1972 Old Dominion 500


The 1972 Old Dominion 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series racing event that was held on September 24, 1972, at Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Virginia.
The race car drivers still had to commute to the races using the same stock cars that competed in a typical weekend's race through a policy of homologation. This policy was in effect until roughly 1975. By 1980, NASCAR had completely stopped tracking the year model of all the vehicles and most teams did not take stock cars to the track under their own power anymore.

Background

is one of five short tracks to hold NASCAR races. The standard track at Martinsville Speedway is a four-turn short track oval that is long. The track's turns are banked at eleven degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at zero degrees. The back stretch also has a zero degree banking.

Race report

Five hundred laps were done on a paved track spanning in a time of three hours and forty-five minutes. Richard Petty would defeat Bobby Allison by a time of six seconds in front of 31,000 live audience members; making this race the closest Bobby Allison ever came to winning at Martinsville. Although Cecil Gordon had a competitive finish of 10th place during this event, his lackluster performance during the 1972 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season would eventually cost him a shot at winning the championship.
Exactly ten minutes from the race along with a flyover by the local military jets were used in the 1973 American film The Last American Hero. While Richard Petty and Bobby Allison got filmed most of the time, a moment involving Ray Hendrick's #2 vehicle crashing on lap 311 was also a notable event during the filming.
Allison would earn the pole position with a speed of. The average speed of the race, however, would be a mere. Eight cautions slowed the race for 58 laps in the entire race. All thirty-six of the qualifying drivers on the grid were male and born somewhere in the United States of America. Originally, 56 drivers auditioned for this race; including Joe Frasson, who was one of the ones who failed to qualify. Bill Shirey would be the unfortunate last-place finisher due to an overheating issue on lap 19. LeeRoy Yarbrough and Fred Lorenzen would retire from NASCAR after this race.
Richard Petty would go on to win the championship shortly after this race was over while Bobby Allison would find a new employer named Ralph Moody for the 1973 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season. The total purse of this racing event was $46,650 ; the first-place finisher received $7,350 while the last-place finisher received $425.
Six of NASCAR's most notable crew chiefs were on attendance for this race; including Harry Hyde, Dale Inman, Vic Ballard and Lee Gordon.

Technological concerns

Improvements in tire and engine technology in the early 1970s had made NASCAR Cup Series vehicles overpowered compared to the limited space that Martinsville Speedway had for breathing space. Further technological advancements by 2013 have caused further concern for driver safety at Martinsville; indicating that the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series may have to use restrictor plates in Martinsville if tire/engine technology keeps its current pace of development.

Qualifying

Finishing order

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  1. Richard Petty
  2. Bobby Allison
  3. David Pearson
  4. Buddy Baker
  5. Jimmy Hensley
  6. Benny Parsons
  7. Buddy Arrington
  8. James Hylton
  9. Elmo Langley
  10. Cecil Gordon
  11. Coo Coo Marlin
  12. Bill Champion
  13. Raymond Williams
  14. J.D. McDuffie
  15. John Sears
  16. Ben Arnold
  17. Neil Castles
  18. Ed Negre
  19. Charlie Roberts
  20. Walter Ballard
  21. Jabe Thomas
  22. James Cox
  23. Henley Gray
  24. David Ray Boggs
  25. Ray Hendrick
  26. Tiny Lund
  27. Fred Lorenzen
  28. Dean Dalton
  29. Dave Marcis
  30. LeeRoy Yarbrough
  31. Bill Dennis
  32. Frank Warren
  33. Richard Childress
  34. Larry Smith
  35. Bobby Isaac
  36. Bill Shirey

    Timeline

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