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1979 Coca-Cola 500

1979 Coca-Cola 500
Race details
Race 19 of 31 in the 1979 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season
Pocono Raceway, the race track where the race was held.
Pocono Raceway, the race track where the race was held.
Date July 30, 1979 (1979-July-30)
Official name Coca-Cola 500
Location Pocono International Raceway, Long Pond, Pennsylvania
Course Permanent racing facility
2.500 mi (3.400 km)
Distance 200 laps, 501.0 mi (804 km)
Weather Temperatures reaching up to 80.1 °F (26.7 °C); average wind speeds of 2.9 miles per hour (4.7 km/h)
Average speed 115.207 miles per hour (185.408 km/h)
Attendance 40,000
Pole position
Driver Race Hill Farm Team
Most laps led
Driver Darrell Waltrip Al Rudd Auto
Laps 62
Winner
No. 11 Cale Yarborough Junior Johnson & Associates
Television in the United States
Network untelevised
Announcers none

The 1979 Coca-Cola 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series racing event that took place on July 30, 1979, at Pocono International Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania.

By the following season, NASCAR had completely stopped tracking the year model of all the vehicles and most teams did not take stock cars to the track under their own power anymore. Only manual transmission vehicles were allowed to participate in this race; a policy that NASCAR has retained to the present day.

Pocono Raceway is one of six superspeedways to hold NASCAR races; the others are Daytona International Speedway, Michigan International Speedway, Auto Club Speedway, Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway. The standard track at Pocono Raceway is a three-turn superspeedway that is 2.5 miles (4.0 km) long. The track's turns are banked differently; the first is banked at 14°, the second turn at 8° and the final turn with 6°. However, each of the three straightaways are banked at 2°.

While originally scheduled for July 29, 1979, it was postponed one day due to rain.

Two hundred laps were completed in four hours and twenty minutes. Seven cautions flags were given out by NASCAR for 49 laps; Cale Yarborough eventually defeated Richard Petty under the race's final yellow flag. This would result in Yarborough's third win of the year. Forty thousand fans attended a live racing event where the average speed of the vehicles would be 115.207 miles per hour (185.408 km/h). None of the drivers on the starting grid were born in Wisconsin; which is still true in 2016.Harry Gant qualified for the pole position with a speed of 148.711 miles per hour (239.327 km/h). The majority of the vehicles involved in the race had Chevrolet as their manufacturer.Steve Gray would make his NASCAR debut that resulted in a last-place finish. He crashed on the very first lap of the race with Roger Hamby and Al Holbert; taking home only $1,305 in winnings ($4,306.32 when adjusted for inflation).


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