1977 NASCAR Winston Cup Series

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1977 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
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The 1977 NASCAR Grand National Winston Cup Series was the 29th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 6th modern era NASCAR Cup series. The season began on Sunday, January 16 and ended on Sunday, November 20. Cale Yarborough driving the Junior Johnson #11 Holly Farms Chevrolet won his second consecutive NASCAR Grand National Series Winston Cup Championship. Ricky Rudd was crowned NASCAR Rookie of the Year.

This was the last season without Terry Labonte until 2015; the team he would join was in 1977 driven by Skip Manning.

Season recap[]

Race # Date Event Circuit Winner
1 January 16 Winston Western 500 Riverside International Raceway David Pearson
2 February 20 Daytona 500 Daytona International Speedway Cale Yarborough
3 February 27 Richmond 400 Richmond Fairgrounds Raceway Cale Yarborough
4 March 13 Carolina 500 North Carolina Speedway Richard Petty
5 March 20 Atlanta 500 Atlanta International Raceway Richard Petty
6 March 27 Gwyn Staley 400 North Wilkesboro Speedway Cale Yarborough
7 April 3 Rebel 500 Darlington Raceway Darrell Waltrip
8 April 17 Southeastern 500 Bristol International Speedway Cale Yarborough
9 April 24 Virginia 500 Martinsville Speedway Cale Yarborough
10 May 1 Winston 500 Alabama International Motor Speedway Darrell Waltrip
11 May 7 Music City USA 420 Nashville Speedway Benny Parsons
12 May 15 Mason-Dixon 500 Dover Downs International Speedway Cale Yarborough
13 May 29 World 600 Charlotte Motor Speedway Richard Petty
14 June 12 Riverside 400 Riverside International Raceway Richard Petty
15 June 19 Cam 2 Motor Oil 400 Michigan International Speedway Cale Yarborough
16 July 4 Firecracker 400 Daytona International Speedway Richard Petty
17 July 16 Nashville 420 Nashville Speedway Darrell Waltrip
18 July 31 Coca-Cola 500 Pocono Raceway Benny Parsons
19 August 7 Talladega 500 Alabama International Motor Speedway Donnie Allison*
20 August 22 Champion Spark Plug 400 Michigan International Speedway Darrell Waltrip
21 August 28 Volunteer 400 Bristol International Speedway Cale Yarborough
22 September 5 Southern 500 Darlington Raceway David Pearson
23 September 11 Capital City 400 Richmond Fairgrounds Raceway Neil Bonnett
24 September 18 Delaware 500 Dover Downs International Speedway Benny Parsons
25 September 25 Old Dominion 500 Martinsville Speedway Cale Yarborough
26 October 2 Wilkes 400 North Wilkesboro Speedway Darrell Waltrip
27 October 9 National 500 Charlotte Motor Speedway Benny Parsons
28 October 23 American 500 North Carolina Speedway Donnie Allison
29 November 6 Dixie 500 Atlanta International Raceway Darrell Waltrip
30 November 20 Los Angeles Times 500 Ontario Motor Speedway Neil Bonnett

Donnie Allison is credited with the win but Darrell Waltrip finished the race for an over-heated Donnie Allison after Darrell Waltrip dropped out of the race after 106 laps. Points are always scored by the driver, who starts the race.

Race Summaries[]

  • Winston Western 500 - David Pearson pounced when Cale Yarborough spun and seized his eleventh race in his last 23 starts, and fourth straight win on a California speedway.
  • Daytona 500 - Cale Yarborough became only the second driver to win the Daytona 500 more than once, edging Benny Parsons. Richard Petty nearly lost a lap on the start due to an emergency stop on the pace lap; Bobby Wawak's car caught fire on Lap Four and the yellow allowed Petty to get a lap back; he roared through the field and led but fell out with engine failure, his eleventh engine-related failure in the last 37 races.
  • Richmond 400 - Yarborough led 161 laps as rain cut the event short at 245 laps; it was Cale's twelfth win in the last 37 races.
  • Carolina 500 - North Carolina Motor Speedway was repaved in the off-season and the surface proved slick; the lead changed 30 times amid numerous crashes. Richard Petty pounced after halfway and won handily for the first superspeedway race to finish with an average speed under 100 MPH since 1961.
  • Atlanta 500 - Petty, Pearson, and Cale had the entire race to themselves and finished 1-2-3 as only two cautions interrupted the 500-miler.
  • Gwyn Staley 400 - Yarborough led 320 laps en route to the win. Neil Bonnett won his second pole of the season in Harry Hyde's Dodge.
  • Rebel 500 - Darrell Waltrip first served notice for the season as a two-car crash with six laps to go brought out the yellow; Waltrip surged as Bobby Allison (subbing for his brother Donnie in Hoss Ellington's Chevy) and Petty were racing to the line; all three hit the line abreast and Waltrip was declared the winner by inches as the race ended under yellow.
  • Southeastern 500 - Yarborough annihilated the field at Bristol International Raceway as he led all but five laps and was seven laps ahead of runner-up Dick Brooks, this thanks in part to only two brief yellows.
  • Virginia 500 - Darrell Waltrip led 51 laps in challenging Cale and also Benny Parsons but fell out with brake failure. Parsons led 83 laps but was no match for Cale; the win was Yarborough's fifth of the season and 15th of the last 43 races.
  • Winston 500 - The race lead changed 63 times among 11 drivers as Donnie Allison led over 70 laps. Richard Petty exploded from ninth to the lead on Lap Six but fell out on Lap 153 with engine failure. On the final lap Darrell Waltrip led with Allison second, Cale Yarborough third, and Benny Parsons fourth; Waltrip swung low in Turn Two to break the draft, and a mad scramble ensued where Cale rocketed to the high side in Three but was sideswiped by Waltrip and Parsons tried to shoot the gap; Cale edged Parsons for second as Waltrip broke away to the win.
  • Music City 420 - Benny Parsons ended Yarborough's streak of short track wins when he grabbed the lead with 38 laps to go after Cale had led 275 straight laps; it was the first win for Parsons in the season.
  • Mason Dixon 500 - For the second straight Dover race Cale Yarborough lost multiple laps, this time getting his damaged rear bumper repaired; Junior Johnson tore it off by hand and sent Cale back out; Cale erased his deficit and after a lap-after-lap battle with David Pearson broke away to the win, his sixth of the season, increasing his point lead to 202 over third-place finisher Richard Petty.
  • World 600 - Before Petty Enterprises left for the Charlotte Motor Speedway engine builder Maurice Petty created a race motor that had the same horsepower as their qualifying motor; Richard unleashed that horsepower leading 311 laps and winning by over half a lap; he broke away from early battles with Pearson and Donnie Allison and past halfway executed a risky three-abreast pass in the trioval around Pearson and Bobby Allison driving Benny Parsons' Chevrolet in relief with Coo Coo Marlin's lapped car involved. Cale Yarborough broke a water pump and lost 50 laps getting repairs; his point lead was thus sliced nearly in half, to 108 points.
  • NAPA 400 - Petty broke away from the field for the final 63 laps and beat Pearson and Cale for his fourth win of the year; Petty and Pearson finished together in the top two for the 63rd and what turned out to be final time.
  • Michigan 400 - Cale Yarborough got back on track with a dominant win at Michigan International Speedway, his first there since 1970. He was critical of the track's surface, which had buckled in spots due to a hard winter: "My car jumped out of gear three times."
  • Firecracker 400 - Neil Bonnett won the pole after his team wrenched by Harry Hyde was purchased by mysterious coal-miner J.D. Stacy; the former K&K Insurance #71 was renumbered and painted white with red lettering; a cylinder faltered on the start and Bonnett limped home eighth. After Cale and Bobby Allison fought for the lead in the first 49 laps with A. J. Foyt and Darrell Waltrip (the lead changed 28 times in that span) Richard Petty took over, leading 92 of the last 111 laps. "I wish people would stop complaining about the Chevrolets," said Waltrip (second at the end). "A Dodge won the pole here and Petty's Dodge blew my doors off." Cale's transmission broke and after replacing the transmission he finished 14 laps down in 23rd, saying, "When Old Blue (Petty) wanted to go, he went." Petty cut Cale's point lead to 17.
  • Nashville 420 - Darrell Waltrip led the last 251 laps for an easy win, but scoring headaches (due to pit road being the track's infield quarter-mile oval) left second and third place in dispute; Bobby Allison finished a lap down in second and Richard Petty finished third.
  • Coca-Cola 500 - NASCAR mandated cylinder changes for Ford engines that gave them some 20 extra horsepower, though David Pearson believed "we need 40" to battle the Chevrolets. The race lead changed hands 47 times officially as Benny Parsons flexed the most muscle he'd shown in the season to that point. Darrell Waltrip won the pole, his first on a superspeedway, and photos from this Pocono race were used in an October story on Waltrip in Sports Illustrated. Richard Petty rallied from a flat tire in the first twenty laps; he closed on Parsons in the final laps but finished a close second. Parsons led 118 laps for his second win of the year, while Cale Yarborough finished sixth with damage from a crash with Buddy Baker at lap 120; Petty thus took the point lead by eight points over Cale and Junior Johnson stated the car simply wasn't strong enough.
  • Talladega 500 - Once again Alabama International Motor Speedway witnessed one of the most bizarre weekends in NASCAR history. Following qualifying (Benny Parsons and Donnie Allison swept the front row while Chevrolets swept the top ten; Petty's Dodge in 11th was best of the non-Chevrolets) NASCAR confiscated the fuel cell (a Banjo Matthews product that was expandable) of one of the race's entrants (the identity of the team was not revealed) and announced he was cracking down on illegal fuel cells following this plus several bouts of unusually good mileage at Pocono; he stationed an official near the garage pay phones and the names of crewmen frantically telephoning to order new fuel cells were taken down. Thus were Junior Johnson, Hoss Ellington, Bud Moore, M.C. Anderson, and DiGard Racing caught with illegal fuel cells and fined. Donnie Allison fought for the lead as it changed 49 times on a brutally hot day; he fell ill after drinking a bottle of soda and needed a relief driver; Darrell Waltrip arrived in the Hoss Ellington pit and drove the final 40 laps, beating Cale Yarborough and Skip Manning for the win, the final time entering the 2021 season a relief driver got the win. Cale was second despite complaining afterward that his car was stuck in fourth gear and was "the sorriest Chevrolet on the track"; with Petty finishing 11th with a burned valve, Cale retook the point lead and would never look back.
  • Champion Spark Plug 400 - Moved to Monday following Sunday rains, the 400-miler at Michigan International Speedway was won by Darrell Waltrip. It was the first Grand National race run following the passing of 1970 champion Bobby Isaac.
  • Volunteer 500 - Yarborough grabbed his eighth win of the season, edging Darrell Waltrip under caution.
  • Southern 500 - The surging seasons of Yarborough and Waltrip collided hard in the Southern 500. Waltrip won the pole and Cale started fourth, and the two battled hard for first; the lead had changed hands 28 times by Lap 236 when the leaders came into lapped traffic; Waltrip slammed into Yarborough and the wreck wiped out Janet Guthrie, D.K. Ulrich, and Terry Bivins. Waltrip limped home sixth and Yarborugh salvaged fourth as David Pearson pounced to the win, only his second of the season. Following the race Ulrich confronted Yarborough about the wreck, and Cale responded, "I didn't hit you, Jaws did. Jaws Waltrip." Ulrich started laughing upon recognizing the reference and it became a catchphrase for fans about Waltrip.
  • Capital City 400 - Dodge Chargers finished 1-2 as Neil Bonnett, heavily coached by crew chief Harry Hyde, edged Richard Petty for his first Grand National win and the first for team owner J.D. Stacy.
  • Delaware 500 - Benny Parsons and Donnie Allison combined to lead 470 of 500 laps as Parsons grabbed his third win of the season and Donnie finished fourth. Neil Bonnett, fresh off his first career win, won the pole and led 20 laps. Cale Yarborough finished third and added 77 points to his lead as Richard Petty fell out with engine failure.
  • Old Dominion 500 - Yarborough grabbed his ninth win of the season on a very hot day, so hot an exhausted Yarborough called for the track to shorten the distance of its races, which earned an angry rebuke from H. Clay Earles.
  • Wilkes 400 - Richard Petty's fading title hopes took another blow at North Wilkesboro Speedway. Petty led 199 laps from the pole but crashed after being sideswiped by the lapped car of Bobby Allison. Darrell Waltrip took the win and in postrace interviews said the race was easy according to what he called "The Cale Scale," a mocking reference to Yarborough's complaint about fatigue the week earlier.
  • National 500 - Benny Parsons authored his most dominant run of the season as he led 250 laps and wasn't slowed despite running out of gas and losing a lap; he easily rebounded and ran down Yarborough for the win. Richard Petty led 25 laps but the suspension collapsed while leading; Petty's Dodge slowed off Four and David Pearson and Bobby Allison spun behind him. The DNF effectively ended Petty's title hopes. Dave Marcis finished 23rd in Penske Racing's Chevrolet, and following the race the Chevy equipment was sold to businessman Rod Osterlund and Marcis was tabbed as the new team's driver.
  • American 500 - Donnie Allison dominated the weekend for his second win of the year and ninth career Winston Cup Grand National win. Cale Yarborough clinched the championship despite a runner-up finish by Petty. Darrell Waltrip raced despite incurring injuries at Riverside International Raceway and also after being kicked by a mule during a parade days before the race. "I ran into a wall and got stepped on by a mule," Waltrip said afterward.
  • Dixie 500 - Rain delayed the race to the doorstep of darkness and cut its distance to 268 laps. On the final lap with darkness close to enveloping the track, Darrell Waltrip, using the lapped car of James Hylton as a pick, stormed past Donnie Allison and stole the win; Donnie crashed with Cale Yarborough at the stripe, finishing fourth.
  • Los Angeles Times 500 - 1974 Dodge Chargers swept the front row and Petty and Neil Bonnett battled for the lead all 500 miles; the lead changed 37 official times and numerous additional times, particularly in the opening laps as Petty and Bonnett battled Pearson, A. J. Foyt, and Waltrip. Waltrip fell out and Pearson lost a lap late as Petty came up short of Bonnett at the stripe despite skidding through Turn Four to try to catch him. The win was Bonnett's first on a superspeedway and the 45th Winston Cup Grand National win for crew chief Harry Hyde. Cale Yarborough recovered from a late spin to finish third; his winning point total was 5,000, the highest point total recorded under the point system developed by Bob Latford. Dave Marcis finished 14th in his first race with Rod Osterlund. For 5 laps under caution Janet Guthrie led laps which was the first time a woman led laps in NASCAR, and would not be done by a woman in the NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series until the 2013 Daytona 500 when Danica Patrick would lead laps.

Final Points Standings[]

Driver's standings[]

Finish Driver Points Starts Wins Top 5s Top 10s Poles
1 Cale Yarborough 5000 30 9 25 27 3
2 Richard Petty 4614 30 5 20 23 5
3 Benny Parsons 4570 30 4 20 22 3
4 Darrell Waltrip 4498 30 6 16 24 3
5 Buddy Baker 3961 30 0 9 20 0
6 Dick Brooks 3742 29 0 7 20 0
7 James Hylton 3476 30 0 0 11 0
8 Bobby Allison 3467 30 0 5 15 0
9 Richard Childress 3463 30 0 0 11 0
10 Cecil Gordon 3294 30 0 0 2 0
11 Buddy Arrington 3247 28 0 0 5 0
12 J.D. McDuffie 3236 30 0 0 4 0
13 David Pearson 3227 22 2 16 16 5
14 Skip Manning 3120 28 0 1 8 0
15 D.K. Ulrich 2901 30 0 0 0 0
16 Frank Warren 2876 29 0 0 1 0
17 Ricky Rudd 2810 25 0 1 10 0
18 Neil Bonnett 2649 23 2 5 9 6
19 Jimmy Means 2640 26 0 0 6 0
20 Tighe Scott 2628 26 0 1 1 0
21 Sam Sommers 2517 23 0 2 8 1
22 Ed Negre 2214 24 0 0 0 0
23 Janet Guthrie 2037 19 0 0 4 0
24 Donnie Allison 1970 17 2 9 10 3
25 Dave Marcis 1931 18 0 5 7 0
26 Tommy Gale 1689 18 0 0 0 0
27 Dick May 1324 13 0 0 0 0
28 Henley Gray 1214 14 0 0 0 0
29 Bruce Hill 1213 16 0 0 4 0
30 Lennie Pond 1193 14 0 4 6 0
31 Butch Hartman 1116 11 0 0 2 0
32 Ferrel Harris 1088 11 0 0 0 0
33 Baxter Price 1086 12 0 0 0 0
34 Coo Coo Marlin 1004 11 0 1 5 0
35 Bill Elliott 926 10 0 0 2 0
36 Gary Myers 888 10 0 0 0 0
37 David Sisco 847 10 0 0 0 0
38 Terry Bivins 841 8 0 0 1 0
39 G.C. Spencer 785 8 0 0 1 0
40 Terry Ryan 702 7 0 0 1 0
41 Joe Mihalic 683 8 0 0 0 0
42 Elmo Langley 634 7 0 0 0 0
43 Dean Dalton 620 8 0 0 0 0
44 Earl Brooks 552 6 0 0 0 0
45 Bobby Wawak 522 8 0 0 0 0
46 Harold Miller 470 6 0 0 0 0
47 Junior Miller 467 5 0 0 0 0
48 Rick Newsom 446 7 0 0 0 0
49 Ramo Stott 440 5 0 0 0 0
50 Grant Adcox 413 6 0 0 0 0
51 Sonny Easley 386 3 0 1 2 0
52 Ralph Jones 382 4 0 0 0 0
53 Ronnie Thomas 331 4 0 0 0 0
54 Morgan Shepherd 322 3 0 0 1 0
55 Walter Ballard 318 3 0 0 0 0
56 Norm Palmer 305 3 0 0 1 0
57 Earle Canavan 301 5 0 0 0 0
58 Jimmy Lee Capps 282 3 0 0 0 0
59 Jim Hurtubise 259 4 0 0 0 0
60 Chuck Bown 258 3 0 0 0 0
61 Jimmy Hensley 247 2 0 0 1 0
62 Travis Tiller 243 3 0 0 0 0
63 Roy Smith 237 3 0 0 0 0
64 Roland Wlodyka 219 5 0 0 0 0
65 Bill Schmitt 219 3 0 0 0 0
66 Ron Hutcherson 217 5 0 0 1 0
67 Hershel McGriff 207 2 0 0 1 0
68 Jim Thirkettle 206 2 0 0 0 0
69 Elliott Forbes-Robinson 201 3 0 0 0 0
70 Bob Burcham 199 2 0 0 1 0
71 Chuck Wahl 194 2 0 0 0 0
72 Bill Seifert 191 2 0 0 0 0
73 Eddie Bradshaw 186 2 0 0 1 0
74 Richard White 185 2 0 0 0 0
75 Gary Johnson 179 2 0 0 0 0
76 Mike Kempton 176 2 0 0 0 0
77 Marty Robbins 173 2 0 0 0 0
78 Kenny Brightbill 170 2 0 0 0 0
79 Peter Knab 167 3 0 0 0 0
80 Larry LaMay 164 2 0 0 0 0
81 Jocko Maggiacomo 164 3 0 0 0 0
82 Ernie Stierly 161 2 0 0 0 0
83 Don Puskarich 152 2 0 0 0 0
84 Hugh Pearson 142 1 0 0 1 0
85 John Dineen 124 1 0 0 0 0
85 Joe Ruttman 124 1 0 0 0 0
87 Jody Ridley 121 1 0 0 0 0
88 Robin Schildnecht 118 2 0 0 0 0
89 Harry Jefferson 109 1 0 0 0 0
90 Jim Vandiver 103 1 0 0 0 0
91 Harry Goularte 100 1 0 0 0 0
92 Marv Acton 94 2 0 0 0 0
93 Joe Frasson 91 1 0 0 0 0
93 Gary Matthews 91 1 0 0 0 0
95 Jim Raptis 89 3 0 0 0 0
96 Bill Baker 79 2 0 0 0 0
96 John Borneman 79 1 0 0 0 0
96 Paul Dean Holt 79 1 0 0 0 0
99 Dick Trickle 76 1 0 0 0 0
99 Greg Heller 76 1 0 0 0 0
101 Harry Gant 73 1 0 0 0 0
101 Don Graham 73 1 0 0 0 0
102 Carl Joiner 70 1 0 0 0 0
102 Ron McGee 70 1 0 0 0 0
102 Sumner McKnight 70 1 0 0 0 0
106 Ray Elder 67 1 0 0 0 0
107 John Kennedy 64 1 0 0 0 0
107 Vince Giamformaggio 64 1 0 0 0 0
107 Glenn Francis 64 1 0 0 0 0
110 Jimmy Insolo 61 2 0 1 1 0
111 Phil Finney 58 1 0 0 0 0
111 Don Noel 58 1 0 0 0 0
111 Nestor Peles 58 2 0 0 0 0
114 Raymond Williams 55 1 0 0 0 0
114 Steve Stolarek 55 1 0 0 0 0
114 Dick Skillen 55 1 0 0 0 0
114 John Kieper 55 1 0 0 0 0
118 Dale Earnhardt 49 1 0 0 0 0
Salt Walther 1 0 0 0 0
Tom Sneva 1 0 0 0 0
Johnny Rutherford 3 0 0 0 0
Bill Osborne 1 0 0 0 0
Randy Myers 1 0 0 0 0
Steve Moore 1 0 0 0 0
Billy McGinnis 1 0 0 0 0
Roger McCluskey 1 0 0 0 0
Lella Lombardi 1 0 0 0 0
Roger Hamby 2 0 0 0 0
A.J. Foyt 6 0 1 3 1
Christine Beckers 1 0 0 0 0
Blackie Wangerin 1 0 0 0 0

[1]

References[]

  1. ^ "1977 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Central - The Third Turn". www.thethirdturn.com. Retrieved 2021-04-29.

External links[]

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