1999 Pepsi 400

1999 Pepsi 400
Race details[1]
Race 17 of 34 in the 1999 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season

Track map of Daytona International Speedway showing mainly the speedway.
Date July 3, 1999 (1999-July-03)
Official name Pepsi 400
Location Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida
Course Permanent racing facility
2.500 mi (4.023 km)
Distance 160 laps, 400 mi (643.737 km)
Weather Hot with temperatures reaching up to 86 °F (30 °C); wind speeds approaching 11.1 miles per hour (17.9 km/h)
Average speed 169.213 miles per hour (272.322 km/h)
Attendance 130,000[2]
Pole position
Driver Felix Sabates
Most laps led
Driver Rusty Wallace Roger Penske
Laps 75
Winner
No. 88 Dale Jarrett Yates Racing
Television in the United States
Network CBS
Announcers Mike Joy, Ned Jarrett, Buddy Baker

The 1999 Pepsi 400 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series race that took place on July 3, 1999, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. This race would make the halfway point of the 1999 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season.

Summary

It took nearly two hours and twenty-two minutes for Dale Jarrett to defeat Dale Earnhardt under the race's final caution flag in front of a live audience of 130,000.[2] Joe Nemechek would earn the pole position in this race driving at speeds up to 194.86 miles per hour or 313.60 kilometres per hour.[2] Ricky Craven would become the last-place finisher in this 160-lap race due to a steering issue on lap 34.[2] Mark Martin would be forced into a backup car while five drivers would fail to qualify for this race.[2] Only Michael Waltrip, Buckshot Jones, Steve Park, and Craven would fail to finish the race.[2] The average speed of the race was 169.213 miles per hour or 272.322 kilometres per hour with three cautions handed out by NASCAR authorities for nine brief laps.[2] Rain would briefly occur for four laps before disappearing for the remainder of the race.[2]

Loy Allen, Jr. would retire from NASCAR after this race.[3] The total prize purse for this race was estimated at more than two million dollars.[4] Winnings for this race varied from more than $160,000 for the winner and less than $36,000 for the last-place finisher.[5]

Drivers who failed to qualify for this race are Derrike Cope, Hut Stricklin, Ken Bouchard, Robert Pressley and Stanton Barrett.[2]

Top ten finishers

Pos[2] Grid No. Driver Manufacturer Laps Laps led
1 12 88 Dale Jarrett Ford 160 40
2 10 3 Dale Earnhardt Chevrolet 160 18
3 37 99 Jeff Burton Ford 160 0
4 8 31 Mike Skinner Chevrolet 160 7
5 9 18 Bobby Labonte Chevrolet 160 3
6 6 20 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 160 0
7 25 22 Ward Burton Pontiac 160 0
8 18 4 Bobby Hamilton Chevrolet 160 0
9 32 36 Ernie Irvan Pontiac 160 0
10 38 5 Terry Labonte Chevrolet 160 0

Timeline

Standings after the race

Pos Driver Points[2] Differential
1 Dale Jarrett 2674 0
2 Bobby Labonte 2497 -177
3 Mark Martin 2440 -234
4 Jeff Burton 2419 -255
5 Jeff Gordon 2280 -394
6 Tony Stewart 2261 -413
7 Dale Earnhardt 2182 -492
8 Rusty Wallace 2053 -621
9 Ward Burton 2023 -651
10 Jeremy Mayfield 2018 -656

References

  1. "Weather of the 1999 Pepsi 400". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Archived from the original on 2013-07-02. Retrieved 2013-06-25.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1999 Pepsi 400 racing information at Racing Reference
  3. 1999 Pepsi 400 results at Race-Database
  4. NASCAR Race Results for the 1999 Pepsi 400 at Fantasy Racing Cheat Sheet
  5. NASCAR Race Results for the 1999 Pepsi 400 at Driver Averages
Preceded by
1999 Save Mart/Kragen 350
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Season
1999
Succeeded by
1999 Jiffy Lube 300
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