1994 Daytona 500

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1994 Daytona 500
Race details [1]
Race 1 of 31 in the 1994 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season
1994 Daytona 500 program cover and logo.jpg
1994 Daytona 500 program cover
Date February 20, 1994 (1994-2-20)
Location Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida
Course Permanent racing facility
2.5 mi (4.02336 km)
Distance 200 laps, 500 mi (804.672 km)
Weather Mild with temperatures reaching up to 77 °F (25 °C); wind speeds approaching 14 miles per hour (23 km/h)
Average speed 156.931 miles per hour (252.556 km/h)
Pole position
Driver TriStar Motorsports
Qualifying race winners
Duel 1 Winner Ernie Irvan Robert Yates Racing
Duel 2 Winner Dale Earnhardt Richard Childress Racing
Most laps led
Driver Ernie Irvan Robert Yates Racing
Laps 84
Winner
No. 4 Sterling Marlin Morgan-McClure Motorsports
Television in the United States
Network CBS
Announcers Ken Squier, Chris Economaki and Ned Jarrett
Nielsen ratings 9.6/26
(13.6 million viewers)
Logo for the 1994 Daytona 500. 1994-95 Daytona 500 logo.png
Logo for the 1994 Daytona 500.

The 1994 Daytona 500, the 36th running of the event, was held February 20 at Daytona International Speedway, in Daytona Beach, Florida. Loy Allen Jr., ARCA graduate and Winston Cup rookie, driving the No. 19 for TriStar Motorsports, won the pole. Speedweeks 1994 was marked by tragedy when two drivers, Neil Bonnett and Rodney Orr, were killed in separate practice accidents for this race. Sterling Marlin in the Morgan-McClure Motorsports No. 4 won the race, the first win of his NASCAR career.

Contents

Fatal crashes in practice sessions

During Speedweeks, on the first day of practice for the Daytona 500, legendary driver Neil Bonnett crashed in turn four. Bonnett died at Halifax Hospital from massive head injuries. Three days later, reigning Goody's Dash Series (NASCAR's four-cylinder class) champion, Rodney Orr, making his Cup debut, lost control and spun in turn two. His car flipped and hit the catch fence with the roof above the driver's seat. Orr was killed instantly. After the deaths of Bonnett and Orr, NASCAR Veteran Jimmy Means announced his retirement from driving. Following these tragedies, a worried Rusty Wallace gave a lecture, calling out the drivers for over-aggression on the track, during the pre-race Drivers Meeting. In his lecture, Wallace was extremely critical of the drivers taking bold risks such as gambling on their tires, making overly-aggressive moves early in the races, and not taking much time to fix any damages to their car on pit road. Wallace stopped for a short bit midway through his speech to give fellow driver Ken Schrader a chance to speak during his lecture with Schrader saying "we had a reality check this week." In conclusion, Wallace told the drivers, "Use your damn heads please!" He was given a round of applause from the drivers and teams after his lecture.

In the middle of the Goodyear-Hoosier tire war, Hoosier released teams from their contracts three days following Orr's death. Hoosier received blame from some observers as the tires were the only linking factor between the two deaths. However, the criticism was purely speculative and NASCAR never blamed the tires for the deaths and never offered an official cause of the accident for either fatality.

An investigation done by the Orlando Sentinel blamed Orr's crash on a broken right-rear shock absorber mounting bracket. That same part was reportedly broken on Bonnett's car. NASCAR refused to comment on the outside investigation. In order to reduce drag, teams were using extremely aggressive suspension packages with extremely soft shock absorbers and springs at Daytona and Talladega in order to reduce drag. The cars often bottomed out, creating sparks, which became visible at Daytona after the Firecracker 400 was run at night in 1998.

The extremely soft shock absorbers and springs, along with aged pavement (last replaced in 1979) caused the mounting brackets to fail. By 1999, drivers were complaining about the extremely soft shock package for safety issues, and NASCAR implemented rules in 2000 mandating specification shock absorbers and springs supplied by the sanctioning body at Daytona and Talladega, where teams arrived at the NASCAR trackside office and are randomly assigned shock absorbers and springs that must be returned to NASCAR at the end of the race in order to stop this dangerous practice. This practice is not used at other circuits [2] As of 2022, teams in the Cup Series are required to use specification shock absorbers and springs from seventh-generation specification supplier Tenneco.

Summary

Rookie polesitter Loy Allen, Jr. failed to lead the first lap. Ernie Irvan and Dale Earnhardt swapped the lead several times in the first 60 laps (which turned out to be a preview of the Championship battle), with Jeff Gordon leading briefly. The Big One happened on lap 62 when Chuck Bown and Kyle Petty touched in Turn 4. Petty, Robert Pressley, John Andretti and Rusty Wallace were done for the day. Hut Stricklin, Harry Gant, Bobby Hillin Jr., and rookie Jeff Burton, among others, were also involved. The race restarted with Daytona 500 rookie Todd Bodine in the lead. He was soon passed by Earnhardt and was then tagged by Gordon whom Todd thought he was clear of. Jimmy Spencer, Ted Musgrave, Brett Bodine and Michael Waltrip were caught up in a chain reaction to Bodine's spin; Brett and Waltrip would continue.

The finish

The yellow flag was displayed with 60 laps to go when Morgan Shepherd spun, which made for interesting fuel mileage strategy. Earnhardt, Irvan, and Mark Martin came into the pits again for extra fuel. 1990 winner Derrike Cope led the field at the restart, only to be passed by Marlin and Irvan a couple of laps later. Irvan took the lead with 43 laps to go, but on Lap 180 he suddenly got loose in Turn 4. He recovered the car, but Marlin retook the lead as Irvan fell back to 7th. With 12 laps to go, Irvan was repassed by Martin, whom he had passed a few laps before, but with eight laps to go the Ford duo tag-teamed Jeff Gordon for 3rd and 4th. The two Fords swapped positions with five laps to go, and Irvan passed Terry Labonte (who was hung up behind Jimmy Hensley) in the tri-oval with three laps to go. But Sterling Marlin's Morgan-McClure Chevrolet was untouchable, and he finally won a Winston Cup race in his 279th start after eight second-place finishes. He broke Dave Marcis' previous record for most starts before his first Cup win (227th start, at Martinsville in 1975). Martin ran out of fuel with two to go, but he managed to take the white flag to complete 199 laps.

Race results

PosGridNo.DriverTeamManufacturerLapsStatusLaps ledPoints
144 Sterling Marlin Morgan-McClure Motorsports Chevrolet 200Running30180
2328 Ernie Irvan (W) Robert Yates Racing Ford 200Running84180
395 Terry Labonte Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 200Running1170
4624 Jeff Gordon Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 200Running7165
51221 Morgan Shepherd Wood Brothers Racing Ford 200Running7160
63177 Greg Sacks U.S. Racing Ford 200Running0150
723 Dale Earnhardt Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet 200Running45151
82010 Ricky Rudd Rudd Performance Motorsports Ford 200Running0142
9811 Bill Elliott (W) Junior Johnson & Associates Ford 200Running0138
101325 Ken Schrader Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 200Running0134
11397 Geoff Bodine (W) Geoff Bodine Racing Ford 200Running1135
122340 Bobby Hamilton Team SABCO Chevrolet 200Running2132
1376 Mark Martin Roush Racing Ford 199Out of fuel5129
142215 Lake Speed Bud Moore Engineering Ford 199Running0121
152555 Jimmy Hensley RaDiUs Motorsports Ford 199Running0118
164222 Bobby Labonte Bill Davis Racing Pontiac 199Running0115
171843 Wally Dallenbach Jr. Petty Enterprises Pontiac 199Running0112
18349 Joe Ruttman Melling Racing Ford 199Running0109
192880 Jimmy Horton Hover Motorsports Ford 199Running0106
202932 Dick Trickle Active Motorsports Ford 198Running0103
211698 Derrike Cope (W) Cale Yarborough Motorsports Ford 198Running7105
22119 Loy Allen Jr. # TriStar Motorsports Ford 198Running097
233712 Chuck Bown Bobby Allison Motorsports Ford 198Running094
243390 Bobby Hillin Jr. Donlavey Racing Ford 198Running091
252771 Dave Marcis Marcis Auto Racing Chevrolet 198Running088
26358 Jeff Burton # Stavola Brothers Racing Ford 197Running085
27301 Rick Mast Precision Products Racing Ford 197Running082
283217 Darrell Waltrip (W) DarWal Inc. Chevrolet 197Running079
291797 Chad Little Mark Rypien Motorsports Ford 196Running181
304095 Jeremy Mayfield #Sadler Brothers Racing Ford 195Out of fuel073
311430 Michael Waltrip Bahari Racing Pontiac 194Running070
321026 Brett Bodine King Racing Ford 185Running067
333823 Hut Stricklin Travis Carter Enterprises Ford 174Running064
343633 Harry Gant Leo Jackson Motorsports Chevrolet 165Running061
354118 Dale Jarrett (W) Joe Gibbs Racing Chevrolet 146Engine363
361175 Todd Bodine Butch Mock Motorsports Ford 79Accident760
372127 Jimmy Spencer Junior Johnson & Associates Ford 79Accident052
382416 Ted Musgrave Roush Racing Ford 79Accident049
392642 Kyle Petty Team SABCO Pontiac 64Accident046
401954 Robert Pressley Leo Jackson Motorsports Chevrolet 62Accident043
4152 Rusty Wallace Penske Racing South Ford 61Accident040
421514 John Andretti # Hagan Racing Chevrolet 47Accident037
Failed to Qualify
4389 Jim Sauter Mueller Racing Ford
4441 Joe Nemechek # Larry Hedrick Motorsports Chevrolet
4552 Brad Teague Means Racing Ford
4645 Rich Bickle #Isenhour Racing Chevrolet
4734 Bob Brevak Brevak Racing Ford
4802T. W. TaylorTaylor Racing Ford
490 Delma Cowart H. L. Waters Racing Ford
5048 Trevor Boys Hylton Racing Pontiac
5147 Billy Standridge #Johnson Racing Ford
5256 Jerry Hill Tierney Motorsports Ford
5374 Kerry Teague KT Motorsports Chevrolet
5429 Steve Grissom # Diamond Ridge Motorsports Chevrolet
5573 Phil Barkdoll Barkdoll Racing Chevrolet
5620 Buddy Baker Moroso Racing Ford
5753 Ritchie Petty Petty Brothers Racing Ford
5861 Rick Carelli Chesrown Racing Chevrolet
5931 Ward Burton # A.G. Dillard Motorsports Chevrolet
6037 Rodney Orr #1Orr Motorsports Ford
6151 Neil Bonnett 1 Phoenix Racing Chevrolet
6257 Joe Ruttman 2Bob Rahilly Ford
6362Ronnie Sanders2 Henley Gray Ford
6466 Mark Thompson 2Mike Brandt Ford
6584 Norm Benning 2 Norm Benning Racing Oldsmobile
6684 Rick Crawford 2 Circle Bar Racing Chevrolet
6785 Scott Brayton 2Mansion Motorsports Ford
6892 Brad Teague 2 Jimmy Means Racing Ford
6999 Danny Sullivan 2Chris Virtue Chevrolet
# Rookie of the Year candidate / 1 Withdrawn due to driver fatality / 2 Withdrawn for other reasons
Source: [3]

References

  1. "Weather of the 1994 Daytona 500". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Retrieved June 19, 2013.
  2. Harris, Mike. "NASCAR puts in new shock rule". Las Vegas Sun. Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  3. "1994 Daytona 500". Racing-Reference.info. February 20, 1994. Retrieved June 3, 2013.