The Labor Day Classic 500
is a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia. This most recent name change for the fall Atlanta race reflects a rescheduling of this particular race, the second in its history. Prior to its most recent rescheduling the fall Atlanta race was always run during the final stages of the NASCAR season, in either October or November, and was one of the ten races in the Chase for the Sprint Cup from its inauguration in 2004 until 2008.
With the realignment NASCAR returns its Labor Day weekend Cup race to the southern United States for the first time since the 2003 Southern 500.
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BASS PRO SHOPS MBNA 500 TICKETS
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Overview
From 1987 until 2001, the race was scheduled as the final race of the NASCAR season, and typically the event in which the champion was decided. Several times, however, the championship was decided prior to this race, or was decided when the points leader simply started the race, clinching enough points simply by finishing last or better.
The
1992 event marked the final race for
Richard Petty, and coincidentally, the debut for
Jeff Gordon. With six drivers eligible for the
Winston Cup Championship, the race is widely regarded as one of the greatest NASCAR races of all time.
Alan Kulwicki, who finished second in the race, edged out
Bill Elliott, the race winner, by leading one more lap in the race. Kulwicki won the NASCAR Winston Cup title by a then-record margin of only 10 points.
In 2001, the race was scheduled as the season finale, however, it ended up being the second-to-last race. The
New Hampshire 300 was postponed from September 16 to the Friday after Thanksgiving, due to
9/11. Beginning in 2002 the race was moved to mid-October as NASCAR elected to hold its final race at
Homestead-Miami Speedway instead of Atlanta. The 2003 race started a tradition of night qualifying at Atlanta, which has carried over to the spring race as well.
The 1998 race was run mostly at night after a long rain delay; despite the inexperience with the lights, newly installed for an
Indy Racing League race, NASCAR and the teams agreed to attempt finishing the race at night. It was shortend to 221 laps because it was after 11:00 PM and NASCAR wanted to "get the fans out at a decent hour". The 1999
Cracker Barrel 500 also ended at night.
In 2006, the race start time was changed from 12:40 PM to 2:55 PM in order to finish the race at night. Driver complaints erupted because of the track's troublesome situation where the sun can get into the driver's eyes in Turn 1, including leading to a crash during the time the sun sets in that area of the track between Jeff Gordon and Jamie McMurray, led to the abandonment of the 3 PM start after this race.
Beginning in 2009 the race will be run Labor Day weekend as part of a
realignment agreement with
Auto Club Speedway and
Talladega Superspeedway, where Talladega's
fall race will move to the Atlanta race weekend and
Fontana will get a race in the
Chase for the Sprint Cup, moving into the date where Talladega's race was.
[1] As was the the case with the recent Labor Day weekend races run at Fontana the Pep Boys Auto 500 will be run at night, marking the first regularly scheduled Sprint Cup race at Atlanta to start at night.
Past winners
Dixie 300
Dixie 400
- 1966 - Richard Petty
- 1961 - David Pearson
- 1962 - Rex White
- 1963 - Junior Johnson
- 1964 - Ned Jarrett
- 1965 - Marvin Panch
Dixie 500
- 1967 - Dick Hutcherson
- 1968 - LeeRoy Yarbrough
- 1969 - LeeRoy Yarbrough
- 1970 - Richard Petty
- 1971 - Richard Petty
- 1972 - Bobby Allison
- 1973 - David Pearson
- 1974 - Richard Petty
- 1975 - Buddy Baker
- 1976 - Dave Marcis
- 1977 - Darrell Waltrip (268 laps / 407.9 miles because of rain)
- 1978 - Donnie Allison
- 1979 - Neil Bonnett
Atlanta Journal 500
- 1980 - Cale Yarborough
- 1981 - Neil Bonnett
- 1982 - Bobby Allison
- 1983 - Neil Bonnett
- 1984 - Dale Earnhardt
- 1985 - Bill Elliott
- 1986 - Dale Earnhardt
- 1987 - Bill Elliott
- * For the first time, this race was scheduled as the final race of the NASCAR season.
- 1988 - Rusty Wallace
- 1989 - Dale Earnhardt
- * In this race independent driver Grant Addcox was killed in a crash.
- 1990 - Morgan Shepherd
- * One of Bill Elliott's crew members was killed when Ricky Rudd was coming into the pits for service and lost control of his car. This led to NASCAR mandating a speed limit on pit road for crew members safety.
Hardee's 500
Hooters 500
- 1992 - Bill Elliott
- * Widely considered one of the Greatest NASCAR races of all time. See 1992 Hooters 500
- 1993 - Rusty Wallace
- *Race winner Wallace, and Winston Cup champion Dale Earnhardt circled the track in a Polish Victory Lap, carrying #7 and #28 flag to honor Alan Kulwicki and Davey Allison who were both killed in aviation accidents during the season. Both Kulwicki and Allison were key fixtures exactly one year earlier at the classic 1992 race.
- 1994 - Mark Martin
NAPA 500
- 1995 - Dale Earnhardt
- 1996 - Bobby Labonte
- * Labonte's older brother Terry clinched the 1996 Winston Cup Championship driving for Hendrick Motorsports. The two made a victory lap together and celebrated together in victory lane.
- 1997 - Bobby Labonte (325 laps with new configuration)
- 1998 - Jeff Gordon (221 laps / 340.34 miles because of rain; first night Cup race)
- 1999 - Bobby Labonte
- 2000 - Jerry Nadeau
- * Moved from Sunday to Monday due to rain. Final career start for Darrell Waltrip. It would be the final time the event would be the last race of the NASCAR season.
- 2001 - Bobby Labonte
- * Was scheduled to be the final race of the 2001 season, but Loudon was moved to the weekend after due to 9/11. That instead made this the second-to-last race of the season.
- 2002 - Kurt Busch (248 laps / 381.92 miles because of rain)
- * Moved from November to October, such that the race will no longer be the final race of the NASCAR season.
Bass Pro Shop MBNA 500
- 2003 - Jeff Gordon (race postponed due to rain, held on Monday)
- 2004 - Jimmie Johnson
- 2005 - Carl Edwards
- 2006 - Tony Stewart
Pep Boys Auto 500
- 2007 - Jimmie Johnson (329 laps / 506.66 miles because of green-white-checker finish)
- 2008 - Carl Edwards
Labor Day Classic 500
Realignment
This race, Atlanta's second of the season, had been rumored to be either eliminated or moved several times in recent years. Most recently, track owner
Bruton Smith, president of Speedway Motorsports, Inc., was talking with International Speedway Corporation about a possible date switch with one of its tracks. On February 29, 2008, Smith proposed a move that involved the fall Atlanta race and the
Pepsi 500, the Labor Day weekend race held at
Auto Club Speedway.
[2] Doing so gave the Fontana, California track a race in the
Chase for the Sprint Cup as well as return the Labor Day weekend race to the southern U.S. for the first time since the second-to-last
Southern 500 was run. It also makes the three races that precede the beginning of the Chase closer to each other geographically. Prior to the realignment, the teams raced in the
Sharpie 500 at
Bristol the week before Labor Day, then traveled cross country for the Pepsi 500, then came back across the country to run the
Chevy Rock & Roll 400 at
Richmond the following Saturday.
Ultimately, NASCAR adjusted the schedule as announced on August 19,
2008 to allow the fall race at Atlanta and the Chase event to Fontana to be swapped, but also in the process moved the
AMP Energy 500 at
Talladega Superspeedway to Atlanta's old date - usually the last weekend in October - and the aforementioned Pepsi 500 was placed in the old Talladega date, the first weekend in October beginning in
2009.
References
- http://sports.espn.go.com/rpm/nascar/cup/news/story?id=3543062
- NASCAR.COM - Smith proposes date swap between California, Atlanta - Feb 29, 2008