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Atlanta 500


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Atlanta 500

Atlanta Motor Speedway.svg

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Venue
Atlanta Motor Speedway
Corporate sponsor

Kobalt Tools
First race
July 30, 1960
Last race
March 7, 2010
Distance
500.5 miles (805.476 km)
Laps
325
Previous names
Atlanta 500 (1960–1980)
Coca-Cola 500 (1981–1985)
Motorcraft 500 (1986)
Motorcraft Quality Parts 500 (1987–1993)
Purolator 500 (1994–1996)
Primestar 500 (1997–1998)
Cracker Barrel 500 (1999)
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store 500 (2000–2001)
MBNA America 500 (2002)
Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 (2003)
Golden Corral 500 (2004–2006)
Kobalt Tools 500 (2007–2010)

The Atlanta 500 was a NASCAR Cup Series stock car race that was run annually each March at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia from 1960 to 2010. The race was the first of two races held at the Atlanta track every season, with the Dixie 500, being the second and run at various times (originally November, later October and currently the second race of the season), now run as the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500.


The race was 500.5 miles (805.5 km) in length. In August 2010, Atlanta Motor Speedway announced that they would no longer run the spring race, instead choosing to focus on the Labor Day weekend race at the track beginning in 2011.[1] The end of the Atlanta 500 permitted the addition of a race at Kentucky Speedway starting in 2011.




Contents





  • 1 Notable races


  • 2 Past winners

    • 2.1 Notes


    • 2.2 Track length notes


    • 2.3 Multiple winners (drivers)


    • 2.4 Manufacturers wins



  • 3 Television broadcasters

    • 3.1 Notes



  • 4 References




Notable races[edit]



  • 1960: The first race at Atlanta International Raceway (now Atlanta Motor Speedway) was won by Bobby Johns in a 1960 Pontiac.


  • 1961: Bob Burdick led 44 laps to his only career Grand National win. Polesitter Marvin Panch led 127 laps but faded to sixth, while Fred Lorenzen led 87 laps but fell out with engine failure. Rookie Bobby Allison finished 37th.


  • 1964: Lorenzen led the last 168 laps and 206 in all to a two-lap win amid an epidemic of tire failures and resultant crashes; Paul Goldsmith led the first 54 laps but blew a tire, smashed the guardrail, and flipped over.


  • 1966: Jim Hurtubise led the final 58 laps to his only career Grand National win.


  • 1971: A. J. Foyt outdueled Richard Petty for his fifth career win.


  • 1972: Bobby Allison posted the first win for Chevrolet on a superspeedway since the 1960s, as he held off a strong challenge from Foyt and Bobby Isaac.


  • 1974: Cale Yarborough grabbed the lead when David Pearson pitted under green and was trapped by an ill-timed yellow; the race was shortened to 450 miles (720 km) due to the energy crisis.


  • 1975: After winning the Dixie 500 four times, Richard Petty edged Buddy Baker for his first Atlanta 500 win.


  • 1976: Pearson lost a lap early and spent 225 laps getting it back before winning. Yarborough lost four laps on a green-flag stop and got three of them back to finish third.


  • 1977: Richard Petty, David Pearson, and Cale Yarborough finished 1-2-3 as they combined to lead all 328 laps. Yarborough finished third after his brakes wore out and at times he had to be stopped by Richard Childress' car on pit road. Only two yellows flew.


  • 1979: Buddy Baker caught a late yellow, got four tires, and won in a late sprint, his first win since 1976.


  • 1980: Sophomore Dale Earnhardt took the lead with 30 to go after Cale Yarborough broke while chasing down Bobby Allison. USAC stock car racer Rusty Wallace finished a strong second. Donnie Allison crashed out of the lead with sophomore Terry Labonte in what became his final race for car owner Hoss Ellington.


  • 1981: Yarborough posted his first win for car owner M.C. Anderson, but the story of the race was a loud protest by Bobby Allison over NASCAR-mandated reduction of the spoiler of his 1981 Pontiac Lemans to reduce the car's aerodynamic efficiency. Car owner Harry Ranier threatened to boycott the race but got no support in the garage area and relented to the rule change.


  • 1982: After Dale Earnhardt fell out rain hit the race and Darrell Waltrip edged Richard Petty to the race-ending yellow.


  • 1983: Cale Yarborough drove a backup car to victory for the second time in 1983. He'd wrecked his primary Ranier Chevy a week earlier in Rockingham and used a car that had been a show car.


  • 1984: Benny Parsons posted his final win.


  • 1986: Morgan Shepherd outran Dale Earnhardt for his first win in five years and the first of three wins at Atlanta.


  • 1987: Dale Earnhardt fell out late and Ricky Rudd edged Parsons and Rusty Wallace for his first win on an oval bigger than one mile (1.6 km).


  • 1989: Darrell Waltrip came back from nearly a lap down to win; on a mid-race yellow Waltrip was slowed by the pace car picking up the wrong leader during pitstops and was trapped barely on the lead lap. The mishap led to the implementation of a rule closing pit road when the yellow comes out; the rule was designed to stop cars from pitting before taking the yellow, which was blamed for scoring mistakes in the days of manual lap scoring.


  • 1992: Bill Elliott won in unlikely fashion as a yellow trapped the entire field behind him a lap down during green flag stops in the final 30 laps.


  • 1995: Jeff Gordon posted his second win of 1995 on his way to his first title.


  • 1997: Dale Jarrett dominated in a race where Steve Grissom tore open a concrete wall, flipped over, and his fuel cell hit the outside wall and erupted in flame.


  • 1998: Bobby Labonte took the win in a race delayed to Monday by rain and in a weekend that saw numerous driver injuries, notably Mike Skinner and Derrike Cope.


  • 2000: Dale Earnhardt edged Labonte by inches after Skinner dominated the race but blew up.


  • 2001: Kevin Harvick edged Gordon by inches in his first win for RCR after Earnhardt's death. Although he was assigned a different number, Harvick used the same car and team Earnhardt won with the previous year.


  • 2002: Tony Stewart posted his first 500-mile (800 km) win.


  • 2005: Carl Edwards slithered past Jimmie Johnson on the final lap to score his first career win and also sweeps the weekend at Atlanta.


  • 2006: Bill Lester becomes the first African-American driver to race in a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series event since Willy T. Ribbs in 1986. Kasey Kahne would later on win this race and becomes the first of many wins for Kasey Kahne in 2006.


  • 2007: It was the last race that the "old" racecar was run consecutively. The Car of Tomorrow would debut next week at Bristol. Also it was Mark Martin's last consecutive race that he had participated in since 1991.


  • 2008: Kyle Busch won, giving Toyota their first win in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. It was the first time a foreign auto maker won since Jaguar in 1954. It was also Kyle's first win under the Joe Gibbs Racing banner.


  • 2009: Kurt Busch dominated the race after a pit crew mistake by one of Marcos Ambrose's crewman trapped most of the cars that could challenge him a lap down.


  • 2010: A scary flight by Brad Keselowski was a top story; Keselowski was spun out by the lapped car of Carl Edwards and nearly struck the fencing past the start-finish line in the final laps. This was also the last spring race at Atlanta until the track's surviving summer-autumn race was moved to March in 2015.


Past winners[edit]































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Year
Date

No.
Driver
Team
Manufacturer
Race Distance
Race Time
Average Speed
(mph)
Report
Laps
Miles (km)

1960
October 30
5

Bobby Johns

Cotton Owens

Pontiac
334
501 (806.281)
4:36:44
108.408

Report

1961
March 26
53

Bob Burdick

Roy Burdick

Pontiac
334
501 (806.281)
4:02:05
124.172

Report

1962
June 10
28

Fred Lorenzen

Holman-Moody

Ford
219*
328.5 (528.669)
3:13:16
101.983

Report

1963
March 17
28

Fred Lorenzen

Holman-Moody

Ford
334
501 (806.281)
3:50:12
130.582

Report

1964
April 5
28

Fred Lorenzen

Holman-Moody

Ford
334
501 (806.281)
3:46:05
134.137

Report

1965
April 11
21

Marvin Panch

Wood Brothers Racing

Ford
334
501 (806.281)
3:52:17
129.41

Report

1966
March 27
56

Jim Hurtubise

Norm Nelson

Plymouth
334
501 (806.281)
3:49:02
131.247

Report

1967
April 2
21

Cale Yarborough

Wood Brothers Racing

Ford
334
501 (806.281)
3:49:03
131.238

Report

1968
March 31
21

Cale Yarborough

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
334
501 (806.281)
3:59:24
125.564

Report

1969
March 30
21

Cale Yarborough

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
334
501 (806.281)
3:46:10
132.191

Report

1970
March 29
22

Bobby Allison

Mario Rossi

Dodge
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:34:38
139.554

Report

1971
April 4
21

A. J. Foyt

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:42:16
131.375

Report

1972
March 26
12

Bobby Allison

Richard Howard

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:53:37
128.214

Report

1973
April 1
21

David Pearson

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:34:52
139.351

Report

1974
March 24
11

Cale Yarborough

Richard Howard

Chevrolet
296*
450.512 (725.028)
3:01:26
136.91

Report

1975
March 23
43

Richard Petty

Petty Enterprises

Dodge
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:44:06
133.496

Report

1976
March 21
21

David Pearson

Wood Brothers Racing

Mercury
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:52:16
128.904

Report

1977
March 20
43

Richard Petty

Petty Enterprises

Dodge
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:27:51
144.093

Report

1978
March 19
15

Bobby Allison

Bud Moore Engineering

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:30:10
142.52

Report

1979
March 18
28

Buddy Baker

Ranier-Lundy

Oldsmobile
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:41:47
135.136

Report

1980
March 16
2

Dale Earnhardt

Rod Osterlund Racing

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:42:32
134.808

Report

1981
March 15
27

Cale Yarborough

M.C. Anderson Racing

Buick
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:44:10
133.619

Report

1982
March 21
11

Darrell Waltrip

Junior Johnson & Associates

Buick
287*
436.82 (702.993)
3:29:58
124.824

Report

1983
March 27
28

Cale Yarborough

Ranier-Lundy

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
4:01:27
124.055

Report

1984
March 18
55

Benny Parsons

Johnny Hayes

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:26:39
144.945

Report

1985
March 17
9

Bill Elliott

Melling Racing

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:33:32
140.273

Report

1986
March 16
47

Morgan Shepherd

Race Hill Farm Team

Buick
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:46:41
132.126

Report

1987
March 15
15

Ricky Rudd

Bud Moore Engineering

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:44:02
133.689

Report

1988
March 20
3

Dale Earnhardt

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:37:42
137.588

Report

1989
March 19
17

Darrell Waltrip

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:34:26
139.684

Report

1990
March 18
3

Dale Earnhardt

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:10:58
156.849

Report

1991
March 17/18*
25

Ken Schrader

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:33:14
140.47

Report

1992
March 15
11

Bill Elliott

Junior Johnson & Associates

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:22:44
147.746

Report

1993
March 20*
21

Morgan Shepherd

Wood Brothers Racing

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:17:26
150.442

Report

1994
March 13
28

Ernie Irvan

Robert Yates Racing

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:24:58
146.136

Report

1995
March 12
24

Jeff Gordon

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:19:32
150.115

Report

1996
March 10
3

Dale Earnhardt

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:05:42
161.298

Report

1997*
March 9
88

Dale Jarrett

Robert Yates Racing

Ford
328
499.216 (803.41)
3:45:40
132.731

Report

1998
March 9*
18

Bobby Labonte

Joe Gibbs Racing

Pontiac
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:35:16
139.501

Report

1999
March 14
24

Jeff Gordon

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:29:35
143.284

Report

2000
March 12
3

Dale Earnhardt

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:47:55
131.759

Report

2001
March 11
29

Kevin Harvick

Richard Childress Racing

Chevrolet
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:29:36
143.273

Report

2002
March 10
20

Tony Stewart

Joe Gibbs Racing

Pontiac
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:22:18
148.443

Report

2003
March 9
18

Bobby Labonte

Joe Gibbs Racing

Chevrolet
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:25:37
146.048

Report

2004
March 14
8

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Dale Earnhardt, Inc.

Chevrolet
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:09:15
158.679

Report

2005
March 20
99

Carl Edwards

Roush Racing

Ford
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:29:18
143.478

Report

2006
March 20*
9

Kasey Kahne

Evernham Motorsports

Dodge
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:28:24
144.098

Report

2007
March 18
48

Jimmie Johnson

Hendrick Motorsports

Chevrolet
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:16:23
152.915

Report

2008
March 9
18

Kyle Busch

Joe Gibbs Racing

Toyota
325
500.5 (805.476)
3:33:01
140.975

Report

2009
March 8
2

Kurt Busch

Penske Racing

Dodge
330*
508.2 (817.868)
3:59:01
127.573

Report

2010
March 7
2

Kurt Busch

Penske Racing

Dodge
341*
525.14 (845.13)
3:59:59
131.294

Report


Notes[edit]



  • 1962 & 1982: Race shortened due to rain.


  • 1974: Race shortened due to energy crisis.


  • 1991: Race started on Sunday but was finished on Monday due to rain.


  • 1993: Race postponed one week due to snow from Blizzard of '93.


  • 1997: Last race on an old layout.


  • 1998 & 2006: Race postponed from Sunday to Monday due to rain.


  • 2009 & 2010: Race extended due to a green–white–checker finish. 2010 race took 2 attempts.


Track length notes[edit]



  • 1960–1969: 1.5 mile course


  • 1970–1997: 1.522 mile course


  • 1998–2010: 1.54 mile course


Multiple winners (drivers)[edit]

































# Wins
Driver
Years Won
6

Cale Yarborough
1967, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1981, 1983
5

Dale Earnhardt
1980, 1988, 1990, 1996, 2000
3

Fred Lorenzen
1962, 1963, 1964

Bobby Allison
1970, 1972, 1978
2

David Pearson
1973, 1976

Richard Petty
1975, 1977

Darrell Waltrip
1982, 1989

Bill Elliott
1985, 1992

Morgan Shepherd
1986, 1993

Jeff Gordon
1995, 1999

Bobby Labonte
1998, 2003

Kurt Busch
2009, 2010


Manufacturers wins[edit]






























# Wins
Manufacturer
Years Won
17

Chevrolet
1972, 1974, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2007
13

Ford
1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1978, 1985, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1997, 2005
6

Dodge
1970, 1975, 1977, 2006, 2009, 2010
5

Mercury
1968, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1976
4

Pontiac
1960, 1961, 1998, 2002
3

Buick
1981, 1982, 1986
1

Plymouth
1966

Oldsmobile
1979

Toyota
2008


Television broadcasters[edit]


































































Year
Network

Lap-by-lap

Color commentator(s)

1964

CBS



1969

ABC

Bill Flemming

Chris Economaki

1971

1972

Keith Jackson

1973

1975

Jackie Stewart

1976

Chris Economaki

1977

1978

Al Michaels

Jackie Stewart

1979

Chris Economaki

1980

Jackie Stewart

1981

Keith Jackson

Chris Economaki

1982

Jackie Stewart

1983

1984

Sam Posey

1985

1986

Jim Lampley

1987

1988

Keith Jackson

Jerry Punch

1989

Paul Page

Benny Parsons
Bobby Unser

1990

1991

1992

1993

TNN

Mike Joy

Buddy Baker
Neil Bonnett

1994

ABC

Bob Jenkins

Benny Parsons

1995

1996

1997

1998

ESPN
ABC

Benny Parsons(ESPN/ABC)
Ned Jarrett(ESPN)

1999

ABC

Benny Parsons

2000

Benny Parsons
Ray Evernham

2001

Fox

Mike Joy

Darrell Waltrip
Larry McReynolds

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

Fox
FX*

2007

Fox

2008

2009

2010


Notes[edit]


  • The 1991 race was rained out after 51 laps on Sunday, ran the next day, but ABC decided not to televise the remainder of the race. No other network bothered to show the remainder of the race, leaving the race untelevised. To date it is the last untelevised Cup race.


  • ABC was originally scheduled to televise the 1993 race on March 14, but the Storm of the Century had it postponed a week. ABC bailed out, so a frozen TNN crew stepped in to show the race, in trade they gave up the Busch Series race they were going to show on that weekend to ESPN.

  • The 1998 race was initially going to be broadcast on ABC before being postponed from March 8. Also Ned Jarrett stepped in to call the race with Bob Jenkins and Benny Parsons on Monday after the race had been postponed from Sunday.

  • The 2006 race was rained out, so it moved to FX (as well as some Fox affiliates) for Monday.


References[edit]




  1. ^ "Atlanta Motor Speedway Announces Schedule For 2011 NASCAR Season". www.atlantamotorspeedway.com. Archived from the original on 7 August 2010. Retrieved 6 August 2010..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em











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