Race details | |||
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Race 25 of 31 in the 1980 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season | |||
Layout of Dover International Speedway
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Date | September 14, 1980 | ||
Official name | CRC Chemicals 500 | ||
Location | Dover Downs International Speedway, Dover, Delaware | ||
Course | Permanent racing facility 1.000 mi (1.609 km) |
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Distance | 500 laps, 500.0 mi (804.6 km) | ||
Weather | Hot with temperatures reaching up to 88 °F (31 °C); wind speeds up to 7 miles per hour (11 km/h) | ||
Average speed | 116.024 miles per hour (186.723 km/h) | ||
Pole position | |||
Driver | Junior Johnson & Associates | ||
Most laps led | |||
Driver | Darrell Waltrip | DiGard Motorsports | |
Laps | 264 | ||
Winner | |||
No. 88 | Darrell Waltrip | DiGard Motorsports | |
Television in the United States | |||
Network | untelevised | ||
Announcers | none |
The 1980 CRC Chemicals 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series racing event that took place on September 14, 1980, at Dover Downs International Speedway, Dover, Delaware.
This would be the last of 26 wins for Darrell Waltrip at DiGard, Inc.. Darrell won a lot of races but the team struggled with reliability issues which cost Darrell every year except 1979. Darrell had a contract with DiGard that ran through 1982 but with the help of his father-in-law, Junior Johnson, and sponsor Mountain Dew he was able to get out of the contract at the end of 1980 and finally win his first Winston Cup title in 1981.
Dover Downs International Speedway, now called Dover International Speedway, is one of five short tracks to hold NASCAR races; the others are Bristol Motor Speedway, Richmond International Raceway, Martinsville Speedway, and Phoenix International Raceway. The NASCAR race makes use of the track's standard configuration, a four-turn short track oval that is 1 mile (1.6 km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees, and both the front stretch (the location of the finish line) and the backstretch are banked at nine degrees.
Twenty-nine lead changes were noticed amongst 11 different drivers.
A combination of racing veterans and relative newcomers to the sport made the 1980 NASCAR Cup Series racing amongst the closest ever seen within the 1970s and 1980s decades. The 1980 NASCAR season was also a rare period in time where the "little teams" could compete almost on a completely equal level against the "big organizations" of stock car racing. Today, independent organizations like NEMCO Motorsports and Robby Gordon Motorsports have a very harsh degree of difficulty to overcome when trying to overtake powerhouses like Hendrick Motorsports, Richard Childress Racing, and Joe Gibbs Racing. The approximate time it took to complete the race was four hours and fourteen minutes using 500 laps of racing. Eight yellow flags were given out for 39 laps while Darrell Waltrip defeated Harry Gant by almost ½ of a second. The attendance for this paved oval track race was 35,500 live audience members. Waltrip would earn $22,900 just by winning this race ($66,563.53 when adjusted for inflation).