1976 NASCAR Winston Cup Series

1976 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
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The 1976 NASCAR Grand National Winston Cup Series was the 28th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 5th modern era NASCAR Cup series. The season began on Sunday, January 18 and ended on Sunday, November 21. Cale Yarborough, driving the #11 Junior Johnson Holly Farms Chevrolet scored his first of three consecutive NASCAR Grand National Series Winston Cup Championships. Skip Manning was named NASCAR Rookie of the Year.

Season recap

DateEventCircuitWinner Broadcaster
January 18Winston Western 500Riverside International RacewayDavid Pearson Untelevised
February 15Daytona 500Daytona International Speedway ABC
February 29Carolina 500North Carolina SpeedwayRichard Petty Untelevised
March 7Richmond 400Richmond Fairgrounds RacewayDave Marcis
March 14Southeastern 400Bristol International SpeedwayCale Yarborough
March 21Atlanta 500Atlanta International RacewayDavid Pearson ABC
April 4Gwyn Staley 400North Wilkesboro SpeedwayCale Yarborough Untelevised
April 11Rebel 500Darlington RacewayDavid Pearson ABC
April 25Virginia 500Martinsville SpeedwayDarrell Waltrip Untelevised
May 2Winston 500Alabama International Motor SpeedwayBuddy Baker CBS
May 8Music City USA 420Nashville SpeedwayCale Yarborough Untelevised
May 16Mason-Dixon 500Dover Downs International SpeedwayBenny Parsons
May 30World 600Charlotte Motor SpeedwayDavid Pearson CBS
June 13Riverside 400Riverside International RacewayDavid Pearson
June 20Cam 2 Motor Oil 400Michigan International SpeedwayDavid Pearson Untelevised
July 4Firecracker 400Daytona International SpeedwayCale Yarborough ABC
July 17Nashville 420Nashville SpeedwayBenny Parsons Untelevised
August 1Purolator 500Pocono RacewayRichard Petty
August 8Talladega 500Alabama International Motor SpeedwayDave Marcis CBS
August 22Champion Spark Plug 400Michigan International SpeedwayDavid Pearson
August 29Volunteer 400Bristol International SpeedwayCale Yarborough Untelevised
September 6Southern 500Darlington RacewayDavid Pearson ABC
September 12Capital City 400Richmond Fairgrounds RacewayCale Yarborough Untelevised
September 19Delaware 500Dover Downs International SpeedwayCale Yarborough
September 26Old Dominion 500Martinsville SpeedwayCale Yarborough
October 3Wilkes 400North Wilkesboro SpeedwayCale Yarborough
October 10National 500Charlotte Motor SpeedwayDonnie Allison ABC
October 24American 500North Carolina SpeedwayRichard Petty Untelevised
November 7Dixie 500Atlanta International RacewayDave Marcis CBS
November 21Los Angeles Times 500Ontario Motor SpeedwayDavid Pearson Untelevised

Race Summaries

  • Western 500 - Bobby Allison won the pole in Roger Penske's final race fielding a Matador and led the first 18 laps. Richard Petty started 27th and stormed through the field to lead 15 laps but fell out with engine failure. David Pearson led 124 laps for his first road course win since 1966 and the Wood Brothers Racing team's first Riverside win since 1968.
  • Daytona 500 – From disallowance of qualifying times for A. J. Foyt, Dave Marcis, and Darrell Waltrip to the crashing of race leaders Richard Petty and David Pearson a half-mile from the checkered flag - the finish broadcast live on Wide World of Sports - the 1976 500 became one of the most celebrated races in history.
  • Carolina 500 – Richard Petty won going away in a race marred by a huge melee on the backstretch where Bobby Allison tumbled.
  • Richmond 400 Cale Yarborough's bid for his first win of the season ended when he crashed with twelve laps to go. Dave Marcis edged Richard Petty in a battle of Dodges.
  • Southeastern 400 Yarborough finally broke through, leading 285 laps and putting runner-up Darrell Waltrip a lap down. Petty lost the point lead to Benny Parsons (who finished third) after a crash with Cecil Gordon and Bill Champion just 64 laps in.
  • Atlanta 500 – NASCAR mandated smaller carburators beginning with this race. David Pearson spent 225 laps fighting to get back onto the lead lap and took his third win of the season, beating Parsons. Yarborough finished third, a lap down after making up three laps of a four-lap deficit.
  • Gwyn Staley 400 - Dave Marcis won the pole but finished a distant eighth as Cale Yarborough won at Junior Johnson's home track, leading 364 laps and putting runner-up Richard Petty a lap down. Benny Parsons led 23 laps and finished fourth.
  • Rebel 500 - Pearson ran down Buddy Baker in a race where his father Buck finished sixth. Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip were involved in a hard crash at Lap 80 while Petty and Yarborough fell out with engine failures.
  • Virginia 500Cale Yarborough crashed when Dave Marcis' rearend spilled fluid while dueling for the lead. Darrell Waltrip thus took the win, his first with Gatorade sponsorship.
  • Winston 500 Buddy Baker qualified twelfth, a run so disappointing his Bud Moore team drove back to their Spartanburg, SC shop to overhaul the engine before returning to Talladega for the race. Baker nonetheless became the first driver to win a 500-miler in less than three hours, while an early-race crash with Pearson, Dave Marcis, and Dick Brooks eliminated Benny Parsons and cost him the point lead (and a $10,000 bonus awarded to the driver who accumulated the most points per third of the season) to runner-up Yarborough. Richard Petty finished fourth after he stalled the car on an early pitstop and lost a lap.
  • Mason-Dixon 500 Benny Parsons suffered nose damage in a mid-race crash but his Chevrolet ran stronger after the wreck; he stormed to lead 161 of the race's last 169 laps and beat Pearson by 25 seconds. Cale Yarborough led 243 laps but was penalized a lap on a pitstop, then fell out with engine failure; he thus lost the point lead to Parsons.
  • World 600 – Pearson edged Petty and Cale Yarborough as Bruton Smith made his official return to Charlotte Motor Speedway. Janet Guthrie made her NASCAR debut.
  • Michigan 400 - Cale Yarborough dominated until he lost power due to a blown head gasket (still finishing second) and Pearson took his seventh win of the season. Cale's runner-up finish regained him the point lead as Benny Parsons lost 21 laps and finished 19th.
  • Firecracker 400 - Cale Yarborough edged Pearson for his first Daytona win since 1968.
  • Nashville 420 - Neil Bonnett drove most the race for pole-sitter Bobby Allison; days before Allison was injured in a bad crash at Elko, MN and had to give way to Bonnett after the opening lap; the Penske #2 finished a distant seventh. Buddy Baker led 220 laps but fell out while leading with 90 laps to go; Benny Parsons took over and beat Richard Petty and Darrell Waltrip. Waltrip's third place at his home track came following the hiring by DiGard of engine builder Marion "Ducky" Newman, who'd left Bud Moore's team in a salary dispute.
  • Purolator 500 – NASCAR allowed teams to use larger carburators again beginning with Pocono. The lead changed 47 times as Pearson's blown tire coming to the white flag gave Petty only his second win of the season. Benny Parsons edged Pearson for third while pole-sitter Cale Yarborough blew his engine halfway through; Junior Johnson's team changed engines in the garage in 33 minutes and Yarborough finished 25th; he lost the point lead to Parsons.
  • Talladega 500 Dave Marcis took his only Talladega win and the first for crew chief Harry Hyde. The lead changed a season-high 57 times. Benny Parsons blew his engine after 39 laps while Cale suffered another engine failure, yet Junior Johnson's team changed engines mid-race again, this time in 20 minutes. Richard Petty blew his engine after taking the lead in the final 20 laps; with this combination of DNFs Cale thus took the point lead for what proved to be the final time. Darrell Waltrip blew his engine and following the race DiGard fired team manager Mario Rossi and engine builders "Stump" Davis and Keith Harlan; the team hired Robert Yates to assist Marion Newman.
  • Yankee 400 – David Pearson took his eighth win of the season, but first since the June event at Michigan International Speedway. Cale Yarborough finished second; Junior Johnson hired a security guard to watch his engines, suspecting sabotage after back-to-back engine failures.
  • Southern 500 – Pearson took the one race he had sought his entire career. A big wreck occurred after Buddy Baker blew up and spun; behind him Skip Manning spun and was hit in the left side door by Joe Frasson. Cale Yarborough hit a guardrail post on pit road and it bent the rearend assembly; Richard Childress helped the Junior Johnson crew replace the assembly and Cale finished 23rd; Richard Petty finished second despite hammering the wall off the track's infamous fourth turn and cut Cale's point lead to 29.
  • Capital City 400 - Bobby Allison made his most determined bid for a win of the season, chasing Cale Yarborough and finished one length back at the finish. Cale increased his point lead over Petty to 44.
  • Delaware 500 - Cale Yarborough made up two laps on two separate occasions and won his second straight race.
  • Old Dominion 500 - Darrell Waltrip won the pole, his first with Robert Yates power, but could only finish second to Cale as rain cut short the 500-lapper at 340 laps.
  • Wilkes 400 - Yarborough won his fourth straight race and season-leading ninth overall.
  • National 500 - Donnie Allison surprised the field in a backup Hoss Ellington Monte Carlo; the engine measured a tick over the legal displacement in immediate post race inspection but after cooling down the engine was within limits. The win was Donnie's first in Grand National competition since 1971.
  • American 500 - Richard Petty took the win, only his third of the season. Lennie Pond finished second. Green flag pitstops became frequent as Petty spent a total of 125 seconds in the pits to Pond's 54 seconds.
  • Dixie 500 Dave Marcis took his final superspeedway win after a race-long duel with Yarborough, Pearson, and Buddy Baker; Richard Benyo of Stock Car Racing Magazine described the initial 62 laps as a battle where "Marcis was able to nose Pearson, Yarborough, and Baker to the stripe" from Laps 14 through 62. Dale Earnhardt made his third career start in this race and survived a vicious tumble after hitting the spinning Ford of Dick Brooks. Richard Petty's engine failure all but clinched the season championship for Cale Yarborough. During the weekend Penske Racing issued a press release stating Bobby Allison, fresh from victory in a USAC 200-mile stock car race at Texas World Speedway in the Penske Mercury, would return to the team for 1977.
  • LA Times 500 – Pearson led the final 121 laps and easily posted his eighth superspeedway win and tenth overall of the season. Yarborough clinched the season championship (his first and also the first for team owner Junior Johnson) by taking the green flag, only to fall out with transmission trouble after leading 68 laps. Bobby Allison blew his engine simultaneously with his brother Donnie and after the race told Roger Penske he was leaving the team.

Daytona 500

Dixie 500

Firecracker 400

Gwyn Staley 400

Los Angeles Times 500

Final Points Standings

  1. Cale Yarborough – 4644
  2. Richard Petty – 4449
  3. Benny Parsons – 4304
  4. Bobby Allison – 4097
  5. Lennie Pond – 3930
  6. Dave Marcis – 3875
  7. Buddy Baker – 3745
  8. Darrell Waltrip – 3505
  9. David Pearson – 3483
  10. Dick Brooks – 3447
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