1968 Beltsville 300

1968 Beltsville 300
Race details[1][2]
Race 16 of 49 in the 1968 NASCAR Grand National Series season
Date May 17, 1968 (1968-05-17)
Official name Beltsville 300
Location Beltsville Speedway, Beltsville, Maryland
Course Permanent racing facility
0.500 mi (0.836 km)
Distance 300 laps, 150.0 mi (225.0 km)
Weather Warm with temperatures approaching 80.1 °F (26.7 °C); wind speeds up to 19 miles per hour (31 km/h)
Average speed 74.844 miles per hour (120.450 km/h)
Attendance 8,700
Pole position
Driver Petty Enterprises
Most laps led
Driver Richard Petty Petty Enterprises
Laps 158
Winner
No. 17 David Pearson Holman-Moody
Television in the United States
Network untelevised
Announcers none

The 1968 Beltsville 300 was a NASCAR Grand National Series (now Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series) event that was held on May 17, 1968, at Beltsville Speedway in Beltsville, Maryland.

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.

Background

Beltsville Speedway was specially designed with banked turns for stock car racing. Originally known as the "Baltimore-Washington Speedway", this track received its final name in its 19th month of operation.[3] The track hosted modified stock car racing vehicles alongside the other NASCAR series.[3] Wednesday nights were the original night for racing but the schedule eventually added Friday night racing.[3] Ten Grand National races were raced there including the popular Beltsville 300 series of races.[4]

Summary

It took two hours for David Pearson (in his Holman-Moody owned '68 Ford Torino) to defeat Bobby Isaac (in his '67 Dodge Charger) by one lap and five seconds in front of 8,700 people.[2] The majority of the starting grid would be driving Ford vehicles while Dodge, Chevrolet, Buick, Oldsmobile and Plymouth made up the minority of the racing vehicles.[5] Notable crew chiefs who participated in the event were Ray Hicks, Jake Elder, Frankie Scott, Dale Inman and Harry Hyde.[6]

Notable speeds were: 74.844 miles or 120.450 kilometres per hour as the average speed and 83.604 miles or 134.548 kilometres per hour as the pole position speed.[2] The track was a paved oval track spanning 0.500 miles or 0.805 kilometres.[2] Three hundred laps were raced on this track for a grand total of 150.0 miles or 241.4 kilometres.[2] There was one Canadian participant named Frog Fagan; he started in 20th place and finished the race in 22nd place.[2]

Total winnings for this race were $6,800 ($46,832.15 when considering inflation); David Pearson would receive $1,400 ($9,641.91 when considering inflation) while last-place finisher Wendell Scott would receive a meager $100 ($688.71 when considering inflation).[7] Tim Pistone was the start and park car for this race; he quit the race for reasons unknown.[2] Other notable racers who participated included Wendell Scott, Buck Baker, and J.D. McDuffie.[2]

Qualifying

Grid No. Driver Manufacturer
1 43 Richard Petty '68 Plymouth
2 17 David Pearson '68 Ford
3 5 Pete Hamilton '68 Ford
4 10 Bill Champion '66 Ford
5 48 James Hylton '67 Dodge
6 4 John Sears '67 Ford
7 71 Bobby Isaac '67 Dodge
8 3 Buddy Baker '67 Dodge
9 55 Tom Pistone '66 Ford
10 25 Jabe Thomas '67 Ford
11 07 George Davis '67 Chevrolet
12 20 Clyde Lynn '67 Mercury
13 64 Elmo Langley '66 Ford
14 70 J.D. McDuffie '67 Buick
15 28 Earl Brooks '66 Ford

Finishing order

  1. David Pearson (No. 17)
  2. Bobby Isaac (No. 71)
  3. Buddy Baker (No. 3)
  4. James Hylton (No. 48)
  5. John Sears (No. 4)
  6. Jabe Thomas (No. 25)
  7. Neil Castles (No. 06)
  8. Roy Tyner (No. 09)
  9. Bill Champion (No. 10)
  10. Henley Gray (No. 19)
  11. Earl Brooks (No. 28)
  12. Paul Dean Holt (No. 01)
  13. Elmo Langley (No. 64)
  14. Richard Petty (No. 43)
  15. J.D. McDuffie (No. 70)
  16. Tom Pistone (No. 55)
  17. George Davis (No. 07)
  18. Ed Negre (No. 8)
  19. Pete Hamilton (No. 5)
  20. Buck Baker (No. 88)
  21. Clyde Lynn (No. 20)
  22. Frog Fagan (No. 95)
  23. Wendell Scott (No. 34)

Timeline

References

  1. "1968 Beltsville 300 weather information". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "1968 Beltsville 300 information". Racing Reference. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  3. 1 2 3 Complete history of the Beltsville Speedway at The Vintage Racer
  4. Beltsville Speedway event history at Everything Stock Car
  5. "1968 Beltsville 300 information (makes and models of the cars". Driver Averages. Retrieved 2015-03-14.
  6. "1968 Beltsville 300 crew chief information". Racing Reference. Retrieved 2017-07-01.
  7. "1968 Beltsville 300 information (prize winnings)". Fantasy Racing Cheat Sheet. Retrieved 2012-09-15.
Preceded by
1968 Rebel 400
NASCAR Grand National Season
1968
Succeeded by
1968 Tidewater 250
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.