1989 The Winston Explained

Year:1989
Race Name:The Winston
Details Ref:[1]
Type:CUST
Description:Race 2 of 2 exhibition races in the 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
Location:Concord, North Carolina
Course:Charlotte Motor Speedway
Course Mi:1.5
Course Km:2.4
Distance Laps:135
Distance Mi:202.5
Distance Km:324
Weather:Temperatures around 82F, with 72% humidity and winds gusting to 10mph, partly sunny with 20% chance of rain
Avg:133.15mph
Pole Driver:Terry Labonte
Pole Team:Junior Johnson & Associates
Most Driver:Rusty Wallace
Most Team:Blue Max Racing
Most Laps:69
Car:27
First Driver:Rusty Wallace
First Team:Blue Max Racing
Network:ABC
Announcers:Paul Page, Benny Parsons, and Bobby Unser

The 1989 edition of The Winston was a stock car racing competition that took place on May 21, 1989. Held at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, the 135-lap race was an exhibition race in the 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Series. Terry Labonte of Junior Johnson & Associates won the pole, but it was Rusty Wallace of Blue Max Racing who led the most laps (69) and won the race to collect after spinning Darrell Waltrip of Hendrick Motorsports out before the final lap.[2] [3]

Background

The Winston was open to race winners from last season through the 1989 Winston 500 at Talladega Superspeedway. The winner of The Winston Open advanced to complete the starting grid. Because the field did not meet the minimum requirement of 19 cars, the remaining spots were awarded to the most recent winning drivers prior to the 1988 season.

1989 The Winston drivers and eligibility

Race winners in 1988 and 1989

Race winners from previous years, not eligible by the above criteria

Winner of The Winston Open

Race summary

Race 1 (75 laps)

Terry Labonte won the pole while Dale Earnhardt took the outside pole. Sterling Marlin made the starting grid by winning the Winston Open for the second year in the row. Darrell Waltrip and Kyle Petty served as the onboard camera cars throughout the race. Upon the waving of the green flag, Labonte had a good start while Rusty Wallace challenged Earnhardt for second place, but Earnhardt gained momentum and overtook Labonte to lead the first lap. Wallace and Alan Kulwicki zipped past Labonte, who then started losing positions to Geoff Bodine and Waltrip by the second lap. As Wallace closed in on Earnhardt, the first caution flag waved after Kyle Petty crashed on the turn three wall and Richard Petty spun out of control; the younger Petty was rushed to the hospital with only minor bruises. Earnhardt was forced to restart at the back of the field after his right front tire was punctured by the debris. Wallace led the field with Kulwicki and Waltrip behind him while Davey Allison and Bill Elliott overtook Labonte and Earnhardt inched his way back in the top 10. In the end, Wallace took the checkered flag and collected .

Race 1 results
  1. 27-Rusty Wallace
  2. 17-Darrell Waltrip
  3. 25-Ken Schrader
  4. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  5. 7-Alan Kulwicki

Race 2 (50 laps)

Wallace led the field on the single-line restart, but Waltrip passed him from the outside after the first three laps. Morgan Shepherd retired on lap 83 after his engine overheated. Waltrip won the 50-lap segment to collect

Race 2 results
  1. 17-Darrell Waltrip
  2. 27-Rusty Wallace
  3. 25-Ken Schrader
  4. 3-Dale Earnhardt
  5. 7-Alan Kulwicki

Race 3 (10 laps)

Waltrip led the field in the 10-lap shootout. He continued his lead while Wallace closed in on him. With two laps to go, Wallace tapped Waltrip on the left rear, sending Waltrip spinning across the infield grass and triggering the caution. It was decided by NASCAR that the restart would be a two-lap dash, which Wallace won to collect a combined, including the prize for the final segment.

After the race, a fight ensued between the pit crews of Wallace and Waltrip as Wallace made his way to Victory Lane. Furious over the outcome of the race, Waltrip commented: "I just hope he chokes on that $200,000. That's all I can say." Rusty would apologize post-race for the contact, but maintained that it was a racing accident. By mid-week, Wallace and Waltrip would settle their feud with a phone call, although Wallace would become the most unpopular driver of the season despite becoming the Winston Cup champion.[2]

+ Race results
PosGridCarDriverOwnerManufacturerLaps runLaps led
1327Rusty WallaceBlue Max RacingPontiac13569
21425Ken SchraderHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet1350
323Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress RacingChevrolet1357
499Bill ElliottMelling RacingFord1350
547Alan KulwickiAK RacingFord1351
62094Sterling MarlinHagan RacingOldsmobile1350
7717Darrell WaltripHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet13554
81326Ricky RuddKing RacingBuick1350
955Geoff BodineHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet1350
101088Greg SacksBaker-Schiff RacingPontiac1350
11118Bobby Hillin Jr.Stavola Brothers RacingBuick1350
12828Davey AllisonRobert Yates RacingFord1350
131283Lake SpeedSpeed RacingOldsmobile1353
14111Terry LabonteJunior Johnson & AssociatesChevrolet1351
15621Neil BonnettWood Brothers RacingFord1350
161943Richard PettyPetty EnterprisesPontiac1340
171533Harry GantJackson MotorsportsChevrolet1340
181655Phil ParsonsJackson MotorsportsOldsmobile1330
191875Morgan ShepherdRahMoc EnterprisesPontiac830
201242Kyle PettySABCO RacingPontiac30

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1989 The Winston. Racing-Reference . January 26, 2019.
  2. News: An Unhappy Champion: For Rusty Wallace, Success and Popularity Mix Like Water and Oil . Shav . Glick . . February 14, 1990 . January 26, 2019.
  3. Web site: 10 Historic NASCAR All-Star Races . Tom . Jensen . . May 19, 2023 . September 27, 2023.