was also in contention.[2]

On Lap 63, the engine on the Bud Moore Engineering Ford driven by Earnhardt failed. As the race went on the lead bounced back and forth, and Bobby Allison, who'd lost a lap, crowded the leaders most of the day. Past halfway Kyle Petty blew his engine and a tire issue dropped Bonnett off the lead lap; when Mark Martin hit the wall Ruttman swerved to stop Bonnett from getting his lap back as they raced through a group of lapped cars. Bonnett got his lap back later but blew his engine in the final twenty laps while Brooks cut a tire and lost a lap.

On the final lap, Baker led Yarborough, Ruttman, and Elliott. Cale stormed past Baker on the backstretch and Ruttman drafted into second; Baker dove under Ruttman and Elliott snookered them both on the high side in a three-abreast photo finish for second. The win was Cale's third in the 500 and was also the first time that an in-car camera of a car went into victory lane before a national CBS Sports audience (this tradition would eventually continue into the present day).

Waltrip-Brooks incident

With Brooks as the leader, the field slowed down coming back to the yellow. Two cars, though, tried to get their lap back by beating the leader back to the finish line, a practice banned subsequently in 2003 - Lake Speed passed Brooks in Turn Four and then chopped hard into his path; Brooks slammed his brakes and Darrell Waltrip spun to avoid hitting Brooks; Waltrip's Chevrolet hammered the inside guardrail and flew backward back onto the racetrack, nearly collecting Yarborough, Bodine, and Ruttman.

Waltrip suffered a concussion, resulting in an overnight hospitalization. He returned the next week at Richmond, which would be prohibited under a 2014 rule change. Waltrip admitted in his biography DW: A Lifetime Going Round in Circles (published in 2002) that it was a life-changing crash: when he heard drivers and fans joking that the crash would "knock him sane" or "finally shut him up", he realized for the first time how unpopular he was and resolved to clean up his image. Waltrip often referenced the crash when asked to be a keynote speaker at national events.

The practice of allowing lapped cars to attempt passing the leader at the finish line when taking the caution was prohibited after the 2003 Sylvania 300 at Loudon, NH when after Dale Jarrett crashed and numerous cars nearly struck Jarrett's disabled car on the race to gain a lap back, leading to the development of the current beneficiary rule. The concussion protocol was adopted in 2014 after Dale Earnhardt, Jr. (whose grandfather helped Waltrip with his first Cup car) took himself out of two races in the 2012 season after two concussions—one in August (Kansas tire test) and in October (Talladega race crash).

Did not qualify

Drivers who failed to qualify for this event include Blackie Wangerin, Joe Millikan, Connie Saylor, Morgan Shepherd, Rusty Wallace and David Simko.[2]

•This would be the only time Rusty Wallace ever failed to qualify for a race in his 25 year career.

Finishing Order

Pos Grid No. Driver Car Make Laps Status Laps
led
Points
1 828Cale YarboroughPontiac LeMans200Running23180
2 179Bill ElliottFord Thunderbird200Running6175
3 521Buddy BakerFord Thunderbird200Running35170
4 1198Joe RuttmanChevrolet Monte Carlo200Running57170
5 1090Dick BrooksFord Thunderbird199Running15160
6 4144Terry LabonteChevrolet Monte Carlo199Running0150
7 2253Tom SnevaChevrolet Monte Carlo199Running0146
8 1516David PearsonChevrolet Monte Carlo198Running0142
9 3522Bobby AllisonChevrolet Monte Carlo198Running0138
10 1884Jody RidleyBuick Regal197Running0134
11 914A. J. FoytChevrolet Monte Carlo197Running0130
12 3951Lennie PondBuick Regal197Running0127
13 3266Phil ParsonsBuick Regal196Running0124
14 4252Jimmy MeansBuick Regal196Running0121
15 2789Dean RoperPontiac Grand Prix194Running0118
16 3467Buddy ArringtonChrysler Imperial194Running0115
17 3641Ronnie ThomasPontiac Grand Prix192Running0112
18 206Jim SauterChevrolet Monte Carlo191Running0109
19 2826Ronnie HopkinsBuick Regal191Running0106
20 3004Rick BaldwinDodge Mirada188Running0103
21 4010Clark DwyerChevrolet Monte Carlo188Running0100
22 475Neil BonnettChevrolet Monte Carlo187Running9102
23 2948James HyltonChevrolet Monte Carlo184Running094
24 13Ricky RuddChevrolet Monte Carlo182Camshaft196
25 161Lake SpeedChevrolet Monte Carlo178Engine088
26 2347Ron BouchardBuick Regal162Engine085
27 2564Tommy GaleFord Thunderbird149Engine082
28 122Mark MartinBuick Regal136Crash079
29 3770J. D. McDuffiePontiac Grand Prix132Engine076
30 288Geoffrey BodinePontiac Grand Prix106Engine1478
31 380Delma CowartBuick Regal102Crash070
32 2171Dave MarcisChevrolet Monte Carlo100Piston067
33 77Kyle PettyPontiac Grand Prix99Engine969
34 3317Sterling MarlinChevrolet Monte Carlo69Piston061
35 315Dale EarnhardtFord Thunderbird63Engine263
36 3111Darrell WaltripChevrolet Monte Carlo62Crash055
37 1333Harry GantBuick Regal56Engine052
38 643Richard PettyPontiac Grand Prix47Engine2954
39 2632Bosco LoweBuick Regal36Crash046
40 1923Elliott Forbes-RobinsonBuick Regal36Engine043
41 2427Tim RichmondPontiac LeMans24Engine040
42 1455Benny ParsonsBuick Regal8Push Rod037
Source[3]

References

  1. "Weather of the 1983 Daytona 500". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Archived from the original on 2013-07-02. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  2. "1983 Daytona 500 racing information". Racing Reference. Archived from the original on 2013-07-02. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  3. https://www.racing-reference.info/race/1983_Daytona_500/W
Preceded by
1982 Winston Western 500
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Season
1982-83
Succeeded by
1983 Richmond 400
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