1967 Fireball 300

1967 Fireball 300
Race details[1]
Race 6 of 49 in the 1967 NASCAR Grand National Series season
Date March 7, 1967 (1967-03-07)
Official name Fireball 300
Location Asheville-Weaverville Speedway, Weaverville, North Carolina
Course Permanent racing facility
0.500 mi (0.804 km)
Distance 300 laps, 150 mi (241 km)
Weather Chilly with temperatures approaching 71.1 °F (21.7 °C); winds up to 15 miles per hour (24 km/h)
Average speed 83.360 miles per hour (134.155 km/h)
Attendance 9,500[2]
Pole position
Driver Junior Johnson & Associates
Most laps led
Driver Richard Petty Petty Enterprises
Laps 150
Winner
No. 43 Richard Petty Petty Enterprises
Television in the United States
Network untelevised
Announcers none

The 1967 Fireball 300 was a NASCAR Grand National Series (now Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series) event that was held on March 7, 1967, at Asheville-Weaverville Speedway in Weaverville, North Carolina.[2]

The name of the race was named after Fireball Roberts who died years before this race in a racing accident.

Summary

This was the historic site of Richard Petty's 50th career in front of nine thousand and five hundred people in what is now known as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.[2] The average speed of the race was 83.360 miles per hour (134.155 km/h) on a paved oval track spanning 0.500 miles (0.805 km) for three hundred laps.[2] It took one hour and forty-seven minutes for the race to reach its conclusion; Petty defeating Darel Dieringer by outlapping him twice.[2] All twenty-two racers were from the United States of America.[2]

Total winnings for this race were $7,150 ($51,355.84 when adjusted for inflation). Individual earnings for each driver ranged from the winner's share of $1,800 ($12,928.74 when adjusted for inflation) to the last-place finisher's portion of $100 ($718.26 when adjusted for inflation).[3]

Jim Conway would retire from NASCAR Cup Series competition after this event.[4] The transition to purpose-built racecars began in the early 1960s and occurred gradually over that decade. Changes made to the sport by the late 1960s brought an end to the "strictly stock" vehicles of the 1950s; most of the cars were trailered to events or hauled in by trucks.

Qualifying

Grid No. Driver Manufacturer
1 26 Darel Dieringer '67 Ford
2 43 Richard Petty '67 Plymouth
3 14 Jim Paschal '65 Plymouth
4 2 Bobby Allison '66 Chevrolet
5 4 John Sears '66 Ford
6 6 David Pearson '66 Dodge
7 88 Buck Baker '66 Oldsmobile
8 64 Elmo Langley '66 Ford
9 19 J.T. Putney '66 Chevrolet
10 75 Earl Brooks '66 Ford

Finishing order

  1. Richard Petty (No. 43)
  2. Darel Dieringer† (No. 26)
  3. Bobby Allison (No. 2)
  4. David Pearson (No. 6)
  5. John Sears† (No. 4)
  6. J.T. Putney (No. 19)
  7. Paul Lewis (No. 00)
  8. Elmo Langley† (No. 64)
  9. Clyde Lynn† (No. 20)
  10. Wendell Scott† (No. 34)
  11. Bill Seifert (No. 45)
  12. Henley Gray (No. 97)
  13. Paul Dean Holt (No. 31)
  14. Jim Conway* (No. 91)
  15. Wayne Smith* (No. 38)
  16. Roy Tyner*† (No. 9)
  17. Roy Mayne* (No. 46)
  18. Neil Castles* (No. 09)
  19. Earl Brooks*† (No. 75)
  20. James Hylton* (No. 44)
  21. Buck Baker*† (No. 88)
  22. Jim Paschal*† (No. 14)

* Driver failed to finish race
† Signifies that the driver is known to be deceased

Timeline

References

  1. "1967 Fireball 300 weather information". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "1967 Fireball 300 information". Racing Reference. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  3. "1967 Fireball 300 prize winnings information". Fantasy Racing Cheat Sheet. Retrieved 2012-12-02.
  4. "Retirements from NASCAR". Race Database. Retrieved 2012-12-02.
Preceded by
1967 Augusta 300
Richard Petty's Career Wins
1960-1984
Succeeded by
1967 Columbia 200
Preceded by
1966
NASCAR Fireball 300 Races
1965-1969
Succeeded by
1968
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