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1998 Las Vegas 400

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1998 Las Vegas 400

Date
  
March 1, 1998 (1998-03-01)

Location
  
Las Vegas Motor Speedway

Course
  
Permanent racing facility 1.5 mi (2.41 km)

Distance
  
267 laps, 400.5 mi (644.54 km)

Weather
  
Temperatures reaching up to 60.1 °F (15.6 °C); wind speeds up to 8.9 miles per hour (14.3 km/h)

Average speed
  
146.554 miles per hour (235.856 km/h)

The 1998 Las Vegas 400 was the inaugural running of the NASCAR Winston Cup Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Mark Martin, driver of the Valvoline Ford, won the race, and also led the most laps with 82. Dale Jarrett of the Quality Care Service/Ford Credit Ford won the pole position, but finished 40th due to an engine problem. A total of 120,000 people attended the race, with the profits from all three NASCAR races totaling $40 million for the local economy.

Contents

Race

The command to start the engines was given by boxing announcer Michael Buffer. As of the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, none of the top 16 finishers are currently racing full-time; Jeff Gordon, the lone current full-time driver, finished 17th.

This race has been self-acclaimed by Mark Martin as being his "biggest victory in the Winston Cup Series." Martin's diminutive stature made him shorter than the Vegas showgirls that posed with him after the race. He would collect six more career wins after this race; making him a strong contender for the championship with an all-new NASCAR team. The Ford Taurus would win more than 100 races after this event before it was retired and replaced with a new Ford model, the Fusion.

Jeff Burton had to fight back from a pit road penalty in order to finish the race with a decent position.

Race results

Source:

References

1998 Las Vegas 400 Wikipedia