Race details | |||
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Race 48 of 54 in the 1969 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season | |||
A pack of drivers are about to make a turn at the 1969 National 500 |
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Date | October 12, 1969 | ||
Location | Charlotte Motor Speedway (Concord, North Carolina) | ||
Course | Permanent racing facility 1.500 mi (2.414 km) |
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Distance | 334 laps, 501 mi (804 km) | ||
Avg Speed | 131.271 miles per hour (211.260 km/h) | ||
Pole position | |||
Driver | Cale Yarborough | Wood Brothers | |
Most laps led | |||
Driver | Donnie Allison | Banjo Matthews | |
Laps | 161 | ||
Winner | |||
27 |
Donnie Allison |
Banjo Matthews | |
Television | |||
Network | untelevised | ||
Announcers | none |
The 1969 National 500 was a NASCAR Grand National (now Sprint Cup Series) racing event that took place on October 12, 1969 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (Concord, North Carolina, USA).[1] This race is still being held in today's Sprint Cup Series as the Bank of America 500.
It took three hours and forty-two minutes to complete the race.[1][2] Nine cautions were given out for fifty laps but Donnie Allison defeated Bobby Allison[3] by sixteen seconds.[1] Fifty thousand people attended this live race to see speeds averaging 131.271 miles per hour (211.260 km/h) and Cale Yarborough earning his pole position by qualifying with a speed of 162.162 miles per hour (260.974 km/h).[1][2]
Sheraton (a popular chain of hotels and resorts even back then) was the only official driver sponsor that wasn't linked with the automotive industry for this particular race.[1] Other notable drivers in this race include: A.J. Foyt, Coo Coo Marlin, Cale Yarborough, J.D. McDuffie, Wendell Scott, and Richard Petty.[1][2] This would become the forty-eighth racing officially sanctioned by NASCAR out of the 54 that would be raced in 1969.[1][2] The 1969 NASCAR Grand National season would later mark its conclusion with the 1969 Texas 500 race on December 7, 1969 with David Pearson emerging as the eventual champion for the year.[1] Pearson would later become recognized for winning races more consistently than Richard Petty but having an abbreviated racing career compared to him.[1]
Had Pearson been able to participate in the number of races as Petty, he might have beaten Richard Petty's record of 200 career race wins. The winner's purse was considered to be $20,280 ($121,495.3 in today's money).[1]
* Driver failed to finish race
Preceded by 1969 Wilkes 400 |
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Season 1969 |
Succeeded by 1969 untitled race at Savannah Speedway |