2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500

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Date April 28, 2002 (2002-04-28)
Official name NAPA Auto Parts 500
Course Permanent racing facility
2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500
Race details[1]
Race 10 of 36 in the 2002 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season
The 2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500 program cover, featuring Rusty Wallace.
The 2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500 program cover, featuring Rusty Wallace.
Date April 28, 2002 (2002-04-28)
Official name NAPA Auto Parts 500
Location California Speedway, Fontana, California
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 2.0 miles (3.219 km)
Distance 250 laps, 500 mi (804.672 km)
Weather Temperatures reaching up to 75.9 °F (24.4 °C); wind speeds up to 11.1 miles per hour (17.9 km/h)
Average speed 150.088 miles per hour (241.543 km/h)
Pole position
Driver Penske Racing
Most laps led
Driver Kurt Busch Roush Racing
Laps 102
Winner
No. 48 Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
Television in the United States
Network Fox Broadcasting Company
Announcers Mike Joy, Darrell Waltrip and Larry McReynolds

The 2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series stock car race held on April 28, 2002 at California Speedway in Fontana, California. Contested over 250 laps on the 2-mile (3.2-kilometre) asphalt D-shaped oval, it was the tenth race of the 2002 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his first career Winston Cup Series victory. Kurt Busch finished second and Ricky Rudd finished third.

The layout of California Speedway, the venue where the race was held.

The track, California Speedway, was a four-turn superspeedway that was 2 miles (3.2 kilometres) long.[2] The track's turns were banked from fourteen degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, was banked at eleven degrees. Unlike the front stretch, the back straightaway was banked at three degrees.

Summary

There were ten drivers who failed to finish the race; with five of the drivers forcing to leave the race due to terminal crashes while five other drivers had engine issues.[3] Nearly 10% of the 199-minute race was held under a caution flag and the average green flag run was approximately 38 laps.[4]

Dale Earnhardt Jr. suffered a concussion when Kevin Harvick slowed on the track and veered into Earnhardt Jr.'s path, causing Jr. to hit the outside retaining wall parallel on the driver's side (this was before SAFER barriers were installed). The impact bent the dashboard of Jr.'s car and severely disoriented him; this ultimately forced NASCAR to pass a regulation forcing drivers to take the ambulance ride to the infield care center every time they crashed (he did not admit to have this injury until mid-September, after which NASCAR also passed a new concussion protocol).[5][6]

Race results

Race statistics

References

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