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1999 Daytona 500

Auto race held at Daytona International Speedway in 1999


Auto race held at Daytona International Speedway in 1999

FieldValue
TypeNASWINSTON
Year1999
Race_No1
Season_No34
Image1999 Daytona 500 logo.png
Caption1999 Daytona 500 logo
Fulldate
LocationDaytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach, Florida, US
Course_mi2.5
Course_km4.02336
Distance_laps200
Distance_mi500
Distance_km804.672
WeatherTemperatures reaching up to 64.9 F; wind speeds approaching 15.9 mph
Avg161.551 mi/h
Pole_DriverJeff Gordon
Pole_TeamHendrick Motorsports
Duel1Bobby Labonte
One_TeamJoe Gibbs Racing
Duel2Dale Earnhardt
Two_TeamRichard Childress Racing
Most_DriverRusty Wallace
Most_TeamPenske Racing
Most_laps104
Car24
First_DriverJeff Gordon
First_TeamHendrick Motorsports
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersMike Joy, Buddy Baker, and Ned Jarrett
Ratings9.6/25
(12.9 million viewers)

Daytona Beach, Florida, US (12.9 million viewers)

The 1999 Daytona 500, the 41st running of the event, was held February 14, 1999, at Daytona International Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole and won the race, making him the first Daytona 500 pole sitter to win the race since Bill Elliott in 1987. Including the No Bull 5 Bonus, Gordon earned a then-record payout of $2,172,246 for winning, while the last place finisher earned $91,751.

Silly season

The start of the 1999 season was marked by three owners (Andy Petree, Travis Carter, and Joe Gibbs) expanding to 2 full-time teams for the first time in their careers. Their drivers were Kenny Wallace (Petree), Darrell Waltrip (Carter), and rookie Tony Stewart (JGR). Several new teams debuted, including Joe Bessey's new #60 and the #58 Ford owned by Scott Barbour. Speedweeks would also be marked by controversy involving Junie Donlavey's #90 Ford. Rookie driver Mike Harmon was dismissed from his team just before the Gatorade 125 qualifying races after reports surfaced that Harmon's sponsor, Big Daddy's Barbecue Sauce, was not living up to its contract obligations, as well as the team wanting a veteran driver to find more speed on the track; Donlavey's team wound up signing Mike Wallace, who'd driven for the team in the 1994-96 period.

Qualifying and Gatorade 125s

Jeff Gordon won the pole for the race with a speed of just over 195 mph, and would start alongside former Indy Racing League champion Tony Stewart, who was making his Winston Cup debut. A total of 59 drivers would make an attempt to qualify for the 1999 Daytona 500. Bobby Labonte would win the first Gatorade 125 qualifying race after taking the lead from Gordon on lap 39. A lap 1 incident, the only caution of the First Duel, ended Dan Pardus and Jeff Green's chances at making the Daytona 500. Dale Earnhardt won the 2nd Gatorade duel after taking the lead from Stewart on lap 8. The second duel was marred by two caution periods that ended Dick Trickle, Glen Morgan, and David Green's chances at qualifying for the race. This would be Earnhardt's final win at Daytona.

Drivers qualified for the Daytona 500 either by finishing in the top 16 in their qualifying race, through a 2-lap qualifying run, or a provisional starting spot based on owner points from the 1999 season. They had three chances to make a 2-lap time trial run that would be fast enough to make the Daytona 500.

Race summary

This race was known for Jeff Gordon's daring three-wide pass on Rusty Wallace and Mike Skinner. He passed Wallace after ducking to the apron, nearly plowing into the damaged car of Ricky Rudd. Skinner jumped to the outside and they raced three-wide for three laps until Dale Earnhardt (the defending Daytona 500 winner) gave Gordon the needed push. The race was also known for a determined Earnhardt repeatedly trying to pass Gordon for the lead on the final lap, only for Gordon to beat him to the finish. The race had a 13-car pileup on lap 135, in which eventual series champion Dale Jarrett flipped over twice but he was uninjured. This was also the first Winston No Bull 5 race of the season.

Results

PosGridCarDriverTeamMakeLapsLaps ledStatus12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243
124Jeff Gordon **(W)**Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet20017Running
43Dale Earnhardt **(W)**Richard Childress RacingChevrolet2000Running
4128Kenny Irwin Jr.Robert Yates RacingFord2000Running
1231Mike SkinnerRichard Childress RacingChevrolet20031Running
137Michael WaltripMattei MotorsportsChevrolet2000Running
733Ken SchraderAndy Petree RacingChevrolet2000Running
2444Kyle PettyPetty EnterprisesPontiac2000Running
102Rusty WallacePenske RacingFord200104Running
2697Chad LittleRoush RacingFord2000Running
2198Rick MastBurdette MotorsportsFord2000Running
259Jerry NadeauMelling RacingFord2000Running
3425Wally Dallenbach Jr.Hendrick MotorsportsChevrolet2000Running
1416Kevin LepageRoush RacingFord2000Running
3136Ernie Irvan **(W)**MB2 MotorsportsPontiac2000Running
2775Ted MusgraveButch Mock MotorsportsFord2000Running
3571Dave MarcisMarcis Auto RacingChevrolet1990Flagged
3926Johnny BensonRoush RacingFord1990Flagged
2030Derrike Cope **(W)**Bahari RacingPontiac1990Flagged
1577Robert PressleyJasper MotorsportsFord1990Flagged
612Jeremy MayfieldPenske RacingFord1997Flagged
4366Darrell Waltrip **(W)**Haas-Carter MotorsportsFord1990Flagged
4011Brett BodineBrett Bodine RacingFord1990Flagged
4290Mike WallaceDonlavey RacingFord1990Flagged
1822Ward BurtonBill Davis RacingPontiac1990Flagged
318Bobby LabonteJoe Gibbs RacingPontiac19820Flagged
2858Ricky CravenSBIII MotorsportsFord1970Flagged
3794Bill Elliott **(W)**Bill Elliott RacingFord1947Accident
220Tony Stewart **(R)**Joe Gibbs RacingPontiac1810Flagged
164Bobby HamiltonMorgan-McClure MotorsportsChevrolet1740Accident
2910Ricky RuddRudd Performance MotorsportsFord1680Flagged
96Mark MartinRoush RacingFord1470Accident
1740Sterling Marlin **(W)**SABCO RacingChevrolet1440Accident
2245Rich BickleTyler Jet MotorsportsPontiac1420Accident
231Steve ParkDale Earnhardt, Inc.Chevrolet1390Accident
599Jeff BurtonRoush RacingFord1380Accident
3242Joe NemechekSABCO RacingChevrolet1370Accident
888Dale Jarrett **(W)**Robert Yates RacingFord13414Accident
195Terry LabonteHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet1340Accident
3060Geoffrey Bodine **(W)**Joe Bessey MotorsportsChevrolet1340Accident
3821Elliott Sadler **(R)**Wood Brothers RacingFord1320Accident
1123Jimmy SpencerHaas-Carter MotorsportsFord1210Accident
3355Kenny WallaceAndy Petree RacingChevrolet920Engine
3643John AndrettiPetty EnterprisesPontiac250Engine
84Stanton Barrett **(R)**PBH MotorsportsChevrolet
80Andy HillenburgHover MotorsportsFord
81Morgan ShepherdPinnacle MotorsportsFord
91Steve GrissomLJ RacingChevrolet
00Buckshot Jones **(R)**Buckshot RacingPontiac
78Gary Bradberry **(R)**Triad MotorsportsFord
47Billy StandridgeStandridge Auto RacingFord
73Ken BouchardBarkdoll RacingChevrolet
59Mark Gibson **(R)**CSG MotorsportsFord
72Jim SauterMarcis Auto RacingChevrolet
79Norm Benning **(R)**T.R.I.X. RacingChevrolet
13Dick TrickleBill Elliott RacingFord
15Jeff Green **(R)**Bud Moore EngineeringFord
48Glen Morgan **(R)**Glen Morgan RacingChevrolet
50Dan Pardus **(R)**Midwest Transit RacingChevrolet
41David Green **(R)**Larry Hedrick MotorsportsChevrolet
90Mike Harmon **(R)**2Donlavey RacingFord
**Notes:**

Media

Television

The Daytona 500 was covered by CBS in the United States for the twenty first straight year. Mike Joy, two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Ned Jarrett and 1980 race winner Buddy Baker called the race from the broadcast booth. Dick Berggren, Ralph Sheheen and Bill Stephens handled pit road for the television side. Ken Squier would serve as co-host alongside Greg Gumbel.

CBSHostBooth announcersPit reporters**Lap-by-lap****Color-commentators**
Greg Gumbel
Ken SquierMike JoyNed Jarrett
Buddy BakerDick Berggren
Ralph Sheheen
Bill Stephens

References

References

  1. "Weather of the ''1999 Daytona 500''". The Old Farmers' Almanac.
  2. [https://archive.today/20130624192652/http://media.ford.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=861]
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