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Not What You Meant?  There are 3 definitions for Talladega 500.

Aaron's 499

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Aaron's 499
Venue Talladega Superspeedway
Corporate sponsor Aaron's
First race 1970
Distance 500.08 miles (805 km)
Number of laps 188
Previous names Alabama 500 (1970)

Winston 500 (1971-1993, 1997) Winston Select 500 (1994-1996) DieHard 500 (1998-2000) Talladega 500 (2001)

The Aaron's 499 is a NASCAR Sprint Cup stock car race held at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama. The race has always been held in early May or late April. The Aaron's 499 is also one of four races currently run with restrictor plates, the others being the UAW Ford 500, the Pepsi 400, and the Daytona 500. The 1997 event, won by Mark Martin, was the fastest NASCAR race to date ever run, at an average speed of 188.354 mph (303.126 km/h), due also to fact that any yellow flag marred the event. The race, from 1970 until the demise of the Grand Slam as a result of the Ferko lawsuit, was known as the second leg of the sport's Grand Slam. It was also previously part of the Winston Million. The name is derived from a sponsorship agreement with the Aaron's chain of lease-to-own stores. The 499 name is designed to mimic the chain's tendencies to offer rentals "For $99" per month. Despite the name, the race is slightly over 500 miles in length.

Past winners

Aaron's 499

Talladega 500

DieHard 500

Winston 500

  • 1997 Mark Martin (race postponed two weeks due to rain)

Winston Select 500

Winston 500

Alabama 500

Notable races

  • As noted before, in the 1987 race, the catchfencing was severely damaged when a wreck by Bobby Allison caused his car to go airborne and shear it off. Probably as a direct result, the carburetor restrictor plate was mandated for this, the fall race, and the two Daytona Races beginning the following year.
  • In the 2003 race (which was marred by a crash on lap 4 that damaged 27 cars, including Earnhardt), Dale Earnhardt, Jr. won his fourth consecutive race at the track, but not without controversy. After the 2001 spring race (thanks in part to protestations from Jimmy Spencer over Mike McLaughlin's blocking in the Busch race en route to a win), NASCAR ruled that the yellow line on the bottom of the track at both Talladega and Daytona were to serve as an out of bounds line (with any car that drops below to gain a position to be immediately black flagged unless they gave the position back or were forced below it). Earnhardt Jr. stormed well below the line entering the apron of turn three as he passed leader Matt Kenseth to avoid contact with Kenseth's car and get the win. NASCAR ruled that Earnhardt was forced below the line as the nose of his car had already passed the nose of Kenseth's car, making it a clean pass.
  • Jeff Gordon's 2004 win was marked by a spinout by Brian Vickers with 4⅓ laps to go. NASCAR's rule at that time was that if a race went past five to go and had a caution, they would not throw out the red flag and stop the cars to ensure a green flag finish. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. had just raced past Gordon for the lead, but at the previous scoring loop, Gordon was still ahead. The race finished under yellow and while Gordon did his victory burnout, enraged fans littered the track with garbage to protest the finish (it was believed that Vickers' crash and the subsequent cleanup would not have taken very long to clean up). This reaction, following a similar fan bombardment of the track at Daytona International Speedway after the 2002 Pepsi 400 ended under yellow, would result in the green-white-checkered rule being instituted in the NEXTEL Cup and Busch Series less than two months later.
  • Following Dale Earnhardt Jr's 2003 win, Hendrick Motorsports won four straight - three by Jeff Gordon and one by Jimmie Johnson.
  • The race has exceeded 40 official lead changes 14 times, including a motorsports record 75 lead changes in 1984.
  • The 1975 running featured the first win for Buddy Baker since 1973 and the first Winston Cup Grand National win for team owner Bud Moore since 1971. Tragedy struck on Lap 149 when race leader Richard Petty pitted with a burning wheel bearing; his nephew Randy Owens was killed when he fitted a hose to a pressurized water tank and the tank exploded.


Previous race:

Subway Fresh Fit 500

NASCAR Races Next race:

Crown Royal Presents The Jim Stewart 400

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Aaron's 499 from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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