1982 Winston 500


The 1982 Winston 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series racing event that took place May 2, 1982, at Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Alabama.
The makes of the cars involved in the race were 1 Oldsmobile, 9 Pontiacs, 5 Fords, 1 Chevrolet, 1 Dodge, and 24 Buicks. During the early 1980s, the NASCAR Winston Cup Series was plagued with top teams running big engines and finishing in third place to avoid inspection.

Background

Talladega Superspeedway, originally known as Alabama International Motor Superspeedway , is a motorsports complex located north of Talladega, Alabama. It is located on the former Anniston Air Force Base in the small city of Lincoln. The track is a Tri-oval and was constructed by International Speedway Corporation, a business controlled by the France Family, in the 1960s. Talladega is most known for its steep banking and the unique location of the start/finish line - located just past the exit to pit road. The track currently hosts the NASCAR series such as the Sprint Cup Series, Xfinity Series, and the Camping World Truck Series. Talladega Superspeedway is the longest NASCAR oval with a length of, and the track at its peak had a seating capacity of 175,000 spectators.

Qualifying

won the pole position with a qualifying speed of ; the first 200+ MPH qualifying speed in NASCAR history. It broke the previous qualifying record of set in 1970 by Bobby Isaac.
GridDriver
128Benny Parsons200.176
211Darrell Waltrip199.446
33Ricky Rudd199.388
444Terry Labonte197.860
550Geoffrey Bodine197.497
627Cale Yarborough197.379
79Bill Elliott196.609
847Ron Bouchard196.343
943Richard Petty195.993
1071Dave Marcis195.705
1102Mark Martin195.673
1288Bobby Allison195.481
131Buddy Baker195.166
1433Harry Gant195.035
1542Kyle Petty194.686
1698Morgan Shepherd194.473
1737Donnie Allison194.181
1896Elliott Forbes-Robinson193.749
1921Neil Bonnett193.422
2015Dale Earnhardt192.797
2175Joe Ruttman194.200
2262Rick Wilson194.098
2324Lennie Pond191.559
242Tim Richmond191.555
2599Phillip Duffie191.482
2666Lowell Cowell191.444
2773Steve Moore191.218
2817Lake Speed190.719
2954David Simko190.537
3019John Anderson189.452
316Dick May189.141
3267Buddy Arrington188.984
3352Jimmy Means188.672
3490Jody Ridley188.660
3594Tommy Gale187.434
3634L.W. Wright187.379
3748Slick Johnson187.251
3870J.D. McDuffie187.087
3907Bill Scott186.824
4040Ferrell Harris185.899

Race report

There were 40 drivers on the grid; all of them were American-born. Darrell Waltrip defeated Terry Labonte by approximately three car lengths even though Labonte had a fender under Waltrip coming to the finish line. Waltrip earned $44,250 for winning the race. In the final laps before the checkered flag, the race became a battle between Benny Parsons, Darrell Waltrip, Terry Labonte and Kyle Petty. Parsons would lead seven of those laps while Waltrip led 13 followed by Labonte leading two. The green flag was waved at 1:00 P.M. while the checkered flag was waved at approximately 4:19 P.M.; There were eight cautions for 39 laps. There were 51 lead changes and the average speed of the race was. The race covered 188 laps of the track, totaling. Attendance was announced at 100,000 spectators.
David Simko, Phillip Duffie, and L.W. Wright each had the potential to do better than Darrell Waltrip during the 1982 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season because of their abilities to perform consistently during that season. In reality, all three of these drivers performed miserably throughout the race and failed to overtake Darrell Waltrip as one of the greatest NASCAR drivers of the 1980s.
David Simko crashed his vehicle on lap 4 while L.W. Wright blew his engine on lap 13. Further engine failures would be caused by Jody Ridley on lap 16, Cale Yarborough on lap 17 and Ron Bouchard on lap 23. Steve Moore's vehicle developed problems with its clutch that forced Moore out of the race on lap 32. Lake Speed blew his engine on lap 39 while Geoffrey Bodine did the same thing on lap 53. A haphazard valve sidelined Rick Wilson on lap 57. Lennie Pond would cause terminal damage to his vehicle on lap 66 while Dave Marcis blew his engine on the same lap. Elliott Forbes-Robinson would be relegated to the sidelines due to a nonworking engine on lap 73 while a problematic piston took Bill Scott out of the race on lap 75.
Richard Petty had an issue with his vehicle's fuel pump that would knock him out of the race on lap 82 while transmission problems took out Bill Elliott on lap 100. Buddy Baker developed steering problems with his vehicle on lap 109; forcing his early exit from the race. An engine issue took out Joe Ruttman on lap 159 and John Anderson on lap 164.
Terry Labonte took the championship lead after this race. Ferrel Harris would retire after this race with a 23rd-place finish. One-time NASCAR driver L.W. Wright would race his only professional stock car event on this day; he managed to out-qualify JD McDuffie because McDuffie was driving some terrible equipment. Wright was a con artist who managed to swindle people into financing him getting a ride for this race. His credentials as a licensed NASCAR driver weren't asked for during the early 1980s.
If NASCAR had kept the giant wings of the Plymouth Superbird for several more years, 200MPH pole position speeds would've happened much earlier, and maybe even 202 MPH or 203 MPH might've been achieved before luck-based strategies began to be used in NASCAR sometime during the 21st century.

Results

Standings after the race