Daytona 500: An Official History
 With roots dating back to the earliest days of motor racing, the Daytona 500 isn't just America's most popular automobile race—it is an American institution. No other race is as widely followed by stock-car racing fans, and no driver's record is fully complete without a 500 victory.
When Lee Petty and Johnny Beauchamp roared side by side to the checkered flag in the inaugural race in 1959, they established a tradition of ultra-competitive racing that continues today. In this first official history of the Daytona 500, author Bob Zeller tells the complete story of more than forty years of close-quarters racing in the 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway. With year-by-year chapters, he captures the competition, drama, and distinctive personalities of the racers. All of the great drivers are here, from Richard Petty, whose career at Daytona included an unrivalled seven 500 victories, to Dale Earnhardt, whose relentless pursuit of a Daytona 500 trophy would last decades until his triumph in 1998.
The book also explains how changes in automotive technology, NASCAR rules, and competitive tactics have kept Daytona at the forefront of the racing world. Richly illustrated with hundreds of colorful photographs frpm ISC Publications-Archives, Daytona 500: An Official History is the definitive record of the premier event in stock car racing.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- In the beginning: The beach-road course era & the first 500
- The sixties: Establishing a competitive tradition
- The seventies: The modern era begins
- The eighties: Record speeds & new winners
- The nineties: NASCAR's popularity booms
- Racing into the new millenium
- Epilogue
- Daytona 500 winners
- Acknowledgments
About the Author
Bob Zeller, a former newspaper journalist covered the Daytona 500 and the NASCAR Winston Cup series, for eight years, for the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, the Roanoke (Virginia) Times and the News & Record of Greensboro, North Carolina. He lives with his wife and two children in Pleasant Garden, North Carolina.
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