Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1986 The Winston


Race details
Race 2 of 2 exhibition races in the 1986 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
May 11, 1986 (1986-05-11)
Hampton, Georgia
Atlanta International Raceway
1.522 miles (2.45 km)
83 laps, 126.3 mi (203.26 km)
Temperatures around 67.2 °F (19.6 °C), with winds gusting to 8.52 miles per hour (13.71 km/h)
159.123 mph (256.084 km/h)
18,500
.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0}Darrell WaltripJunior Johnson & Associates
Bill ElliottMelling Racing
82
Bill ElliottMelling Racing
ESPN
Bob Jenkins, Larry Nuber, and Benny Parsons

The 1986 The Winston, the second running of the NASCAR All-Star Race, was a stock car racing competition that took place on May 11, 1986. The only time The Winston was held at Atlanta International Raceway in Hampton, Georgia, the 83-lap race was the second exhibition race in the 1986 NASCAR Winston Cup Series. Bill Elliott of Melling Racing led the most laps (82) and won the caution-free race and US$200,000, along with US$40,000 for leading laps 20, 30, 50, and 60.

The event featured the Atlanta Invitational, a 100-lap race for drivers who did not meet the eligibility of The Winston. Benny Parsons of Jackson Brothers Motorsports won the race and US$75,000 and became eligible to run the 1987 The Winston. The Atlanta Invitational was held before The Winston, but due to a tape delay, ESPN aired the race after The Winston.

NASCAR's original plan for The Winston was to hold the race at a different track every year, but due to the dismal attendance of this race, The Winston was moved back to Charlotte Motor Speedway for the next 32 years before Bristol Motor Speedway hosted the 2020 NASCAR All-Star Race.

The Winston was open to race winners from the 1985 season. Because the field was one short of the minimum requirement of 10 cars, the final spot was awarded to the highest finishing driver in the 1985 points standings without a win. The pole position was awarded to the defending Winston Cup champion while the rest of the field was determined by the total number of wins from last season, with driver's points used as the tiebreaker.

  • 3-Dale Earnhardt (4 wins)

  • 9-Bill Elliott (11 wins, including the 1985 Daytona 500)

  • 10-Greg Sacks (1 win)

  • 11-Darrell Waltrip (3 wins, defending 1985 champion)

  • 12-Neil Bonnett (2 wins)

  • 15-Ricky Rudd (1 win)

  • 28-Cale Yarborough (2 wins)

  • 33-Harry Gant (3 wins)

  • 44-Terry Labonte (1 win)

  • 5-Geoff Bodine (5th in 1985 driver's points)

The Atlanta Invitational was a 100-lap exhibition race featuring 14 participants that did not meet the eligibility of The Winston. Benny Parsons won the caution-free race and US$75,000. The win also gave him the eligibility to run the 1987 Winston.

PosGridCarDriverOwnerManufacturerLaps runLaps led
555Benny ParsonsJackson Brothers MotorsportsOldsmobile10037
225Tim RichmondHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet10056
38Bobby Hillin Jr.Stavola Brothers RacingBuick1000
64Lake SpeedMorgan–McClure MotorsportsOldsmobile1003
726Joe RuttmanKing RacingBuick1002
422Bobby AllisonStavola Brothers RacingBuick1000
843Richard PettyPetty EnterprisesPontiac1000
1088Buddy BakerBaker-Schiff RacingOldsmobile1000
973Dave MarcisMarcis Auto RacingFord990
1167Buddy ArringtonArrington RacingFord970
1252Jimmy MeansMeans RacingPontiac940
17Kyle PettyWood Brothers RacingFord692
1470J. D. McDuffieMcDuffie RacingPontiac370
136Trevor BoysU.S. RacingChevrolet240
Source:

The Winston was an 83-lap exhibition race with a combined purse of US$500,000. The earnings were as follows:

Column 1Column 2
The Winston earnings
First placeUS$200,000
Second placeUS$75,000
Third placeUS$60,000
Fourth placeUS$50,000
Fifth placeUS$30,000
Sixth placeUS$25,000
Seventh placeUS$20,000
Eighth placeUS$15,000
Ninth placeUS$14,500
Tenth placeUS$10,000

In addition, a purse bonus of US$10,000 was given to the drivers who led laps 20, 30, 50, and 60.

Chevrolet Monte Carlo driver Darrell Waltrip and Ford Thunderbird driver Bill Elliott led the field on the green flag. Despite being the pole sitter, Waltrip lost momentum as Elliott and Dale Earnhardt passed him before the first lap. Prior to the first pit stop, Waltrip struggled with an ill-handling car as he dropped below the top five while Cale Yarborough and Harry Gant battled for third and Neil Bonnett and Geoff Bodine fought for fifth place. With no one close enough to challenge him, Elliott earned US$20,000 by leading laps 20 and 30. The two-tire pit stop began on lap 40. After changing left-side tires, Elliott passed Earnhardt at full speed to regain the lead. He once again collected US$20,000 for leading laps 50 and 60. Elliott dominated the race and took the checkered flag to win US$200,000 with Earnhardt, Gant, Waltrip, and Yarborough wrapping up the top five.

PosGridCarDriverOwnerManufacturerLaps runLaps led
29Bill ElliottMelling RacingFord8382
33Dale EarnhardtRichard Childress RacingChevrolet831
433Harry GantMach 1 RacingChevrolet830
111Darrell WaltripJunior Johnson & AssociatesChevrolet830
628Cale YarboroughRainier-Lundy RacingFord830
512Neil BonnettJunior Johnson & AssociatesChevrolet830
105Geoff BodineHendrick MotorsportsChevrolet830
715Ricky RuddBud Moore EngineeringFord820
844Terry LabonteHagan RacingChevrolet820
910Greg SacksDiGard MotorsportsChevrolet820
Source:
  • Official video
Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1986 The Winston — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report