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The 1978 American 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series (now Sprint Cup Series) race that took place on October 22, 1978, at North Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, North Carolina, USA. Four hundred and ninety-two laps were done on a paved oval track spanning .〔 Forty-six thousand people would attend the race live to see 36 cars (and only 19 of them finish the race).〔〔 Other notable drivers included: Darrell Waltrip (who went on to be a NASCAR announcer for FOX), Benny Parsons, Richard Petty, Richard Childress (driving for himself under the ''Kansas Jack'' sponsorship), and J.D. McDuffie (who would die at Watkins Glen during a racing event in the 1991 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season).〔〔 North Carolina Motor Speedway was affectionally referred to at the time as ''The Action Track''; delivering lots of action from motorcycle racing to stock car events. The ''Baby Grand 125'' was an ARCA (Automobile Racing Club of America) companion race that took place the previous day. People could buy the official program during both races at a relatively low price of $3 USD ($ when adjusted for inflation). ==Summary== Cale Yarborough won the race's pole position and would eventually go onto leading 376 laps of the 492 that were actually done.〔〔 Bobby Allison lost to Yarborough by more than two laps.〔 Gatorade and Hawaiian Tropic were considered to be a small sample of non-automotive sponsors for the drivers;〔 they both were the brand names of non-alcoholic soft drinks. Automotive sponsors were still the norm in NASCAR during the late 1970s due to the general lack of awareness of NASCAR in most of America during that era. Cale Yarborough automatically clinched his third straight NASCAR Winston Cup championship as a result of winning this race. As a result of recent rule changes brought about by the ''Chase for the Sprint Cup''; this situation is no longer possible in today's NASCAR. The racing entries were mostly made of Chevrolet vehicles with very few Ford and Dodge entries.〔〔 Four hours, fifteen minutes, and fifty-eight seconds was the duration of the entire race.〔 The first green flag was waved at noon while the checkered flag was waved at approximately 4:15 P.M.. Engine problems were dominant in the race with only Bill Hollar actually quitting the race for "personal reasons."〔〔 Donnie Allison would become ill after leading 12 laps and would drop out of the race;〔〔 no relief driver was ever found. Five cautions were given out for fifty-two laps and Baxter Price (in his self-sponsored Chevrolet Chevelle Laguna) was the lowest driver to actually finish the race.〔 Joe Frasson would finish his NASCAR Cup Series career by participating in this race and finishing in 23rd place after starting in 25th place (improving his position by two places).〔〔 Charlie Blanton and Johnny Halford would also retire from NASCAR after this race. Frasson drove the race using a self-owned #18 vehicle with a 1978 Buick Century as his manufacturer and model.〔 The number would be transferred over to a Chevrolet machine when it was transferred to Joe Gibbs Racing starting in the 1992 Daytona 500 and remains with JGR to the present day. The number in question would ultimately become synonymous with Kyle Busch's Toyota Camry starting in 2008. Top prize at this race would be $23,360 in American dollars ($ when adjusted for inflation).〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「1978 American 500」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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