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・ 1979 Cricket World Cup Officials
・ 1979 Cricket World Cup squads
・ 1979 Cricket World Cup statistics
・ 1979 Crispa Redmanizers season
・ 1979 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season
・ 1979 Currie Cup
・ 1979 Custom Credit Australian Indoor Championships
・ 1979 Custom Credit Australian Indoor Championships – Doubles
・ 1979 Custom Credit Australian Indoor Championships – Singles
・ 1979 Dallas Cowboys season
・ 1979 Danish 1st Division
・ 1979 Davis Cup
・ 1979 Davis Cup Americas Zone
・ 1979 Davis Cup Eastern Zone
・ 1979 Davis Cup Europe Zone
1979 Daytona 500
・ 1979 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team
・ 1979 Denver Broncos season
・ 1979 Detroit Lions season
・ 1979 Detroit Tigers season
・ 1979 Dino Ferrari Grand Prix
・ 1979 Dniprodzerzhynsk mid-air collision
・ 1979 Dutch Grand Prix
・ 1979 Dutch Open (tennis)
・ 1979 Easter flood
・ 1979 Eastern 8 Men's Basketball Tournament
・ 1979 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
・ 1979 economic reform
・ 1979 Edmonton Eskimos season
・ 1979 Egypt Cup Final


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1979 Daytona 500 : ウィキペディア英語版
1979 Daytona 500

The 1979 Daytona 500, the 21st annual event, was the second race of the 1979 NASCAR Winston Cup (now Sprint Cup) season. It was held on February 18, 1979. Sports pundits consider the 1979 Daytona 500 to be the most important race in stock car history.
The race was Richard Petty's sixth Daytona 500 win. A crash and subsequent fight between leaders Cale Yarborough and Donnie Allison, along with Donnie's brother Bobby, brought national publicity to NASCAR. Motorsports announcer and editor Dick Berggren said: "Nobody knew it then, but that was the race that got everything going. It was the first 'water cooler' race, the first time people had stood around water coolers on Monday and talked about seeing a race on TV the day before. It took a while – years, maybe – to realize how important it was."〔
==Television==
The 1979 Daytona 500 was the first 500-mile race to be broadcast in its entirety live on national television in the United States. Races were shown on television but as an example, the Indianapolis 500 was broadcast on tape delay later in the evening on the day it was run, in this era, and usually in edited form. Most races aired during this period were only broadcast starting with the final quarter to half of the race, as was the procedure for ABC's IndyCar broadcasts on their ''Wide World of Sports'' program.
CBS signed a new contract with NASCAR to telecast the race. Ken Squier and David Hobbs were the booth announcers with Ned Jarrett and Brock Yates〔http://www.amazon.com/1979-Daytona-500-Artist-Provided/dp/B000E4IED2〕 in the pits for that race. The day was fortunate for CBS as a major snowstorm known as the Presidents Day Snowstorm of 1979 bogged down most of the Northeast and parts of the Midwestern United States, increasing the viewership of the event. The race introduced two new innovative uses of TV cameras: The "in-car" camera and the low angle "speed shot", which are now considered standard in all telecasts of auto racing. Motor Racing Network was broadcasting the race on the radio, and their broadcasters included Barney Hall, Mike Joy and Dick Berggren.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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