1970 Home State 200
The 1970 Home State 200 was a NASCAR Grand National Series event that was held on September 30, 1970, at North Carolina State Fairgrounds in Raleigh, North Carolina. The race car drivers still had to commute to the races using the same stock cars that competed in a typical weekend's race through a policy of homologation (and under their own power). This policy was in effect until roughly 1975. By 1980, NASCAR had completely stopped tracking the year model of all the vehicles and most teams did not take stock cars to the track under their own power anymore. SummaryThis race was done on a dirt track spanning a distance of 0.500 miles (0.805 km); for a grand total distance of 100.0 miles (160.9 km). Benny Parsons was driving the car like a modern NASCAR driver would drive on asphalt while Richard Petty was swinging his car sideways and sliding around the corners. Parsons was carefully following Petty after losing the lead; thinking he could try to throw his car to a corner in an attempt to imitate Richard Petty. As soon as he came off of turn 4 and prepared to throw his car sideways into turn 1, the engine blew after 96 laps of consistent racing.[2][3] There were 23 drivers on the racing grid; all of them were American-born males.[2][3] John Sears would finish in last-place as the result of an engine problem on lap 16 even though he was fastest qualifier and led the first ten laps.[2][3][4] Richard Petty defeated Neil Castles by more than two laps[3] in front of 6,000 live audience members. Neil Castles would receive his final 2nd-place finish in Grand National career. His name often comes up in the "best driver never to get a win" discussions.[2] Two lead changes were made in addition to one yellow flag being waved for four laps; making the race last one hour and twenty-seven minutes.[2][3][4] The other finishers in the top ten included: Bobby Isaac, James Hylton, Cecil Gordon, Bobby Allison, Dave Marcis, Ben Arnold, Bill Hollar, Jabe Thomas.[2][3][4] Nord Krauskopf, James Hylton, and Bobby Allison were the most notable NASCAR owners in this race.[2][3][4] This race was the final dirt track race in what is now known as the Cup Series until the 2021 Food City Dirt Race.[5][6] John Kenney would retire after this race while Bill Hollar would make his debut here.[4] The top prize of the race was $1,000 ($7,845.76 when considering inflation) while the last-place finisher received $200 ($1,569.15 when considering inflation).[2] Qualifying
TimelineSection reference: [2]
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