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1984 Daytona 500

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Driver
  
Cale Yarborough

1984 Daytona 500

Date
  
February 19, 1984 (1984-02-19)

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)

Average speed
  
150.994 miles per hour (243.001 km/h)

The 1984 Daytona 500, the 26th running of the event, was held February 19, 1984, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Cale Yarborough, who won the pole, completed a lap of 201.848 miles per hour (324.843 km/h), officially breaking the 200 miles per hour (320 km/h) barrier at Daytona. He won the race for the second year in a row, and the fourth time in his career, with the identical last-lap pass, this time victimizing Darrell Waltrip who would later go on to win the same race in 1989.

Contents

Speedweeks

Cale Yarborough and Waddell Wilson were ready to repeat as Daytona 500 champion as Speedweeks got under way. Yarborough won the pole with a new track record, so next for him was the Twin 125. In race one, he won after 1980 Daytona 500 champ Buddy Baker failed to outfox the cagey veteran. baker was leadingwith 8 laps to go, but decided he would not be a sitting duck. Baker slowed and forced Yarborough to pass. Yarborough took off and Baker could not catch him. Yarborough won by 1.8 seconds. In the second race, 1982 Daytona 500 champ Bobby Allison hold off Harry Gant, while Darrell Waltrip in his 12th attempt to win the Daytona 500 struggled to a 13th-place finish.

Calamity Corner

It was in 1984 that the 4th turn was dubbed Calamity Corner after three vicious weeks. Ricky Rudd was battered and bruised in a wild, tumbling, sidewinding crash in the Busch Clash, but he won two weeks later in Richmond (despite a concussion suffered in the Clash; there was no concussion rule, implemented in 2014, at the time). In the second Twin 125, Randy LaJoie spun off turn four. His car began flying and went underside-first into the inside wall before flipping end over end to a hard stop. The next day, in a consolation race, Natz Peters's car ricocheted off the inside wall into the path of another car, driven by Jim Hurlbert. Both cars exploded in flames. Fortunately, none of the drivers were seriously injured.

When added with Waltrip's vicious crash at Daytona the previous year with out of control cars caused by the grass, by the time the Series returned to Daytona for the Firecracker 400 in July, the entire Turn 4 apron was paved over, the beginning of the track paving aprons for cars to scrub off speed on asphalt aprons instead of grass, which could cause acceleration. The backstretch apron was paved in 2015, following a serious incident at the 2015 Saturday support race for the Daytona 500 that injured Kyle Busch, the section of track past the tri-oval to Turn 1 was paved over and barriers realigned to temporarily seal off the road course during oval races.

The race

The drivers expressed their concern by staging a safe 500, which had no serious incidents. President Ronald Reagan gave the command "Gentlemen, start your engines!" by phone from the White House. Yarborough,Allison, Dale Earnhardt and Richard Petty took turns leading the early laps of the race, but Petty and Allison fell out early with mechanical problems. Yarborough clearly had the strongest car, leading 51 of the first 100 laps. Yarborough's car was so fast, he twice passed leading cars on the outside of the third turn.

Yarborough led most of the second half of the race, but Earnhardt and Terry Labonte were also strong, as well as Bill Elliott and Darrell Waltrip, who lead for the first time on lap 142. Waltrip took the lead again on lap 162 during green flag pit stops. The race's final caution came at lap 177, but four leaders, Waltrip, Yarborough, Labonte and Earnhardt-decided to remain on the track and hold their positions.

After the race resumed on lap 183, six cars pulled away from the field. And as the final lap started, it was Waltrip, Yarborough, Earnhardt, Neil Bonnett, Harry Gant, and Bill Elliott. For 38 laps, Waltrip had grimly hung onto the point. But he knew how fast Yarborough was. Yarborough made his move on the backstretch-the same move that had failed spectaculary in 1979 against Donnie Allison but worked perfectly in 1983 against Baker. Waltrip moved to the middle of the track, but did not aggressively block. Yarborough made the pass without drafting help.

Earnhardt also moved on Waltrip, but didn't begin his pass until turn four. He nipped Waltrip at the line, while Bonnett held off Elliott for fourth. Yarborough won by eight car lengths. For the sixth time in his career, Yarborough had a chance to make a last-lap pass for victory in a NASACR race. For the sixth time, he did it. And for the first time since Fireball Roberts in 1962, a single driver had won the pole, his qualifying race, and the 500. This made Yarborough become the only driver to win the Daytona 500 from the pole more than once, until Elliott joined him after winning the following year and in 1987.

References

1984 Daytona 500 Wikipedia


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