1983 Winston 500 - NASCAR Race

Name of Race: 1983 Winston 500
Name of Track:     Talladega Superspeedway
Date: May 1st

Talladega Superspeedway

Talladega Superspeedway is a motorsports complex located north of Talladega, Alabama. It was constructed in the 1960s in place of abandoned airport runways by International Speedway Corporation, a business controlled by NASCAR's founding France family along with Daytona International Speedway and several other racetracks.

The Largest Oval

At 2.66 miles long, Talladega is the largest oval track in the Nextel Cup Series and has seating provisions for over 175,000 patrons. The start/finish line is placed after the pit exit; the unusual placement has affected the outcome of several races (the start/finish line is normally placed across from the center of pit road). The track is adjacent to and visible from Interstate 20.

Driver Strike Inauguaral NASCAR Race

Talladega got off to a controversial start when the Professional Drivers Association, a union of drivers led by the great Richard Petty, went on strike the night before the inaugural Talladega 500. The union was concerned with the speed which could be attained due to the track's length and steep banking, and the perceived threat to driver safety that this posed.

NASCAR founder Bill France took to the track himself in a car and drove around it at high speeds. NASCAR also ran a successful support race, but it was not enough, and the PDA drivers went on strike. Replacement drivers from the previous day's race were asked to race, and tickets were good for future races.

The race was the only win for Richard Brickhouse and was the debut race for Richard Childress.

Bill Elliott Fastest Lap

Speeds well in excess of 200 mph were commonplace at Talladega. Talladega Superspeedway has the record for the fastest recorded time in a stock car - 212.809 mph set by Bill Elliott on April 30, 1987. Elliott circled the 2.66-mile trioval in 44.998 seconds.

NASCAR First Restrictor Plates

Early in that race, Bobby Allison's Buick flew into the catch fence, injuring fans. NASCAR imposed rule changes to slow the cars after the incident, with a 1988 rule requiring cars running there and at Daytona run to use restrictor plates. The plates limit the amount of air and fuel entering the intake manifolds of the car, greatly reducing the power of the cars and hence their speed. This has led to the style of racing held at Talladega and Daytona to be somewhat different from that at other superspeedways and to be referred to by NASCAR fans as "restrictor-plate racing".

The reduced power affects not only the maximum speed reached by the cars but the time it takes them to achieve their full speed as well, which can be nearly one full circuit of the track.

The racing seen at Talladega today is extremely tight; often in rows of three or four cars throughout most of the field. Such close quarters makes it extremely difficult to control the car, and the slightest mistake often leads to massive (and often frightening) accidents - dubbed "the Big One" by fans and drivers - and Talladega is notorious for such, and always has been. (Such huge crashes are less frequent at Daytona as handling plays a greater role there).

Talladega Races

Talladega hosts two Nextel Cup races and one Busch Series race annually. Both of the Nextel Cup races are 500.08 miles (188 laps) in length. The names by which the races are called now vary due to the purchase of naming rights, with the spring Nextel Cup race since spring 2002 being referred to as the Aaron's 499 after the Atlanta-based rent-to-own chain. On July 26, 2005 it was announced that the Craftsman Truck Series would begin holding a race at Talladega starting in 2006.

The Winston 500

The Winston 500 was known as one of the sport's four legs of the traditional "Winston Million", with the Daytona 500, Coca-Cola 600, and the Southern 500 being the other three. With the demise of the Southern 500 by a lawsuit, there are only three majors remaining. (From 1985 until 1997, a driver who won three of the four majors won a one million dollar bonus.)

Courtesy of Wikipedia.

1983 Winston 500 NASCAR Race Results

Below are the race results for 1983 Winston 500, in order of finishing place.

Fin Driver Num Start Money Laps Pts Status Sponsor
1 Richard Petty 43 15 $46,650 188 0 running STP
2 Benny Parsons 55 12 $24,575 188 0 running Skoal
3 Lake Speed 1 10 $18,975 188 0 running UNO
4 Harry Gant 33 21 $22,425 188 0 running Skoal Bandit
5 Bill Elliott 9 6 $15,905 188 0 running Melling Oil Pumps
6 Terry Labonte 44 7 $16,295 188 0 running Budweiser
8 Ricky Rudd 3 4 $10,665 187 0 running Piedmont Airlines
9 Dave Marcis 71 32 $13,875 187 0 running Transmissions Unlimited
10 Bobby Allison 22 19 $14,475 186 0 running Miller High Life
11 Joe Ruttman 98 2 $9,130 184 0 engine Levi Garrett
13 Tommy Gale 64 31 $7,520 182 0 running Sunny King Ford & Honda
14 Dick Brooks 90 20 $7,160 181 0 running Chameleon Sunglasses
15 Neil Bonnett 75 5 $6,975 181 0 running Team America
16 Cecil Gordon 24 28 $4,085 178 0 running Gordon Racing
17 Morgan Shepherd 2 27 $11,485 175 0 engine ACM Equipment Sales
19 Lennie Pond 48 24 $5,835 169 0 engine Palatine Auto Parts
20 Ron Bouchard 47 23 $6,280 148 0 engine Race Hill Farm
21 Geoffrey Bodine 88 3 $13,460 132 0 engine Gatorade
23 Buddy Arrington 67 40 $4,900 121 0 engine Arrington Racing
24 Dale Earnhardt 15 17 $10,035 120 0 brakes Wrangler
25 Buddy Baker 21 11 $3,935 94 0 engine Valvoline
26 Lowell Cowell 76 37 $3,335 93 0 engine Larry's Nightclub
27 Tim Richmond 27 8 $3,335 72 0 crash Old Milwaukee
28 Phil Parsons 66 9 $2,635 71 0 crash Skoal
29 Cale Yarborough 28 1 $5,885 71 0 crash Hardee's
30 Kyle Petty 7 18 $4,290 71 0 crash 7-Eleven
31 David Pearson 16 16 $2,485 71 0 crash Chattanooga Chew
32 Jody Ridley 84 29 $2,435 71 0 crash Cumberland Mills
33 Darrell Waltrip 11 14 $12,285 70 0 crash Pepsi Challenger
34 A.J. Foyt 14 13 $1,935 70 0 crash Valvoline
35 Ronnie Thomas 41 42 $2,235 69 0 cam Advance Auto Parts
36 Mark Martin 6 25 $3,920 65 0 engine Jim Magill
37 Rick Wilson 62 34 $2,135 55 0 cyl head Wilson Racing
38 Philip Duffie 99 39 $2,085 50 0 brakes U.S. Duffie Sand & Gravel
39 Clark Dwyer 10 26 $2,035 30 0 oil pan Kings Inn Daytona
41 Sterling Marlin 17 22 $2,985 20 0 engine Hesco Exhaust
42 Rick Baldwin 96 35 $1,985 7 0 engine White Crown Engineering
2008 Nextel Points
1 Jimmie Johnson Leader
2 Carl Edwards -69
3 Greg Biffle -217
4 Kevin Harvick -276
5 Clint Bowyer -303
6 Jeff Burton -349
7 Jeff Gordon -368
8 Denny Hamlin -470
9 Tony Stewart -482
10 Kyle Busch -498
2008 Busch Points
1 Clint Bowyer Leader
2 Carl Edwards -21
3 Brad Keselowski -338
4 David Ragan -607
5 Mike Bliss -614
6 Kyle Busch -671
7 David Reutimann -744
8 Mike Wallace -1004
9 Jason Leffler -1046
10 Marcos Ambrose -1141
2008 Craftsman Points
1 Johnny Benson Leader
2 Ron Hornaday -7
3 Todd Bodine -104
4 Erik Darnell -313
5 Matt Crafton -333
6 Mike Skinner -362
7 Rick Crawford -410
8 Dennis Setzer -528
9 Jack Sprague -600
10 Terry Cook -653

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September 2007

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