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1974 World 600

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Auto race held at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1974

1974 World 600
Race details[1][2]
Race 13 of 30 in the1974 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season
Layout of Charlotte Motor Speedway
Layout of Charlotte Motor Speedway
DateMay 26, 1974 (1974-05-26)
Official nameWorld 600
LocationCharlotte Motor Speedway,Concord, North Carolina
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course length1.500 miles (2.414 km)
Distance400 laps, 600 mi (965 km)
WeatherWarm with temperatures of 81 °F (27 °C); wind speeds of 13 miles per hour (21 km/h)
Average speed135.720 miles per hour (218.420 km/h)
Attendance84,000[3]
Pole position
DriverWood Brothers
Most laps led
DriverDavid PearsonWood Brothers
Laps161
Winner
No. 21David PearsonWood Brothers
Television in the United States
Networkuntelevised
Announcersnone
Motor car race

The1974 World 600, the 15th running of theevent, was aNASCARWinston Cup Series event that was held on May 26, 1974, atCharlotte Motor Speedway inConcord, North Carolina.

This would be the first time the World 600 andIndianapolis 500 were raced on the same day.

Race report

[edit]

The race was shortened by 40 laps due to the energy crisis of that year. The lead changed 37 times amongDavid Pearson,Richard Petty,Cale Yarborough,Buddy Baker, andDonnie Allison. Allison and Baker fell out with engine failures while Yarborough spun out early in the race, raced back to the front, then crashed out in the final 20 laps.[3][2]

The race took three hours and fifty-eight minutes.[3][2] Eight cautions slowed the race for 48 laps.[3] The average speed was 135.72 miles per hour (218.42 km/h).[3][2] Pearson defeated Petty by 0.6 seconds in front of eighty-four thousand people.[3][2] The late Jim Vandiver came home in eighth place in his signature #31 Dodge.[3][2] This would be Pearson's second World 600 victory.[3][2] His first career Cup win was in this event in 1961.

Sam McQuagg would make his final start in this race before retiring from NASCAR; McQuagg was teammates with Bobby Isaac; they retired on lap 187 due to vehicle problems.[4] He would later become a commercial pilot for the W. C. Bradly Co. inColumbus,Georgia and would eventually die of cancer in 2009.[4]

Individual earnings for each driver ranged from the winner's share of $26,400 ($168,322 when adjusted for inflation) to the last-place finisher's share of $1,075 ($6,854 when adjusted for inflation). NASCAR allocated a grand total of $167,305 ($1,066,710 when adjusted for inflation).[5]

Qualifying

[edit]
Grid[3]No.DriverManufacturer
121David Pearson'73Mercury
243Richard Petty'74Dodge
315Buddy Baker'73Ford
411Cale Yarborough'74Chevrolet
590Charlie Glotzbach'72Ford
632Dick Brooks'74Dodge
772Benny Parsons'74Chevrolet
854Lennie Pond'74Chevrolet
952Earl Ross'74Chevrolet
1006Neil Castles'73Dodge
1157Bob Burcham'74Chevrolet
125Harry Gant'74Dodge
1398Richie Panch'72Ford
1431Jim Vandiver'72Dodge
1528Sam McQuagg'73Chevrolet
1688Donnie Allison'74Chevrolet
1729Bobby Isaac'74Chevrolet
1895Darrell Waltrip'74Chevrolet
1918Joe Frasson'74Dodge
2096Richard Childress'73Chevrolet
2179Frank Warren'74Dodge
221Billy Scott'74Chevrolet
2312Bobby Allison'74Chevrolet
2448James Hylton'74Chevrolet
2535Dan Daughtry'72Ford

Finishing order

[edit]

Note: Each driver would get an additional 40 laps due to the then-currentenergy crisis (which officially ended in 1980).[2]

  1. David Pearson† (No. 21)
  2. Richard Petty (No. 43)
  3. Bobby Allison (No. 12)
  4. Darrell Waltrip (No. 95)
  5. Earl Ross† (No. 52)
  6. Dave Marcis (No. 2)
  7. Dick Trickle† (No. 81)
  8. Jim Vandiver† (No. 31)
  9. David Sisco† (No. 05)
  10. J.D. McDuffie† (No. 70)
  11. Cale Yarborough*† (No. 11)
  12. Walter Ballard (No. 30)
  13. Roy Mayne† (No. 25)
  14. Harry Gant (No. 5)
  15. James Hylton*† (No. 48)
  16. Neil Castles (No. 06)
  17. Frank Warren (No. 79)
  18. Dick Skillen (No. 78)
  19. Buddy Arrington* (No. 67)
  20. Lennie Pond*† (No. 54)
  21. Tony Bettenhausen Jr.† (No. 9)
  22. Buddy Baker*† (No. 15)
  23. Richie Panch*† (No. 98)
  24. Bill Scott* (No. 1)
  25. G.C. Spencer*† (No. 49)
  26. Travis Tiller* (No. 46)
  27. Dick Brooks*† (No. 32)
  28. Cecil Gordon*† (No. 24)
  29. Dan Daughtry* (No. 35)
  30. Donnie Allison* (No. 88)
  31. Benny Parsons*† (No. 72)
  32. Sam McQuagg*† (No. 28)
  33. Bobby Isaac*† (No. 29)
  34. Richard Childress* (No. 96)
  35. Randy Tissot* (No. 74)
  36. Bob Burcham*† (No. 57)
  37. Charlie Glotzbach* (No. 90)
  38. Coo Coo Marlin*† (No. 14)
  39. Jackie Rogers* (No. 93)
  40. Joe Frasson*† (No. 18)

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

References

[edit]
  1. ^"1974 World 600 weather information". The Old Farmers' Almanac. RetrievedAugust 2, 2012.
  2. ^abcdefgh"1974 World 600 racing results (second reference)". Ultimate Racing History. RetrievedDecember 11, 2010.
  3. ^abcdefghi"1974 World 600 racing results". Racing Reference. RetrievedNovember 12, 2010.
  4. ^ab"NASCAR Driver of the Day: Sam McQuagg". NASCAR Driver of the Day. RetrievedJanuary 7, 2011.
  5. ^"1974 World 600 winnings information". Fantasy Racing Cheat Sheet. RetrievedDecember 2, 2012.
Preceded by NASCAR Winston Cup Series races
1974
Succeeded by
Preceded by World 600 races
1974
Succeeded by
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