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1992 NASCAR Winston Cup Series

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thumb|[[Bill Elliott]] finished second in the championship.

The 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 44th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 21st modern-era Cup season. The season began on February 9, 1992, and ended on November 15, 1992. Independent owner/driver Alan Kulwicki of AK Racing won the Winston Cup championship.

The Generation 4 car was introduced this season, when body panels were removed, teams spent hours in a wind tunnel to gain aerodynamics, the led shot was replaced by the led ingot, the fuel mileage was cut for the drivers to lead more laps, and the bumpers, nose, and tail were composed to mullet fiber glass.

The 1992 season was considered one of the most dramatic and emotional years in NASCAR. The seven-time champion, and "King of stock car racing," Richard Petty retired from the sport at the season's end, concluding a year-long "Fan Appreciation Tour." Petty appeared across the country for autographs and diecast cars were made of his No. 43 car for all 29 of the races he appeared in. The season also saw the quiet debut of a future champion Jeff Gordon, who was planning to move up after two seasons in the Busch Series. Gordon debuted his now-iconic No. 24 DuPont "Rainbow Warrior" Chevrolet at the final race of the year.

The season-long championship battle narrowed down to six drivers, the most ever going into the final race of the season. Davey Allison won the season-opening Daytona 500, and despite a roller-coaster season, remained first, or near the top of the standings all season. Bill Elliott and Kulwicki experienced more consistent results, placing them comfortably near the top. Harry Gant, Mark Martin and Kyle Petty were also factors during the season. Two-time defending champion Dale Earnhardt, however, suffered a dismal season, winning only one race, dropping out several times, and finished outside the top ten at season's end, for just the second time in his Cup career.

The season's climax occurred at the final race of the season, the Hooters 500 at Atlanta. Six drivers entered the race with a mathematical chance at winning the Winston Cup championship. Davey Allison led the charge, but ultimately fell short when he was involved in an accident. The race and the championship came down to a two-man battle between Bill Elliott and Alan Kulwicki. Elliott won the race, while Kulwicki finished second. Kulwicki led 103 laps during the race (compared to 102 by Elliott), clinched the 5 bonus points for leading the most laps, and won the Winston Cup title.

Tragically, only months later, both Kulwicki and Allison would be killed in separate aviation crashes.

The 1992 season was also the final year of Oldsmobile as a manufacturer in the series. The 1992 season was also the first Manufacturers' championship for Ford since 1969. Ford swept the top three in points snapping GM's streak of 16 straight manufacturers' championships (between Chevrolet and Buick).

Teams and drivers

Complete schedule

ManufacturerTeamNo.DriverCrew chiefChevroletFordOldsmobilePontiacPontiac 28
Ford 1Chevrolet 24
Ford 5
**Darrell Waltrip Motorsports**17Darrell WaltripJeff Hammond 17
Jake Elder 13
**Hendrick Motorsports**5Ricky RuddGary DeHart
25Ken SchraderRichard Broome (NASCAR)Richard Broome 7
Ken Howes 23
**Joe Gibbs Racing**18Dale JarrettJimmy Makar
**Larry Hedrick Motorsports**41Greg Sacks 20Dennis Conner
Dave Marcis 7
Hut Stricklin 2
**Marcis Auto Racing**71Dave Marcis 22Bob Marcis
Jim Sauter 7
**Morgan-McClure Motorsports**4Ernie IrvanTony Glover
**Richard Childress Racing**3Dale EarnhardtKirk Shelmerdine
**Whitcomb Racing**10Derrike CopeDoug Williams 1
Barry Dodson 28
**AK Racing**7Alan KulwickiPaul Andrews
**Bud Moore Engineering**15Geoff BodineDonnie Wingo
**Cale Yarborough Motorsports**66Chad Little 6
Bobby Hillin Jr. 1
Jimmy Hensley 22 **(R)**
**Junior Johnson & Associates**11Bill ElliottTim Brewer
22Sterling MarlinMike Beam
**King Racing**26Brett BodineDonnie Richeson
**RaDiUs Motorsports**55Ted MusgraveJames Ince
**Robert Yates Racing**28Davey AllisonLarry McReynolds
**Roush Racing**6Mark MartinSteve Hmiel
16Wally Dallenbach Jr.Steve Lloyd
**Stavola Brothers Racing**8Rick Wilson 1Ken Wilson
Dick Trickle 28
**Wood Brothers Racing**21Morgan ShepherdLeonard Wood
**Hagan Racing**94Terry LabonteDewey Livengood
**Leo Jackson Motorsports**33Harry GantAndy Petree
**Precision Products Racing**1Rick MastRichard Jackson
**Tri-Star Motorsports**68Bobby Hamilton
**Bahari Racing**30Michael WaltripBill Ingle 21
Doug Hewitt 8
**Penske Racing**2Rusty WallaceEddie Dickerson 17
Buddy Parrott 12
**Petty Enterprises**43Richard PettyRobbie Loomis
**SABCO Racing**42Kyle PettyRobin Pemberton
**Means Racing**52Jimmy Means 25
Brad Teague 1
Tommy Kendall 1
Scott Sharp 1
Scott Gaylord 1
**Bobby Allison Motorsports**12Hut Stricklin 21Jimmy Fennig
Jeff Purvis 4
Jimmy Spencer 4

Limited schedule

ManufacturerTeamNo.Race driverCrew chiefRound(s)BuickChevroletFordOldsmobilePontiacPontiac 15
Chevrolet 4Chevrolet 3
Ford 1
**Adele Emerson**44Jack Sellers1
**Balough Racing**77Mike Potter8
9
**Active Motorsports**32Jimmy HortonDavid Ifft11
**Ball Motorsports**99Brad Teague2
**B&B Racing**14A. J. Foyt1
**BS&S Motorsports**49Stanley SmithPhilippe Lopez15
**Chesrown Racing**37Rick CarelliDavid Ifft2
**Close Racing**47Buddy Baker1
**Diamond Ridge Racing**29John KrebsBob Rahilly2
**Ed Ferree**45Ed Ferree2
**Folsom Racing**13Dave Mader III1
Bob Schacht1
Stan Fox2
**Hendrick Motorsports**24Jeff GordonRay Evernham1
**Mansion Motorsports**13Mike Skinner3
**Mueller Brothers Racing**89Jim Sauter3
**Phoenix Racing**51Jeff Purvis2
**Scribner Racing**Rick ScribnerCliff Duvall2
**Team Ireland**31Bobby Hillin Jr.Tony Price 5
Doug Hewitt 712
**Travis Carter Enterprises**98Jimmy Spencer11
**Venturini Motorsports**35Bill Venturini2
**Speed Racing**83Lake Speed3
8
**Barkdoll Racing**73Bill Schmitt1
**Cicci Racing**34Todd Bodine1
**Jeff Davis Racing**44Jeff DavisRod Pool1
**Donlavey Racing**90Dorsey SchroederJunie Donlavey1
Charlie Glotzbach7
Kerry Teague1
Hut Stricklin4
Pancho Carter1
Bobby Hillin Jr.1
91Kerry Teague1
**Gray Racing**62Ben Hess1
**H. L. Waters Motorsports**0Delma Cowart8
**Junior Johnson & Associates**97Hut Stricklin1
**Melling Racing**9Phil ParsonsGene Roberts2
Dorsey Schroeder1
Dave Mader III6
Chad Little13
Bill Schmitt1
**Pat Rissi Racing**59Andy Belmont **(R)**11
**TTC Motorsports Inc.**45Rich Bickle4
50Hershel McGriff1
**Moroso Racing**20Jimmy Spencer1
Mike Wallace2
Joe Ruttman1
**B&B Racing**14A. J. FoytTex Powell1
23Eddie BierschwaleDon Bierschwale9
**Barkdoll Racing**73Phil Barkdoll4
**Close Racing**47Buddy BakerDavid Ifft5
**Collins Racing**97Mark Gibson1
**KT Motorsports**03Kerry Teague1
**88 Racing**88Joe Booher1
**Bailey Racing**36H. B. Bailey2
**Clay Young**50Clay Young4
**Gilliland** **Racing**24Butch Gilliland2
**Rusty Wallace Racing**Kenny Wallace1
**Means Racing**53John McFadden5
Graham Taylor2
77Mike Potter1
**Porter Racing**32Randy Porter5
**Hylton Motorsports**48James Hylton19
**Linro Motorsports**27Gary Balough1
Bob Schacht2
Jeff McClure1

Schedule

No.Race titleTrackDate1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829
Busch ClashDaytona International Speedway, Daytona BeachFebruary 9
Gatorade Twin 125 QualifiersFebruary 13
Daytona 500February 16
GM Goodwrench 500North Carolina Motor Speedway, RockinghamMarch 1
Pontiac Excitement 400Richmond International Raceway, RichmondMarch 8
Motorcraft Quality Parts 500Atlanta Motor Speedway, HamptonMarch 15
TranSouth 500Darlington Raceway, DarlingtonMarch 29
Food City 500Bristol International Raceway, BristolApril 5
First Union 400North Wilkesboro Speedway, North WilkesboroApril 12
Hanes 500Martinsville Speedway, RidgewayApril 26
Winston 500Talladega Superspeedway, TalladegaMay 3
Winston OpenCharlotte Motor Speedway, ConcordMay 16
The Winston
Coca-Cola 600May 24
Budweiser 500Dover Downs International Speedway, DoverMay 31
Save Mart 300KSears Point Raceway, SonomaJune 7
Champion Spark Plug 500Pocono International Raceway, Long PondJune 14
Miller Genuine Draft 400Michigan International Speedway, BrooklynJune 21
Pepsi 400Daytona International Speedway, Daytona BeachJuly 4
Miller Genuine Draft 500Pocono International Raceway, Long PondJuly 19
DieHard 500Talladega Superspeedway, TalladegaJuly 26
Budweiser at The GlenWatkins Glen International, Watkins GlenAugust 9
Champion Spark Plug 400Michigan International Speedway, BrooklynAugust 16
Bud 500Bristol International Raceway, BristolAugust 29
Mountain Dew Southern 500Darlington Raceway, DarlingtonSeptember 6
Miller Genuine Draft 400Richmond International Raceway, RichmondSeptember 12
Peak Antifreeze 500Dover Downs International Speedway, DoverSeptember 20
Goody's 500Martinsville Speedway, RidgewaySeptember 28
Tyson/Holly Farms 400North Wilkesboro Speedway, North WilkesboroOctober 5
Mello Yello 500Charlotte Motor Speedway, ConcordOctober 11
AC Delco 500North Carolina Motor Speedway, RockinghamOctober 25
Pyroil 500KPhoenix International Raceway, PhoenixNovember 1
Hooters 500Atlanta Motor Speedway, HamptonNovember 15

Races

No.RacePole positionMost laps ledWinning driverManufacturer1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829
Busch ClashBrett BodineGeoff BodineGeoff BodineFord
Gatorade Twin 125 #1Sterling MarlinDale EarnhardtDale EarnhardtChevrolet
Gatorade Twin 125 #2Bill ElliottBill ElliottBill ElliottFord
Daytona 500Sterling MarlinDavey AllisonDavey AllisonFord
GM Goodwrench 500Kyle PettyBill ElliottBill ElliottFord
Pontiac Excitement 400Bill ElliottBill ElliottBill ElliottFord
Motorcraft Quality Parts 500Mark MartinDavey AllisonBill ElliottFord
TranSouth 500Sterling MarlinDavey AllisonBill ElliottFord
Food City 500Alan KulwickiAlan KulwickiAlan KulwickiFord
First Union 400Alan KulwickiAlan KulwickiDavey AllisonFord
Hanes 500Darrell WaltripAlan KulwickiMark MartinFord
Winston 500Ernie IrvanDavey AllisonDavey AllisonFord
Winston OpenBrett BodineSterling MarlinMichael WaltripPontiac
The WinstonDavey AllisonDavey AllisonDavey AllisonFord
Coca-Cola 600Bill ElliottKyle PettyDale EarnhardtChevrolet
Budweiser 500Brett BodineDarrell WaltripHarry GantOldsmobile
Save Mart 300KRicky RuddBill ElliottErnie IrvanChevrolet
Champion Spark Plug 500Ken SchraderAlan KulwickiAlan KulwickiFord
Miller Genuine Draft 400Davey AllisonDavey AllisonDavey AllisonFord
Pepsi 400Sterling MarlinErnie IrvanErnie IrvanChevrolet
Miller Genuine Draft 500Davey AllisonDavey AllisonDarrell WaltripChevrolet
DieHard 500Sterling MarlinRicky RuddErnie IrvanChevrolet
Budweiser at The GlenDale EarnhardtErnie Irvan
Kyle PettyKyle PettyPontiac
Champion Spark Plug 400Alan KulwickiBill ElliottHarry GantOldsmobile
Bud 500Ernie IrvanDarrell WaltripDarrell WaltripChevrolet
Mountain Dew Southern 500Sterling MarlinHarry GantDarrell WaltripChevrolet
Miller Genuine Draft 400Ernie IrvanRusty WallaceRusty WallacePontiac
Peak AntiFreeze 500Alan KulwickiBill ElliottRicky RuddChevrolet
Goody's 500Kyle PettyRusty WallaceGeoff BodineFord
Tyson Holly Farms 400Alan KulwickiGeoff BodineGeoff BodineFord
Mello Yello 500Alan KulwickiKyle PettyMark MartinFord
AC Delco 500Kyle PettyKyle PettyKyle PettyPontiac
Pyroil 500KRusty WallaceRusty WallaceDavey AllisonFord
Hooters 500Rick MastAlan KulwickiBill ElliottFord

Busch Clash

The Busch Clash, an exhibition event for all 1991 Busch Pole winners, and one "wild card" (from the fastest second round qualifiers from 1991) consisted of a 15-car field. The event was held Saturday, February 9 at Daytona International Speedway, a slight change from previous seasons, which usually saw the race held on Sunday. The move was made at the request of CBS, who wanted the additional time on Sunday for their coverage of the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France.

Brett Bodine drew the pole.

Top five finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering20
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports20
6Mark MartinRoush Racing20
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing20
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing20
  • The race consisted of two 10-lap "sprint" segments, separated by a competition yellow, during which the field would be inverted.
  • Sterling Marlin won the first 10-lap segment, and Geoff Bodine won the second 10-lap segment, to claim the overall victory.
  • Except for the 2-lap competition yellow, the race otherwise was completed caution-free.

Gatorade 125s

Sterling Marlin won the pole for the Daytona 500 during time trials on Sunday, February 9. His Junior Johnson teammate Bill Elliott qualified second to take the "outside pole."

The Gatorade 125-mile qualifying races for the Daytona 500 were held Thursday, February 13 at Daytona International Speedway. Sterling Marlin and Bill Elliott started first in each of the races, respectively.

Gatorade Twin 125sTop ten finishers – race oneTop ten finishers – race twoPos.Car #DriverTeamLapsPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps1122334455667788991010
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing5011Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates50
6Mark MartinRoush Racing5021Morgan ShepherdWood Brothers Racing50
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports5028Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing50
41Greg SacksLarry Hedrick Motorsports505Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports50
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports5030Michael WaltripBahari Racing50
1Rick MastPrecision Products Racing5017Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports50
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports5066Chad LittleCale Yarborough Motorsports50
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing5015Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering50
9Phil ParsonsMelling Racing5026Brett BodineKing Racing50
03Kerry TeagueKerry Teague Racing5010Derrike CopeWhitcomb Racing50
  • During the second race, a crash on lap 4 took out several cars, including Alan Kulwicki, Terry Labonte and A. J. Foyt. Richard Petty also wrecked out on lap 8. All four would qualify for the Daytona 500 based on speed or by provisional.

34th Daytona 500 by STP

The Daytona 500 by STP was held on February 16 at Daytona International Speedway. Sterling Marlin won the pole.

Main article: 1992 Daytona 500

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing200
21Morgan ShepherdWood Brothers Racing200
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering200
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing200
75Dick TrickleRahMoc Enterprises200
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing200
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing199
55Ted MusgraveRaDiUs Racing199
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing199
9Phil ParsonsMelling Racing199
  • Junior Johnson's stablemates, Bill Elliott and Sterling Marlin, controlled the front row, qualifying 1st–2nd, and leading 58 of the first 91 laps.
  • On lap 92, Elliott, Marlin, and Ernie Irvan, running 1st-2nd-3rd, went three wide coming out of turn two. Marlin, sandwiched in the middle, bounced off both his teammate and Irvan, and all three lost control in front of the entire field, triggering the "Big One". In all, 14 cars were eliminated from the event, and other suffered damage. Richard Petty, in his final Daytona 500, was among the cars spinning to the infield grass, but he was not heavily damaged, and was able to continue.
  • Davey Allison and Morgan Shepherd were among the few cars who narrowly slipped by the big crash unscathed. Allison led 95 of the final 100 laps to claim his first Daytona 500 victory, following in the footsteps of his father Bobby. Shepherd was a surprise second, while Geoff Bodine was third. Michael Waltrip also notably slipped by unscathed, but engine trouble late in the race took him out of contention.
  • Alan Kulwicki started 41st after a crash in the Twin 125s qualifying race. He was running in the top ten when the "Big One" occurred. He spun out into the grass, but did not suffer any significant damage. He returned to the track and ran as high as second. In the closing laps, he was running third, just ahead of Geoff Bodine. On the final lap, while Allison and Shepherd were battling for the lead, Bodine got by Kulwicki down the backstretch and into turn three. Bodine snatched third, and Kulwicki came home fourth.
  • This would be the final Daytona 500 start for both Richard Petty and A. J. Foyt.
  • Three weeks removed from leading Washington to victory in Super Bowl XXVI; Joe Gibbs made his debut as a car owner, with his car finishing 36th after being collected in the aforementioned "Big One" on lap 92.
  • Dick Trickle finished 5th in what would be the final start for RahMoc Enterprises, as co-owners Bob Rahilly and Butch Mock would part ways after the race. Mock later reformed the team as Butch Mock Motorsports.

GM Goodwrench 500

The GM Goodwrench 500 was held March 1 at Rockingham. The #42 of Kyle Petty won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 11-Bill Elliott
  2. 28-Davey Allison
  3. 33-Harry Gant
  4. 30-Michael Waltrip, 1 lap down
  5. 25-Ken Schrader, 1 lap down
  6. 6-Mark Martin, 2 laps down
  7. 94-Terry Labonte, 2 laps down
  8. 26-Brett Bodine, 2 laps down
  9. 12-Hut Stricklin, 2 laps down
  10. 17-Darrell Waltrip, 2 laps down
  • Bill Elliott recovered from his crash at Daytona to lead the final 213 laps, and win in only his second start at Junior Johnson Motorsports.
  • Bill's margin of victory was a whopping 12.75 seconds, nearly half a lap.
  • Davey Allison followed up his Daytona victory finishing second, and extended his points lead.
  • Bill Elliott and Davey Allison led a combined 450 of 492 laps. Allison left the weekend 56 points ahead of Morgan Shepherd, who led 1 lap and finished 3 laps down in 13th.
  • Polesitter Kyle Petty, the two-time defending race and pole position winner, was unable to make it three in a row. The Unocal 76 Challenge bonus money had now rolled over 25 races, and would be $197,600 for the next race.

Pontiac Excitement 400

The Pontiac Excitement 400 was held March 8 at Richmond International Raceway. Bill Elliott won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates400
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing400
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports400
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing400
17Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports400
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports400
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates399
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing399
12Hut StricklinBobby Allison Motorsports399
21Morgan ShepherdWood Brothers Racing399
  • Bill Elliott won his second consecutive race. Elliott was pushed to the limit by Alan Kulwicki, who made a late charge and nearly pulled off a last-lap pass. The two raced clean on the final lap, and Elliott nipped Kulwicki at the finish line by 18 inches. It was just Elliott's second career win on a short track.
  • Points leader Davey Allison finished 4th.
  • This was Bill Elliott's final win at a short track. He dominated by leading 348 of the 400 laps (87%), but beat Alan Kulwicki by only 18 inches. Davey Allison now led the points standings over Harry Gant by 63 points, and Bill Elliott by 68.
  • Bill Elliott broke a streak of 25 rollovers, and claimed the Unocal 76 Challenge of $197,600 — the second-highest total awarded in the history of the program.

Motorcraft Quality Parts 500

The Motorcraft Quality Parts 500 was held March 15 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The #6 of Mark Martin won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 11-Bill Elliott
  2. 33-Harry Gant
  3. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  4. 28-Davey Allison
  5. 8-Dick Trickle
  6. 15-Geoff Bodine
  7. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  8. 42-Kyle Petty
  9. 94-Terry Labonte
  10. 21-Morgan Shepherd
  • Late in the race, it appeared that hometown favorite Bill Elliott would not be victorious on this day. The team had missed on the set-up and he was mired around 15th position most of the day. Late in the race, leaders Allison, Kulwicki, and Gant pitted under green for what would be their final scheduled pit stop of the day. Every car on the lead lap had pitted for tires and fuel, except Elliott, whose Budweiser Ford had been enjoying good fuel mileage. Suddenly, Mike Wallace spun in turn two, bringing out a caution with 40 laps to go. Elliott was now in the lead on a lap by himself because everyone else had already made a green-flag pit stop. At the time there was no "wave around" or Beneficiary rule. Elliott pitted under the caution and was able to keep the lead, returning to the track in the middle of the pack, but still scored as the leader. On the restart, second place Gant led the pack with third place Allison right behind - but both were nearly a full lap behind leader Elliott. Elliott was able to cruise over the final laps to an 18-second win over Harry Gant. It was Elliott's third straight victory, and at the end of the day Elliott and Gant were tied for second in points, 58 behind Davey Allison. Perhaps crew chief Tim Brewer said it best when he quipped, "Maybe we should have backed into Victory Lane, that's sure how we got here!". Elliott himself said "they gimme that race!" Earnhardt, Allison and Trickle rounded out the top five.
  • Due to injuries Ernie Irvan sustained in the previous day's Busch Series race, Irvan in the opening laps was forced to turn his car over to future NASCAR Cup Series champion Bobby Labonte.

TranSouth 500

The TranSouth 500 was held March 29 at Darlington Raceway. The #22 of Sterling Marlin won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 11-Bill Elliott
  2. 33-Harry Gant
  3. 6-Mark Martin
  4. 28-Davey Allison, 1 lap down
  5. 5-Ricky Rudd, 1 lap down
  6. 26-Brett Bodine, 1 lap down
  7. 8-Dick Trickle, 2 laps down
  8. 15-Geoff Bodine, 2 laps down
  9. 94-Terry Labonte, 2 laps down
  10. 3-Dale Earnhardt, 2 laps down
  • At a place where history was reared, Elliott put his name in the record books. In dramatic fashion, Elliott outran hard-charging Gant to post his fourth consecutive victory, tying the modern-era record for most successive wins. Ironically, it was Gant who completed the feat just in September 1991. Mark Martin was third and Ricky Rudd fifth. Allison remained consistent with a fourth-place showing, giving him a 48-point lead over Elliott. Harry Gant was also consistent in the early part of the season, as he sat just 53 points behind Allison.

Food City 500

The Food City 500 was held April 5 at Bristol International Raceway. Alan Kulwicki won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  2. 18-Dale Jarrett
  3. 25-Ken Schrader
  4. 94-Terry Labonte, 1 lap down
  5. 8-Dick Trickle, 1 lap down
  6. 5-Ricky Rudd, 3 laps down
  7. 21-Morgan Shepherd, 4 laps down
  8. 12-Hut Stricklin, 5 laps down
  9. 2-Rusty Wallace, 6 laps down
  10. 10-Derrike Cope, 6 laps down

Failed to qualify: 98-Jimmy Spencer

  • Coach Joe Gibbs started 0–5 as head coach over the Washington Redskins. As car owner of the Interstate Batteries Chevrolet driven by Dale Jarrett, Gibbs was again 0–5. But, as he did in football, Gibbs appeared headed for victory in his sixth try. Jarrett led the late stages of the event, but on lap 474 of the 500-lap event, Kulwicki used lapped traffic to maneuver around Jarrett and post his first victory of 1992.
  • Meanwhile, points leader Allison hit the wall separating the cartilage around his rib cage and knocking two vertebrae out of place and finished 28th. Elliott finished 20th and Allison's points lead was 29 over Elliott and 61 over Gant who finished 29th due to an engine failure after 277 laps.
  • Bill Elliott experienced trouble during the race, finishing 30 laps down in 20th.
  • This was the last asphalt race at Bristol International Raceway. After the race ended, the blacktop was torn up and a new concrete surface was laid down.
  • Rusty Wallace earned his first Top 10 finish in what would be a very difficult season for the 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Series champion.

First Union 400

The First Union 400 was held April 12 at North Wilkesboro Speedway. Alan Kulwicki won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 28-Davey Allison
  2. 2-Rusty Wallace
  3. 5-Ricky Rudd
  4. 15-Geoff Bodine
  5. 33-Harry Gant
  6. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  7. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  8. 22-Sterling Marlin
  9. 94-Terry Labonte
  10. 26-Brett Bodine

Failed to qualify: 32-Jimmy Horton, 9-Dave Mader III*, 48-James Hylton.

  • In one of the grittiest runs of the year, Allison overcame excruciating pain to collect his second win of the season. The pain was so overwhelming, Jimmy Hensley was called to qualify the Texaco Ford. He gave Davey a seventh-place starting position. Wearing a flak jacket and using an electrode-shock apparatus to help ease the pain, Allison held off a stiff challenge from Rusty Wallace and expanded his points lead to 86 over Gant, 106 over Elliott, 116 over Terry Labonte and 123 over Kulwicki.
  • Prior to the race, a special tribute was held for Junior Johnson, a native of nearby Wilkesboro, North Carolina. Incidentally, both of his drivers would fall short of victory lane, as in addition to Sterling Marlin's 8th-place finish; Bill Elliott (driving the #11 Budweiser Ford Thunderbird) finished in the middle of the pack at 20th place.
  • The day before the race saw ESPN broadcaster Benny Parsons, like Johnson a native of Wilkes County, North Carolina, marry his second wife Terri just shy of one year after the death of Parsons' wife Connie.

Hanes 500

The Hanes 500 was held April 26 at Martinsville Speedway. Darrell Waltrip won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 6-Mark Martin
  2. 22-Sterling Marlin
  3. 17-Darrell Waltrip, 1 lap down
  4. 94-Terry Labonte, 1 lap down
  5. 33-Harry Gant, 2 laps down
  6. 21-Morgan Shepherd, 2 laps down
  7. 25-Ken Schrader, 2 laps down
  8. 26-Brett Bodine, 2 laps down
  9. 3-Dale Earnhardt, 3 laps down
  10. 11-Bill Elliott, 3 laps down
  • Scheduling conflicts with ESPN's coverage of the 1992 NFL draft meant they were unable to carry the race live, forcing ESPN to air the race on tape the next day.
  • This will long be remembered as "Camber Day". With new trick rear ends tilted slightly to help get a better drive through the corners, one leader after another fell to the wayside with broken rear axles. First to be victimized was then-dominating Kulwicki, followed by Dale Earnhardt and Ernie Irvan-all in the final 50 laps. With 10 laps remaining, Brett Bodine assumed the lead, until his rear axle broke, leaving Mark Martin standing. Martin's rear axle withstood the strain a few more laps and came out victorious, his first win in 1992. Sterling Marlin posted a second-place finish, followed by Darrell Waltrip, Labonte and Gant. Allison suffered another spin and crash, re injuring his rib cage, but he held a scant 16 point lead over Gant, who finished 5th. Terry Labonte was a surprising 3rd in points, just 41 points out of the lead. Also Dick Trickle was 9th at this time. Reigning Winston Cup champion Dale Earnhardt was 7th overall, while Mark Martin was down in 10th even after his win. 1991 points runner-up Ricky Rudd was 11th, Ken Schrader 14th, Rusty Wallace 16th, and Darrell Waltrip sat 17th in points.

Winston 500

The Winston 500 was held May 3 at Talladega Superspeedway. Ernie Irvan won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 28-Davey Allison
  2. 11-Bill Elliott
  3. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  4. 22-Sterling Marlin
  5. 4-Ernie Irvan
  6. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  7. 18-Dale Jarrett
  8. 6-Mark Martin
  9. 21-Morgan Shepherd
  10. 42-Kyle Petty

Failed to qualify: 0-Delma Cowart, 23-Eddie Bierschwale, 48-James Hylton, 73-Phil Barkdoll, 77-Mike Potter

  • This was Buddy Baker's 700th and final Grand National/Winston Cup start. He would later attempt but fail to qualify for the 1993 DieHard 500, and at Daytona and Atlanta in 1994.
  • Davey Allison's resiliency was evident again. Coming off his second crash of the season, Allison held off Elliott by two car lengths in one of the most exciting finishes of the year. Everyone teamed up against Allison for a final shot coming out of the Talladega tri-oval. Chevrolet teammates Ernie Irvan and Dale Earnhardt on the right and Junior Johnson teammates Elliott and Sterling Marlin on the left. But Allison held them off for his second consecutive Winston 500 victory. The win made Allison the only remaining contender for the Winston Million. He had claimed two of the legs required to claim the $1 million bonus from Winston-the Daytona 500 and Winston 500. He would have two shots at the bonus, Charlotte and Darlington.
  • The #98 Chevrolet of Jimmy Spencer had a spectacular crash late in race on the backstretch. After contact in the middle of the backstretch from the #16 Ford of Wally Dallenbach Jr., the #98 spun and became airborne (almost completely vertical). Luckily, the car came back down on all 4 wheels without flipping over. However, the suspension broke in the car as a result of the landing.
  • Davey Allison led Bill Elliott by 67 points.
  • Richard Petty finished 15th; which would later be tied with June's Miller Genuine Draft 400 at Michigan and the DieHard 500 at Talladega for the best finishes of his farewell season.

The Winston Open

The Winston Open, a last chance race to qualify for The Winston, was held on May 16, 1992, at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Brett Bodine win the pole.

Top five finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345
30Michael WaltripBahari Racing50
12Hut StricklinBobby Allison Motorsports50
41Greg SacksLarry Hedrick Motorsports50
8Dick TrickleStavola Brothers Racing50
66Jimmy HensleyCale Yarborough Motorsports50

The Winston

The 1992 edition of The Winston, took place on May 16, 1992. Davey Allison won the pole. Main article: 1992 The Winston

Criteria to qualify

  • All active 1991 and 1992 race winning drivers.
  • All active 1991 and 1992 race winning car owners.
  • All active former Winston Cup Champions.
  • Top 2 finishers from The Winston Open
Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing70
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing70
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports70
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports70
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates70
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing70
7Alan KulwickiAlan Kulwicki Racing70
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports70
43Richard PettyPetty Enterprises70
94Terry LabonteHagen Racing70
  • Lights were installed at Charlotte Motor Speedway, and it became the first non-short track to host night racing. The lights debuted for this popular exhibition "all star" event, The Winston on Saturday night, May 16.
  • In a race nicknamed "One Hot Night," Davey Allison won in shocking fashion. During the final 10-lap sprint, Dale Earnhardt led Kyle Petty and Davey Allison. On the final lap, Petty nudged Earnhardt in turn three, spinning him out. Petty took the lead into turn four, but as he entered the qual-oval, Davey Allison pulled alongside. The two cars touched as they crossed the finish line, with Allison edging out Petty by less than half a car length. The two cars clipped, and Allison crashed hard into the outside wall, showering bright sparks over the track. Allison spent the night in the hospital instead of victory lane.

Coca-Cola 600

Main article: 1992 Coca-Cola 600

The Coca-Cola 600 was held Sunday, May 24 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The #11 of Bill Elliott won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing400
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports400
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing400
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing400
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports400
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing400
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing400
55Ted MusgraveRaDiUs Racing399
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports398
8Dick TrickleStavola Brothers Racing398
  • All eyes focused on Allison, as he was recovering from his injuries the previous weekend during The Winston. Allison spent two days in the hospital, nursing a broken collarbone, re-injured ribs, and bruises covering 60% of his body. After winning at Daytona and Talladega, Allison was eligible for the Winston Million if he was victorious at Charlotte. Allison had won the Coca-Cola 600 in 1991, and Charlotte was considered Robert Yates's best track.
  • In the late stages, Kyle Petty and Ernie Irvan battled for 1st-2nd. Dale Earnhardt was running third, about 3 seconds behind. After the final round of pit stops (laps 345–346), Dale Earnhardt moved in front of both Kyle Petty and Ernie Irvan to post his first - and only - win of 1992. Allison finished fourth in his bid for the $1 million bonus. Allison still had one more chance to win the Winston Million, later in the season at Darlington.
  • This was the first victory of the season for GM, as all races up to this point have been won by Fords.
  • The Coca-Cola 600 would be Dale Earnhardt's lone victory of 1992 (with the exception of the Gatorade 125 qualifier at Daytona). Approaching his final green-flag pit stop, Earnhardt trailed by 3 seconds, but emerged with a 1.5-second lead, prompting several of his competitors to believe that Earnhardt broke the 55 mph pit road speed limit while exiting. No penalty was assessed.
  • This would be the final Coca-Cola 600 scheduled to run during the daytime. Starting in 1993, the race was moved to a late afternoon/night race.
  • Davey Allison led 33 laps after starting 17th. Polesitter Bill Elliott failed to lead any laps (Ricky Rudd led the first lap from 3rd) en route to a 14th-place finish, 4 laps down. Elliott was now 111 points behind, closely followed by Harry Gant, Alan Kulwicki, and Dale Earnhardt.
  • Jimmy Spencer finished 27th in this in what would be the last race for Travis Carter Enterprises until the 1994 Daytona 500.

Budweiser 500

The Budweiser 500 was held May 31 at Dover Downs International Speedway. The #26 driven by Brett Bodine won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 33-Harry Gant
  2. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  3. 2-Rusty Wallace, 1 lap down
  4. 4-Ernie Irvan, 1 lap down
  5. 17-Darrell Waltrip, 1 lap down
  6. 5-Ricky Rudd, 2 laps down
  7. 12-Hut Stricklin, 2 laps down
  8. 66-Jimmy Hensley, 2 laps down
  9. 8-Dick Trickle, 2 laps down
  10. 21-Morgan Shepherd, 2 laps down
  • Harry Gant could not outduel the field, so he outfueled them en route to his first victory of '92. While other drivers were forced to pit late for fuel, Gant stretched his to the absolute limit and beat Darrell Waltrip in a fuel mileage war. His final pit stop was on lap 403, and Darrell Waltrip's last stop was on lap 406. But Waltrip was the one who ran out of fuel (with a lap and one half remaining), while Gant ran out on the backstretch on lap 500 with a one lap lead. Dale Earnhardt passed him in turns 3 and 4 to unlap himself and finish 26 seconds behind Gant. Third was Rusty Wallace and fourth for Ernie Irvan. Points leader Allison was never a contender, finishing 11th, while Elliott was 13th. Allison's point lead dwindled to 70 points over Gant and just 99 over Earnhardt.
  • This race would be the first time radial tires were used at Dover.

Save Mart Supermarkets 300K

The Save Mart Supermarkets 300K was held June 7 at Sears Point Raceway. For the third consecutive year in this event Ricky Rudd won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 4-Ernie Irvan
  2. 94-Terry Labonte
  3. 6-Mark Martin
  4. 5-Ricky Rudd
  5. 11-Bill Elliott
  6. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  7. 2-Rusty Wallace
  8. 17-Darrell Waltrip
  9. 25-Ken Schrader
  10. 15-Geoff Bodine
  • On the day of this race, NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. died.
  • Ernie Irvan started 2nd in this race, but jumped the start and was given a stop-and-go penalty in the pits. Irvan came through the entire field to win in the fastest Winston Cup race held on the 2.52 mi version of Sears Point. Irvan forged one of the most astonishing comebacks in NASCAR history. Irvan, qualifying second, was black-flagged for jumping the start of the race, relegating him to dead last on a road course with road course demons Rusty Wallace, Ricky Rudd and Terry Labonte leading the field. Irvan blazed through the backmarkers, picked off the middle of the pack, then steadily reeled in leader Labonte with 10 laps remaining. Finally, on lap 67 of the 74-lap event, Irvan retook the top spot and drove on to a 3.6-second win. Irvan dedicated the race to Bill France Sr., the founder of NASCAR who died the morning of the race.
  • Points leader Davey Allison had a terrible day. He spun into a tire barrier early in the race, and later spun in front of the leaders while trying to get out of the way. His 28th-place finish (last car 1 lap down) tightened up the points race in favor of Dale Earnhardt, Bill Elliott, and Harry Gant, who now trailed by 28, 31 and 32 points respectively.
  • Richard Petty's 21st-place finish made him the last car on the lead lap, the final race where he would finish on the lead lap.

Champion Spark Plug 500

The Champion Spark Plug 500 was held June 14 at Pocono Raceway. Ken Schrader won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  2. 6-Mark Martin
  3. 11-Bill Elliott
  4. 25-Ken Schrader
  5. 28-Davey Allison
  6. 42-Kyle Petty
  7. 22-Sterling Marlin
  8. 26-Brett Bodine
  9. 66-Jimmy Hensley
  10. 94-Terry Labonte
  • Alan Kulwicki overcame a charging Mark Martin and a brush with danger while passing a lapped car in the final 15 laps to notch his second '92 win. Kulwicki nearly drove into the wall on the backstretch with 12 laps remaining while passing lapped traffic, yielding the lead to Elliott. But with 10 laps to go, Kulwicki blew by Elliott for a lead he would never again relinquish. Martin also moved by Elliott in the final five laps for second.
  • In what would be the beginning of a rough mid-season string of mechanical troubles, Dale Earnhardt developed motor issues that dropped him back to 28th finishing position and fifth in the points.
  • Davey Allison's points lead continued to dwindle, as Bill Elliott chopped off another 10 points with 21 remaining. Alan Kulwicki's win reduced his deficit to Allison to just 58 points, as he also led the most laps (58 of 200).
  • This would be Alan Kulwicki's last win. 1992 was also the only year in which Kulwicki won twice.
  • This would be the last points race win in the Cup Series for car number 7 until July 17, 1994, when Geoff Bodine won the 1994 Miller Genuine Draft 500 at Pocono
  • This would be the last points race win for a primary Hooters sponsored car until the 2024 Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400, when Chase Elliott won in the #9 Chevrolet Camaro for Hendrick Motorsports, 32 years, and 156 races later.

Miller Genuine Draft 400

The Miller Genuine Draft 400 was held June 21 at Michigan International Speedway. Davey Allison won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 28-Davey Allison
  2. 17-Darrell Waltrip
  3. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  4. 42-Kyle Petty
  5. 5-Ricky Rudd
  6. 6-Mark Martin
  7. 33-Harry Gant
  8. 55-Ted Musgrave, 1 lap down
  9. 3-Dale Earnhardt, 1 lap down
  10. 11-Bill Elliott, 1 lap down
  • After four wrecks and a plethora of misfortune, Allison was up to his old tricks — flat out dominating. Allison guided his Texaco Ford to an easy victory at Michigan, his fourth of the '92 season. By winning from the pole he received the bonus money for the position that boosted his winnings to $150,665. Darrell Waltrip and Kulwicki ran in the top five all day and finished second and third, respectively. Allison padded his points lead to 67 over Elliott and 73 over Kulwicki.
  • Michael Waltrip, driving the #30 Pennzoil Pontiac Grand Prix, was injured in a crash in first round qualifying on June 19; with Ben Hess attempting to qualify on the day before the race in second round qualifying only for Hess to crash at about the same spot; forcing Waltrip to take a provisional to start the race. Waltrip started the race but was still hampered by the injuries and was eventually relieved by Hess.
  • Final time where Davey Allison wins from the pole.
  • This was the last ever 2nd-place finish for Darrell Waltrip.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway test

On the way home from Michigan, on June 22–23, nine top NASCAR Winston Cup series teams were invited to Indianapolis to participate in a Goodyear tire test. Although no official announcements were made, it was in fact an unofficial feasibility test to see if stock cars would be competitive at the circuit (see 1994 Brickyard 400). An estimated 10,000 spectators watched a rather exciting two days of history in the making. A. J. Foyt took a few laps around the track in Dale Earnhardt's car on the second day. ESPN covered the test.

Top speedsPosCar #DriverCar MakeEntrantSpeed12345678910
11Bill ElliottFordJunior Johnson & Associates168.767
4Ernie IrvanChevroletMorgan-McClure Motorsports167.817
2Rusty WallacePontiacPenske Racing166.704
42Kyle PettyPontiacSABCO Racing166.199
5Ricky RuddChevroletHendrick Motorsports165.001
17Darrell WaltripChevroletDarrell Waltrip Motorsports164.567
3Dale EarnhardtChevroletRichard Childress Racing163.194
6Mark MartinFordRoush Racing162.346
3A. J. FoytChevroletRichard Childress Racing161.452
28Davey AllisonFordRobert Yates Racing161.261

Pepsi 400

The Pepsi 400 was held Saturday, July 4 at Daytona International Speedway. Sterling Marlin won the pole position, and Richard Petty qualified second, in his final race at Daytona.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports160
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates160
18Dale JarrettJoe Gibbs Racing160
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering160
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates160
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports160
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports160
6Mark MartinRoush Racing160
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing160
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing160
  • This race was attended by President George H. W. Bush and he served as the grand marshal.
  • A special ceremony was held during the pre-race festivities, honoring Richard Petty's final race at Daytona. Petty had spent time before the race testing at Daytona, in hopes that he might win the pole position and possibly be a factor in the race. He held the provisional pole for quite some time, and ultimately qualified second. At the start, Petty whipped the capacity crowd into a frenzy when he led the first five laps (the final laps led of his long career). He dropped out in 36th due to heat-related fatigue. A futile effort was made for Eddie Bierschwale to take over the #43 car and bring it to the finish, but he lasted only a couple laps.
  • The race became a battle between Ernie Irvan, Sterling Marlin, Dale Jarrett, Geoff Bodine and Bill Elliott. Irvan held off a furious charge by Marlin and Jarrett by two car lengths.
  • Frustration increased for Dale Earnhardt, now-midway through what would turn out to be his worst Winston Cup season. He was the first car out, suffering engine failure, dropping him 252 points behind points leader Allison, who still held a 46-point lead over Elliott.
  • The race went 109 laps before the first caution, and was on-pace for a record average speed until a crash on lap 129 (of 160) slowed the pace. The average speed of 170.457 mph stood as the fastest restrictor plate at Daytona race until 1998.
  • This race marked career start number 400 for Harry Gant, he would finish in 23rd, 2 laps down to the winner
  • This race marked career start number 700 for Dave Marcis, he would blow an engine completing 130 of 160 laps finishing 32nd.
**Winston Cup points standings at halfway point (after 15 of 29 races)**Pos.DriverPointsDifference12345678910
Davey Allison2257Leader
Bill Elliott2211-46
Alan Kulwicki2123-134
Harry Gant2085-172
Dale Earnhardt2005-252
Mark Martin1955-302
Terry Labonte1941-316
Geoff Bodine1905-352
Ricky Rudd1872-385
Morgan Shepherd1869-388

Miller Genuine Draft 500

The Miller Genuine Draft 500 was held July 19 at Pocono Raceway. Davey Allison won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 17-Darrell Waltrip
  2. 33-Harry Gant
  3. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  4. 5-Ricky Rudd
  5. 55-Ted Musgrave
  6. 6-Mark Martin
  7. 42-Kyle Petty
  8. 26-Brett Bodine
  9. 8-Dick Trickle
  10. 18-Dale Jarrett
  • This race changed the outcome of the 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup season. Allison had set a new track record during his pole run, then totally dominated the first 140 laps. An air wrench broke during yellow flag pit stops, putting Allison in seventh for the lap 146 restart. He moved quickly up to fourth on lap 148. Allison's day took a turn for the worse a lap later when he and Darrell Waltrip tangled while jockeying for position exiting turn 2, sending Allison spinning. The air got under Allison's car and sent it into a frightening barrel along the top of the inside guardrail. The car flipped 11 times, eventually landing upside down with gasoline leaking from the rear, completely demolished. Allison suffered a broken right forearm, a dislocated wrist, a skull fracture and a severe concussion. Waltrip drove to victory, and Allison was hospitalized in Pennsylvania for four days. The severity of the crash was such that when Mark Martin drove by, he told his crew, "They may as well get a body bag for Davey."
  • Elliott finished 13th, but took over the points lead for the first time of the year. Allison, his immediate future unknown, now trailed by 9 points, while Alan Kulwicki (-47 points) and Harry Gant (-80 points) continued to stay within reach.
  • The first thing Darrell Waltrip wanted to know after he won was whether or not Davey was okay.
  • Last career pole for Davey Allison.
  • Richard Petty, in his final race at Pocono, qualified 7th and advanced as high as 5th place early in the race before finishing 20th, 1 lap down.
  • Dale Earnhardt's engine problems continued as his team had to change engines shortly before the race started. The two-time defending champion qualified 29th and finished 23rd.

DieHard 500

The DieHard 500 was held July 26 at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama. Sterling Marlin won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 4-Ernie Irvan
  2. 22-Sterling Marlin
  3. 28-Davey Allison/Bobby Hillin Jr.
  4. 5-Ricky Rudd, 1 lap down
  5. 11-Bill Elliott, 1 lap down
  6. 42-Kyle Petty, 1 lap down
  7. 30-Michael Waltrip, 1 lap down
  8. 9-Chad Little, 1 lap down
  9. 25-Ken Schrader, 1 lap down
  10. 26-Brett Bodine, 1 lap down
  • In awe-inspiring fashion, Allison walked into the garage area at Talladega, determined to put on his uniform and drive in the DieHard 500 after suffering the skull fracture the previous week at Pocono. With a tailor-made cast, a wrist brace and velcro on the shifter, Allison started the race and gained the all-important Winston Cup points. After 6 laps during the 1st caution, backup driver 1986 winner Bobby Hillin Jr. took over the wheel and nearly drove the Texaco Ford to victory. Irvan and Marlin again battled for superspeedway supremacy with Irvan nipping the winless Marlin by a scant .19 seconds. Earnhardt had engine failure again and finished dead last for the second time in three races, taking him out of contention for a third consecutive Winston Cup title.
  • The race only saw two yellows, at lap 6 and lap 70. The long green runs caused the field to spread out, and the strongest cars in the field (the 4, 22, and 28) lapped everyone else.
  • Ernie Irvan suffered a flat tire on lap 5. When the yellow came out, he sped out of the pits to stay on the lead lap, but failed to beat leader Ricky Rudd to the line and was penalized to the rear of the field for speeding. He went on to pass everyone and get his lap back, and when the second (and only other) caution came out, he made up his lost lap.
  • Thanks to a great 3rd-place finish by relief driver Bobby Hillin Jr., Davey Allison leapfrogged Bill Elliott by 1 point to re-take the lead. Alan Kulwicki (who finished 3 laps down in 25th) and Harry Gant (2 laps down in 17th) fell to a deficit of 120 and 129 points respectively.
  • After his engine failed, Earnhardt was briefly waiting in position as a possible substitute driver for Richard Petty; though ultimately Petty's final race in Talladega would see "the King" finish the race behind his famed #43.
  • Chad Little's 9th-place finish was the 2nd and final Top 10 finish for Melling Racing in 1992; with the only other Top 10 for the team being the season-opening Daytona 500; when the #9 (then driven by Phil Parsons) finished in 10th place.

Budweiser at The Glen

The Budweiser at The Glen was held August 9 at Watkins Glen International. Dale Earnhardt won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 42-Kyle Petty
  2. 21-Morgan Shepherd
  3. 4-Ernie Irvan
  4. 6-Mark Martin
  5. 16-Wally Dallenbach Jr.
  6. 2-Rusty Wallace
  7. 7-Alan Kulwicki
  8. 94-Terry Labonte
  9. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  10. 26-Brett Bodine
  • The race was shortened to 51 laps due to rain as NASCAR did not have rain tires to use at the time; this would change at the 2020 Bank of America Roval 400.
  • This was the first race for Winston Cup cars since the new bus stop chicane was added in light of J. D. McDuffie's fatal accident in 1991. Nifty pit strategy and Mother Nature helped Kyle Petty notch the first (and only) road course victory of his career. Rain pushed back the start of the race more than three hours, and once the green flag finally fell, it was fairly evident it would be a sprint to the halfway point. Petty won a heated battle for the lead with Ernie Irvan between laps 32–36, a pivotal point in the race. After a caution, the race was restarted on lap 44, one lap before the halfway point, which would make the race official regardless of the weather. Petty brushed off then-leader Dick Trickle on lap 45 and on lap 46, the skies opened. After five laps under caution, the race was red-flagged, then called with Petty as the winner.
  • Still suffering from his Pocono injuries, Davey Allison fell 17 points behind 14th-place finisher Bill Elliott, after Dorsey Schroeder relieved Davey mid-race and finished 20th. Alan Kulwicki's solid finish reduced his interval to 94 points, while Harry Gant made no progress, finishing 18th and increasing his deficit to 140 points. Kyle Petty climbed up to 9th in points, tied with Morgan Shepherd at 340 points behind Elliott.
  • This was Todd Bodine's first Winston Cup race. He drove a Ford Thunderbird bearing his Busch Series car number (34), as well as sponsorship by Diet Pepsi.

Champion Spark Plug 400

Main article: 1992 Champion Spark Plug 400

The Champion Spark Plug 400 was held August 16 at Michigan International Speedway. The #7 of Alan Kulwicki won the pole.

Top ten results

  1. 33-Harry Gant
  2. 17-Darrell Waltrip
  3. 11-Bill Elliott
  4. 4-Ernie Irvan
  5. 28-Davey Allison
  6. 42-Kyle Petty
  7. 22-Sterling Marlin
  8. 18-Dale Jarrett
  9. 6-Mark Martin
  10. 21-Morgan Shepherd
  • The physical pain Davey Allison endured could not have prepared him for the emotional anguish the Alabama native would suffer through this weekend. On Thursday during Busch Grand National practice, Davey's younger brother, Clifford, died as the result of a single-car crash in turn three. The entire racing family mourned for the Allisons. Davey decided to race. He qualified third and finished fifth in a courageous effort.
  • Harry Gant won another fuel mileage war, beating Darrell Waltrip and Elliott to the finish line by nearly five seconds.
  • This was Harry Gant's last Winston Cup victory. He set a new record for oldest winner of a Winston Cup race at 52 years and 219 days. This was also Oldsmobile's last victory in NASCAR.
  • The final caution came out on lap 97 for a turn 2 accident involving Jimmy Hensley, Rick Mast, Jeff McClure, and eliminating Derrike Cope. Midpack runner Harry Gant pitted while the leaders (Bill Elliott, Ernie Irvan, and Davey Allison) stayed out, not believing they could finish the race on one more pit stop. They had pitted under the previous caution when Lake Speed spun and severed a fuel line. Gant pitted under green at lap 149 and stayed out until the checkered flag waved.
  • Bill Elliott's point lead grew from 17 to 37 after he led a race-high 72 of 200 laps. Harry Gant shaved 5 points from his deficit to Elliott (down to 135). Polesitter Alan Kulwicki faded to 14th, 1 lap down, after leading 46 laps. This lackluster result put him 143 points behind.
  • What had been a frustrating second half of 1992 continued for Dale Earnhardt; who was forced to start from the back of the field after failing inspection during the second round of qualifying. Earnhardt would finish 16th in the race.

Bud 500

The Bud 500 was held Saturday night, August 29 at Bristol International Raceway. The #4 of Ernie Irvan won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
17Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports500
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing500
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports500
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing500
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing499
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates499
66Jimmy HensleyCale Yarborough Motorsports499
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports499
26Brett BodineKing Racing499
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing498
  • This was the first race at Bristol after the track was re-surfaced with concrete.
  • Darrell Waltrip, the winningest driver in history at Bristol, won for the 12th (and final) time at the popular track. Waltrip out-dueled Dale Earnhardt and Ken Schrader in one of the most exciting races of the season. Davey Allison was running fifth when he lost control and hit the wall. After extensive repairs, Allison rejoined the race, only to crash into the inside wall on the frontstretch. He dropped out and finished 30th. Elliott was steady with a sixth-place finish.
  • Darrell Waltrip won this race four days after the birth of his second daughter, Sarah.
  • On lap 8 polesitter Ernie Irvan spun on the backstretch and backed into the pit wall after leading the first 7 laps. He lost more than 100 laps and eventually parked the car after completing 285 laps, finishing a disappointing 28th.
  • Among the points contenders, Bill Elliott had the cleanest day, finishing 6th. Harry Gant, Mark Martin, and Davey Allison all dropped out from crashes. Kyle Petty and Alan Kulwicki received minor damage in separate incidents, but both continued and posted top-5 finishes. Bill Elliott gained significant ground, stretching his lead to 109 points over Davey Allison.
  • With his 10th place finish, Rusty Wallace would begin a Modern Era Record of consecutive top 10 finishes on short tracks, a streak that would go all the way into 1995.

Mountain Dew Southern 500

The Mountain Dew Southern 500 was held September 6 at Darlington Raceway. The #22 of Sterling Marlin won the pole position.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
17Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports298
6Mark MartinRoush Racing298
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates298
26Brett BodineKing Racing298
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing298
18Dale JarrettJoe Gibbs Racing298
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing298
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing298
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing298
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports297
  • This race was shortened to 298 laps of 367 due to rain.
  • The attention largely focused on Davey Allison, who was eligible for the Winston Million, and could also claim a Career Grand Slam by winning all four majors in his career. Cloudy skies and rain were in the forecast, but the race started on time and cruised well beyond the halfway point before rain entered the area. As the race progressed, Allison ran in the top three most of the day, and was in contention for victory, and the coveted Winston Million bonus.
  • Allison's biggest challenges, however, were impending rain, and hard-charging Mark Martin. Allison pitted first on lap 286 of the 367-lap event. Martin, pitting on the backstretch, came in on lap 289. Just moments later on lap 295, the skies opened and the rain that had threatened all day finally came. Darrell Waltrip, Bill Elliott, and Brett Bodine were among a handful of drivers who had not yet pitted. When the red flag was displayed on lap 298, Waltrip was scored as the leader, having taken the lead on lap 293. Shortly thereafter, the race was called and Waltrip was declared the winner. It was Waltrip's second consecutive win, but more importantly, his first Southern 500 victory, making him the fourth driver to finish off the Career Grand Slam. Martin was second, with points contender Elliott coming home a surprising third. Allison was shuffled back to 5th.
  • A dejected Allison lost his chance at the Winston Million, however he did win the $100,000 bonus from Winston for winning two out of four crown jewel races. Allison also lost ground to Elliott in the season standings. Elliott now led by 119 points over Allison. Alan Kulwicki was still in striking distance at 161 points behind.
  • Larry McReynolds wrote in his 2002 autobiography, The Big Picture: My Life from Pit Road to the Broadcast Booth about the pit miscue for Allison. He sent a crew member to the NASCAR hauler to look at the weather radar (teams looked at the radar from NASCAR's hauler, unlike modern pit boxes with a connection to the radar), and the crew member gave McReynolds the call to pit the car on lap 286. According to the book, the crew member said "Green means good," with McReynolds responding, "Green means rain." This incident heavily influenced McReynolds when he went to broadcasting, even making an appearance on The Weather Channel after going to broadcasting in 2001.
  • In the thick of the 1992 election season, Bill Clinton was the grand marshal for this race.
  • This was Darrell Waltrip's 84th and final Winston Cup victory.
  • Final time in his career as well that Darrell Waltrip would win multiple races in a season.
  • First time since 1983 (and final time in his career) that Darrell Waltrip won back-to-back races in a season.
  • Dale Earnhardt would once again be plagued with mechanical issues, this time problems with the clutch early. The clutch would be fixed; but Earnhardt would finish in 29th place, 57 laps down and the lowest finishing car still running in the race.

Miller Genuine Draft 400

The Miller Genuine Draft 400 was held Saturday night, September 12 at Richmond International Raceway. The #4 of Ernie Irvan won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing400
6Mark MartinRoush Racing400
17Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports400
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing400
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering400
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports400
21Morgan ShepherdWood Brothers Racing400
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports400
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports400
55Ted MusgraveRaDiUs Racing400
  • Rusty Wallace was driving for newly acquired crew chief Buddy Parrott. Wallace led the final 139 laps and beat Mark Martin by 3.59 seconds for the win. Darrell Waltrip's hot streak ended at two wins, but he followed it up here with a third-place finish.
  • Points leader Bill Elliott struggled home 14th a lap down, Alan Kulwicki finished 15th, while Davey Allison spun twice and finished 19th. Elliott's points grew to 124 over Allison, and 164 over Kulwicki.

Peak Antifreeze 500

The Peak Antifreeze 500 was held September 20 at Dover Downs International Speedway. The #7 of Alan Kulwicki won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports500
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates500
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing500
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing499
21Morgan ShepherdWood Brothers Racing498
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports497
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing496
55Ted MusgraveRaDiUs Racing496
10Derrike CopeWhitcomb Racing495
68Bobby HamiltonTri-Star Motorsports495
  • Points leader Bill Elliott returned to his dominating ways, but late pit stop strategy cost him the victory. While battling Ricky Rudd for the lead, Elliott pitted first, taking on four tires and fuel. Rudd pitted for fuel only, and came out of the pits with a 9-second lead over Elliott. Rudd held on to beat Elliott to the finish line by 0.5 seconds, his only victory of the season.
  • Ricky Rudd's victory kept his streak alive of consecutive seasons with at least one victory – extending it to ten.
  • Bill Elliott led the most laps and extended his point lead over Davey Allison to 154 points, the highest margin of the season. Harry Gant was third, 239 points behind Elliott. Polesitter Alan Kulwicki crashed out of the race on lap 91, finishing 34th and leaving him 278 points out of the lead with six races left.

Goody's 500

The Goody's 500 was scheduled to be held Sunday, September 27 at Martinsville Speedway but rain delayed the race from both starting and finishing until Monday, September 28. Kyle Petty won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering500
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing500
26Brett BodineKing Racing500
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing500
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing500
8Dick TrickleStavola Brothers Racing500
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates500
6Mark MartinRoush Racing499
1Rick MastPrecision Products Racing499
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports499
  • The previous day's rain left the infield very soggy.
  • Spirited battles throughout the field were the order of the day as the cold and humidity led to slick racing conditions. Geoff Bodine emerged through the constant melees to his first win for owner Bud Moore.
  • Kyle Petty, who finished 4th, actually got stuck in the mud and lost 2 laps at one point.
  • Bill Elliott finished 30th as a result of engine failure after 158 laps. Davey Allison ran in the top 5 until his brakes failed in the final 50 laps; he finished 4 laps down in 16th, ultimately not gaining much but reducing Elliott's lead to 112 points.
  • Dale Earnhardt would finish in last place for the third time this season; and like the Pepsi 400 and DieHard 500 the cause was the same, as like Bill Elliott, Earnhardt's exit was due to a blown engine.

Tyson Holly Farms 400

The Tyson Holly Farms 400 was scheduled to be held Sunday, October 4 at North Wilkesboro Speedway but as a result of rain, the race was postponed, then started and completed on Monday, October 5 (the second week in a row that this occurred). The #7 of Alan Kulwicki won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering400
6Mark MartinRoush Racing400
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing399
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing399
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates399
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports399
26Brett BodineKing Racing398
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing398
17Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports397
18Dale JarrettJoe Gibbs Racing397
  • In a complete contrast from the previous week, the result was the same. Geoff Bodine recorded his second consecutive win, but in the caution- and incident-free Holly Farms 400. Bodine led the final 144 laps and lapped everyone except runner-up Mark Martin. He lapped Winston Cup points leader Bill Elliott eight times under green. Bodine's victory, in a Ford, clinched the first manufacturer's championship for Ford Motor Co. since 1969; it was also the first time a brand other than a General Motors product won the manufacturer's title since Dodge won it in 1975.
  • Due to the race running caution-free (very strange for a short track), only 2 cars finished on the lead lap. However, Geoff Bodine won by only 5.3 seconds. As of 2018, this would be the last time ever that a NASCAR short track event race would go flag to flag green (or caution-free). In 2017, NASCAR would make a 3 stages format for every race of the season, and at a certain lap at the end of each stage, they would throw the caution flag, thus making it that a race can no longer go flag to flag green (or caution-free).
  • Bill Elliott stubbed his toe again with another poor finish. He was 8 laps down in 26th at Junior Johnson's home track. Davey Allison was 3 laps down in 11th, and he continued to gain on Elliott as he sat 67 points behind with 4 races to go.

Mello Yello 500

The Mello Yello 500 was held October 11 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Alan Kulwicki won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
6Mark MartinRoush Racing334
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing334
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing334
12Jimmy SpencerBobby Allison Motorsports334
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports334
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports334
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports334
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports334
8Dick TrickleStavola Brothers Racing333
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering333
  • Mark Martin charged past mid-race dominator Kyle Petty in the late stages, then held off Kulwicki in the final 50 laps to post what he called "the most important victory of his career." Martin led 107 laps en route to his second win of the season, which suddenly vaulted him back into contention for the 1992 Winston Cup title.
  • The #31 Team Ireland Chevrolet of Bobby Hillin Jr. was disqualified due to illegal cylinder heads after finishing 15th. As a result, the team withdrew from the series in an attempt to avoid being drawn into disrepute. It would be the last time a Cup driver was disqualified for illegal parts until NASCAR introduced a new disqualification policy for technical inspection failures in 2019.
  • Bill Elliott's sway bar broke after 310 laps, leaving Bill with a 30th-place finish. Junior Johnson entered a third car driven by Hut Stricklin, who retired the car when Elliott had his problem. Stricklin's 31st-place finish saved Elliott 3 points. Davey Allison didn't have a great day, either; he was 5 laps down in 19th.
  • Last career pole for Alan Kulwicki. Kulwicki would finish 2nd despite breaking a gearbox that forced him to finish the race in 4th gear. Kulwicki would use a similar strategy following a gearbox failure at the 1992 Hooters 500 at the end of the season.
**Winston Cup points standings (after 26 of 29 races)**Pos.DriverPointsDifference12345678910
Bill Elliott3653Leader
Davey Allison3614-39
Alan Kulwicki3606-47
Mark Martin3562-91
Harry Gant3555-98
Kyle Petty3539-114
Ricky Rudd3409-244
Darrell Waltrip3303-350
Ernie Irvan3263-390
Terry Labonte3261-392

AC Delco 500

The AC Delco 500 was held October 25 at North Carolina Speedway. Kyle Petty won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
42Kyle PettySABCO Racing492
4Ernie IrvanMorgan-McClure Motorsports492
5Ricky RuddHendrick Motorsports491
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates491
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates491
33Harry GantLeo Jackson Motorsports491
26Brett BodineKing Racing491
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing490
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing490
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing490
  • In the most dominating performance of the season, Kyle Petty continued his sensational second half of 1992 with a convincing AC-Delco 500 win. Petty led all but eight of the 492 laps in his father's final race in North Carolina. He only relinquished the lead during green flag pit stops. The outcome was never in doubt, so the attention moved to the points battle, which marched into Rockingham with six drivers in contention. After Petty's Victory Lane celebration, those six still remained in the title picture, with Elliott leading by 70 over Allison, 85 over Kulwicki, 94 over Petty and 113 over Gant.
  • Kyle Petty led 484 of 492 laps. Mark Martin (before he crashed) and Bill Elliott led 3 laps each, and Ernie Irvan led 2 during green flag pit stops. As a result of the domination and only 2 cautions in a 500-mile (805 km) race, only 2 cars finished on the lead lap. Despite the green flag look of the race, Petty beat Irvan by just under a second.
  • Only time in his career that Kyle Petty won multiple races in a season.
  • Bill Elliott finally had a good finish after 3 successive finishes of 26th or worse.
  • For this race and the following week's Pyroil 500K, TNN had a promotion as part of their encouraging viewers to vote in the 1992 elections, where viewers could call a 1-800 number and respond which of the drivers contending for the 1992 Winston Cup championship would win.
**Winston Cup points standings (after 27 of 29 races)**Pos.DriverPointsDifference12345678
Bill Elliott3818Leader
Davey Allison3748-70
Alan Kulwicki3733-85
Kyle Petty3724-94
Harry Gant3705-113
Mark Martin3640-178
Ricky Rudd3574-244
Ernie Irvan3303-380

Pyroil 500K

The Pyroil 500K was held November 1 at Phoenix International Raceway. The #2 of Rusty Wallace won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
28Davey AllisonRobert Yates Racing312
6Mark MartinRoush Racing312
17Darrell WaltripDarrell Waltrip Motorsports312
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing312
12Jimmy SpencerBobby Allison Motorsports312
25Ken SchraderHendrick Motorsports312
10Derrike CopeWhitcomb Racing312
68Bobby HamiltonTri-Star Motorsports312
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates311
3Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress Racing311
  • Smoke billowed from Elliott's Budweiser Ford, signaling an opportunity for the rest of the Winston Cup contenders. Allison and Kulwicki took full advantage. While Elliott's car suffered from a cracked cylinder head and overheating problems, which relegated him to a 31st-place finish, Allison patiently made his way to the front and won his second consecutive Pyroil 500. The emotional victory — Allison's first since the Pocono accident (and penultimate), vaulted him back into the points lead. Kulwicki ran strong all day and finished fourth, also moving him past Elliott in the point standings. Heading into the season's final event at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Allison led Kulwicki by 30 points, Elliott by 40, Gant by 97, Petty by 98 and Martin by 113. It was the first time in the sport's history that six drivers were still in contention heading into the final event.
  • Rusty Wallace led 161 laps but had to go to the garage area (finishing 28th); during his stay a reporter for TNN asked him a question and Wallace caustically grabbed his microphone into the cockpit to answer.
  • Last race without Jeff Gordon in the field until the 2016 Daytona 500.
  • Final time in his career as well that Davey Allison would win multiple races in a season.
  • To mark Richard Petty's penultimate race, both of the cars sponsored by Skoal tobacco; Harry Gant's #33 Skoal Bandit Oldsmobile and Rick Mast's #1 Skoal Classic Oldsmobile sported "Thanks King Richard" messages on their quarterpanels and decklid.
  • Whitcomb Racing's final top 10 finish. The team would fold after the season ended.
**Winston Cup points standings (after 28 of 29 races)**Pos.DriverPointsDifference123456
Davey Allison3928Leader
Alan Kulwicki3898-30
Bill Elliott3888-40
Harry Gant3831-97
Kyle Petty3830-98
Mark Martin3815-113

Hooters 500

Main article: 1992 Hooters 500

The Hooters 500 was held November 15 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Rick Mast won the pole.

Top ten finishersPos.Car #DriverTeamLaps12345678910
11Bill ElliottJunior Johnson & Associates328
7Alan KulwickiAK Racing328
15Geoff BodineBud Moore Engineering328
12Jimmy SpencerBobby Allison Motorsports328
94Terry LabonteHagan Racing328
2Rusty WallacePenske Racing328
22Sterling MarlinJunior Johnson & Associates327
66Jimmy HensleyCale Yarborough Motorsports326
55Ted MusgraveRaDiUs Racing326
18Dale JarrettJoe Gibbs Racing326
  • In what is largely considered one of the greatest NASCAR races of all time, six drivers entered the race with a mathematical chance to win the Winston Cup (Bill Elliott, Alan Kulwicki, Davey Allison, Kyle Petty, Harry Gant and Mark Martin). The race was the highly publicized final career start for 7-time NASCAR champion Richard Petty and, quietly, the first career start for future champion Jeff Gordon. Davey Allison had to finish 6th or better to automatically clinch the championship.
  • Rick Mast won his first career Winston Cup pole, but crashed out on lap 2 with Brett Bodine and did not lead any laps. Both cars hit the wall in turn one; Bodine spun to the apron and was hammered at full speed by a surprised Hut Stricklin.
  • On lap 95, a multi-car crash ensued that collected Richard Petty. The crash knocked the oil cooler off the car and dumped oil on the King's engine, causing it to erupt in flames. Petty rolled to a stop next to a fire truck, which quickly extinguished the flames, but his return to the race looked very doubtful.
  • Championship contenders Mark Martin and Kyle Petty dropped out with engine trouble while Harry Gant faded and was not a factor in the second half.
  • On lap 254, Davey Allison's fate was sealed. While running 6th — good enough to clinch the title — and charging to the front, suddenly disaster struck. Ernie Irvan had a tire going down, lost control and spun directly in front of Rusty Wallace and Allison. Wallace dodged the spinning Irvan, but Allison was not so lucky. Irvan pancaked the wall and bounced off into Allison. Allison spun into the inside pit wall, and damaged the tirerod. His car still had power, and tried desperately to get his car rolling, but to no avail. The crash effectively ended his run at the championship and winning the race. Elliott and Kulwicki were left to battle for the title. Allison would eventually return to the track but several laps down.
  • Elliott and Kulwicki ran 1st-2nd for most of the second half, swapping the lead on several occasions. It became evident that the driver who led the most laps (receiving the 5 bonus points for leading the most laps) would clinch the championship. After the final gas-and-go pit stops, Kulwicki had led 103 laps. Elliott took over the lead, with Kulwicki settling into a comfortable second. Elliott led the rest of the way, his fifth victory of the season, bringing his laps led total to 102 laps, one short of Kulwicki's total — giving the 5 bonus points to Kulwicki.
  • Elliott won the Hooters 500, but Kulwicki's second-place finish allowed him to claim the 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup championship by a scant 10 points, the third-narrowest margin in the sport's history (after 2011, in which Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards finished tied, the title going to Stewart by virtue of more wins in the season, and Kurt Busch's 8 point margin over Jimmie Johnson in 2004). This would be the final time in his career that Bill Elliott would pull off the season sweep at a track.
  • Meanwhile, the STP crew patched Richard Petty's car back together and "The King" rejoined the field with two laps to go and was running at the finish in his final race to receive the checkered flag.
  • Jeff Gordon started 21st and finished in 31st in his Winston Cup debut.
  • This was the first race without Bobby Labonte until the 2013 Quaker State 400.
  • Jeff Gordon made every start from this race to the 2015 Ford Ecoboost 400. He would go on to win 93 races, four championships, and three Daytona 500s. Gordon made 797 consecutive starts, the most of every other driver.
  • In the last race for Oldsmobile, Harry Gant would be the brands top finsher, finishing in 13th, 4 laps down to the race winner.

Final points standings

(key) Bold - Pole position awarded by time. Italics - Pole position set by owner's points standings. *- Most laps led.

PosDriver[DAY](1992-daytona-500)[CAR](1992-gm-goodwrench-500)[RCH](1992-pontiac-excitement-400)[ATL](1992-motorcraft-quality-parts-500)[DAR](1992-transouth-500)[BRI](1992-food-city-500)[NWS](1992-first-union-400)[MAR](1992-hanes-500)[TAL](1992-winston-500)[CLT](1992-coca-cola-600)[DOV](1992-budweiser-500)[SON](1992-save-mart-300k)[POC](1992-champion-spark-plug-500)[MCH](1992-miller-genuine-draft-400-michigan)[DAY](1992-pepsi-400)[POC](1992-miller-genuine-draft-500)[TAL](1992-diehard-500)[GLN](1992-budweiser-at-the-glen)[MCH](1992-champion-spark-plug-400)[BRI](1992-bud-500)[DAR](1992-mountain-dew-southern-500)[RCH](1992-miller-genuine-draft-400-richmond)[DOV](1992-peak-antifreeze-500)[MAR](1992-goody-s-500)[NWS](1992-tyson-holly-farms-400)[CLT](1992-mello-yello-500)[CAR](1992-ac-delco-500)[PHO](1992-pyroil-500k)[ATL](1992-hooters-500)Points1407824068340154395553945638877373583674936591036031135801235741335561435491534911634371734041833151932512030972130332228302328252427992527872627312726892824102923483017593116693215313312843411353595936806377293872639660406114159242476434674445345436464294727748255492525024951238522305320754198551915618857180581765917360164611646215563155641556512566124671136810769106701007198729573947489758876857776787679708070817082678364845885588658875288528949904691469246934394439540964097379899100101102103104105106107108109PosDriver[DAY](1992-daytona-500)[CAR](1992-gm-goodwrench-500)[RCH](1992-pontiac-excitement-400)[ATL](1992-motorcraft-quality-parts-500)[DAR](1992-transouth-500)[BRI](1992-food-city-500)[NWS](1992-first-union-400)[MAR](1992-hanes-500)[TAL](1992-winston-500)[CLT](1992-coca-cola-600)[DOV](1992-budweiser-500)[SON](1992-save-mart-300k)[POC](1992-champion-spark-plug-500)[MCH](1992-miller-genuine-draft-400-michigan)[DAY](1992-pepsi-400)[POC](1992-miller-genuine-draft-500)[TAL](1992-diehard-500)[GLN](1992-budweiser-at-the-glen)[MCH](1992-champion-spark-plug-400)[BRI](1992-bud-500)[DAR](1992-mountain-dew-southern-500)[RCH](1992-miller-genuine-draft-400-richmond)[DOV](1992-peak-antifreeze-500)[MAR](1992-goody-s-500)[NWS](1992-tyson-holly-farms-400)[CLT](1992-mello-yello-500)[CAR](1992-ac-delco-500)[PHO](1992-pyroil-500k)[ATL](1992-hooters-500)Points
Alan Kulwicki4312718**1*****7***16*6712141*3303257**14**8815**34**5**12****2**1242*
Bill Elliott271***1***112020102**14**135*3105135143*63142*3026304311
Davey Allison1*244*4*281261*411285**1***10**33***320530519416111910127
Harry Gant1233222955245117237232171812616*861913861413
Kyle Petty6**29**20827192818103*29126414761*647123**4**33***1***1916
Mark Martin29630**13**3151618332432686204925221982130232
Ricky Rudd4028612563232696**4**365744*1336810611015533025
Terry Labonte7789949436621210382116188233114137118129165
Darrell Waltrip2610539242515**3**29385*8132131231221*13201593422323
Sterling Marlin**35**15717**22**32824221416732**2**11**2**16715**28**21337516597
Ernie Irvan2811152526241325**5**24119301*3713*4**28**25**11**11276623429
Dale Earnhardt9241131018693126289402340**9**1622942131191481026
Rusty Wallace312617151192311118372437918116211091*162*43721**28***6
Morgan Shepherd213101013712692910292512191513210133175211713133811
Brett Bodine41833206111081620**30**15819128101012941822372871240
Geoff Bodine314166812432133217101411430382740111951411*1035393
Ken Schrader37514411232272326239**4**13612921113139301323732636
Ted Musgrave8172519151419202181622338165121125223010812141129249
Dale Jarrett36371311212172871227392224310211581762512231024152010
Dick Trickle53622575111719109262920359282419232720276189164037
Derrike Cope34191914161014221217331812223419223433121235920221714715
Rick Mast1312182217302314172332113028172426321329232824921351717**28**
Michael Waltrip18434281417292738251520152727267352214353317291623201114
Wally Dallenbach Jr.152124273022301914283425271811321452019242331142420231238
Bobby Hamilton321831242326271320211834173133222422152121321028311519812
Richard Petty1616211632273129154120211615362015281816201628182727252235
Hut Stricklin2499292981811223472731351821163624271130152430311541
Jimmy Hensley **(R)**1525118309291514312629715171317251818218
Dave Marcis2039283025312424271525231836323129173232182426252839383522
Greg Sacks1434323128132112351619431114262919314133
Chad Little3922232333232637212417817342729332417
Jimmy MeansDNQ33353820323034423135233939323924222923DNQDNQ382621
Jimmy SpencerDNQ20123736DNQ26DNQ3227DNQ2041154
Bobby Hillin Jr.3821DNQ252813172525QL2326174030
Stanley Smith22322732DNQ33304022273534363239
Mike Potter30DNQ31DNQDNQ282033273330DNQ33DNQ25DNQ39DNQ
Jim SauterDNQ373918362618222921
Lake SpeedDNQ34DNQ1936342626361818
Jimmy Horton26DNQ223426343831DNQ3424
Bob Schacht424219303138302233
Charlie Glotzbach26183736162030
James HyltonDNQ39DNQDNQDNQ2625DNQ40DNQ39DNQ37DNQ35DNQDNQDNQ
Andy Belmont **(R)**DNQ38DNQ374034312839DNQ32
Jeff Purvis272232263236
Dave Mader III **(R)**DNQQL3416DNQ211839
Jerry O'Neil36213525DNQ2937DNQ
Eddie BierschwaleDNQ40DNQDNQDNQDNQ382819
Buddy Baker1136DNQ31DNQ
Rich BickleDNQ202534
Mike WallaceDNQ332720
Jerry Hill27353838
John McFadden4037403840
Phil Parsons1030
Delma Cowart2535DNQDNQDNQDNQ37DNQ
Phil Barkdoll17DNQDNQ28
Bill Sedgwick1927
Bobby Gerhart323734
Brad TeagueDNQ2129
Mike SkinnerDNQ23DNQDNQDNQ41DNQ28DNQ
John Krebs3123
Dorsey Schroeder1935
Randy PorterDNQ24DNQDNQ33
Bill Schmitt2433
Ron Hornaday Jr.3225
Butch Gilliland3829
Tommy Kendall13
Kerry Teague3338DNQ
Stan Fox3637
Scott Sharp19
A. J. Foyt21
Graham Taylor4036
Rick Scribner3641
Rick Wilson23
Rick Carelli3742
Randy Baker25DNQ
Jeff Davis26
Ed Ferree29DNQ
Jeff Fuller29DNQ
Dave Blaney31DNQ
Jeff Gordon31
Jeff McClure31
Pancho Carter32
R. K. Smith33
T. W. Taylor35DNQ
Joe Ruttman35
Mike Chase35
Todd Bodine37
Scott Gaylord37
Denny Wilson38
Mark ThompsonDNQ39
D. K. Ulrich39
Clay YoungDNQDNQ39DNQ
Gary Balough40
Jack Sellers40
H. B. Bailey41DNQ
Irv Hoerr41
Hershel McGriff42
Joe BooherDNQ
Mark GibsonDNQ
Ben HessDNQWth
Kenny WallaceDNQ
Bobby WoodsDNQ
Wayne JacksDNQDNQ
Bill VenturiniDNQDNQ
Tom RotsellDNQ
Chuck BownDNQ
Mark StahlDNQ
Rich Woodland Jr.DNQ
Dave PletcherWth

Other information

  • Dale Earnhardt and Rusty Wallace both failed to finish in the top 10 in points for 1992. Earnhardt, who was the defending Winston Cup champion for the last 2 years (1990 and 1991), tried to join Cale Yarborough by winning 3 championships in a row, but he had a very disappointing season. He only scored one win, and he finished 12th in points. Wallace had a very disappointing season as well. He too scored only one win, and he finished 13th in points. The next season however, both Earnhardt and Wallace rebounded, and they finished 1st and 2nd in the standings. Earnhardt would win his 6th championship that year with 6 wins, and Wallace would finish 2nd with 10 wins. Earnhardt would win the championship by 80 points over Wallace.
  • Two cars numbered 24 were fielded during the season; Butch Gilliland used the number in a car owned by himself at Phoenix and Jeff Gordon drove the number 24 in his first race car with Hendrick Motorsports. The 1993 Winston Cup Series Media Guide shows that Butch Gilliland also fielded the #24 Aneheim Elect. Gear Pontiac in the Sonoma race in June 1992 finishing 38th after starting 36th. However, as the Phoenix and Sonoma races were declared combination races with the Winston West Series would run joint races together, Gilliland was registered with the West Series, a developmental series since 2003.
  • This was the final year in NASCAR for the Oldsmobile brand.

Rookie of the Year

Jimmy Hensley, driving Cale Yarborough's #66 Ford, was named Rookie of the Year after posting four top-ten finishes in 22 starts. Veteran Chad Little drove the car in the first six races, but was replaced by Bobby Hillin Jr. at North Wilkesboro and by Hensley in the following race at Martinsville. Hensley had previously never started more than 4 Winston Cup races in a season (doing so in 1984 and in 1991). Bob Schacht, Andy Belmont, and Dave Mader III were also declared for the award, but did not run enough races to compete for the award.

References

References

  1. "Race Results".
  2. "1992 Champion Spark Plug 400".
  3. McReynolds, Larry and Zeller, Bob: ''The Big Picture: My Life from Pit Road to the Broadcast Booth''. Phoenix : David Bull Publishing, 2002.
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