1978 California 500
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2.500 mi / 4.023 km
| Race details | |
|---|---|
| Race 13 of 18 in the 1978 USAC Championship Car season | |
| Date | September 3, 1978 |
| Official name | 1978 California 500 |
| Location | Ontario Motor Speedway, Ontario, California, United States |
| Course | Permanent racing facility 2.500 mi / 4.023 km |
| Distance | 200 laps 500.000 mi / 804.672 km |
| Pole position | |
| Driver | |
| Time | 199.933 mph (321.761 km/h) |
| Podium | |
| First | |
| Second | |
| Third | |
The 1978 California 500, the ninth running of the event, was held at the Ontario Motor Speedway in Ontario, California, on Sunday, September 3, 1978. The event was race number 13 of 18 in the 1978 USAC Championship Car season. The race was won by Al Unser, who became the only driver with win all three races in IndyCar's Triple Crown in one year.
USAC held the second race of the 1978 season at Ontario with a 200-mile race on March 26. Danny Ongais won the race over Tom Sneva. That same day, A. J. Foyt won the USAC Stock Car race also at Ontario.
Al Unser won the 1978 Indianapolis 500 and 1978 Pocono 500, giving him the opportunity to win all three races in IndyCar's Triple Crown in one calendar year. Unser had also won the 1977 California 500 the past year.[1]
Mario Andretti withdrew from the California 500 in order to chase the 1978 Formula One championship. While Andretti originally intended to drive for Team Penske, his place at the team was taken by Rick Mears, who had won at Atlanta in late-July.[2]
Practice and Time Trials
Practice began on Tuesday, August 29. Tom Sneva was fastest at 196.057 mph.[3]
Wednesday's practice saw A.J. Foyt surprisingly take practice laps in a car owned by Parnelli Jones.[4] 1966 was the last year Foyt drove a car that he didn't build. It was the same chassis Al Unser used to win the 1977 California 500.[5] Foyt said Jones' car was 250 pounds lighter than his own chassis, that he entered for George Snider.[6]
Pole Day - Thursday August 31
Qualifying was a two-lap, five-mile average speed. Tom Sneva's first lap was 200.401 mph, with a two-lap average of 199.933 mph to win the pole. Johnny Rutherford was second at 199.734 mph. Danny Ongais completed the front-row at 198.697 mph.
23 cars qualified on day one, excluding A.J. Foyt who failed to make a qualifying run because of an oil leak.[5]
Time Trials Day Two - Friday September 1
A.J. Foyt posted the fastest speed of all cars in the California 500 on day two. With a two-lap average of 201.365 mph, Foyt started 24th for the race. Driving Foyt's original car, George Snider qualified 25th at 186.490 mph. Only 30 cars qualified for the race.[6] Jim McElreath was added to the field as a 31st position. It was the first time since the 1947 Indianapolis 500 that less than 33 cars were in a 500-mile Indycar race.[7]
Formula Super Vee Support Races
A pair of 25-lap support races were held on Saturday for the USAC Formula Super Vee championship, known as the Mini-Indy Series.
Race 1
With a speed of 150.502 mph, Dennis Firestone won the pole for race one. On lap 11, Firestone spun out while leading to avoid a crashing car in front of him. That gave the lead to Bill Alsup, who led the rest of the way and won.
The race ended under caution after a spectacular crash with three laps remaining. Going down the backstretch, Roger Mears moved inside George Dyer for fifth place. The two cars moved inside of a lapped car and entered the turn three-wide. The lapped car squeezed Dyer down the track and his left-front wheel clipped Mears' right-rear wheel. Mears flipped over and tumbled towards the wall, hitting the concrete and catching on fire. He quickly ran from the car and was uninjured.[8]
In race two, Firestone beat Alsup in a close finish by only three one hundredths of a second.[8]