Award
Historic and prestigious races in NASCAR are often called
Crown Jewels
. Most commonly these races are the
Daytona 500
,
Coca-Cola 600
, and
Southern 500
. NASCAR also recognizes the
Brickyard 400
as a Crown Jewel. During the Winston Million program, the
Winston 500
at Talledega was included, but most modern sources do not include it as a Crown Jewel race. Winning all Crown Jewel races in a single year is sometimes referred to as a
Grand Slam
.
History
[
edit
]
In 1984,
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
announced at the
Waldorf Astoria New York
during the annual year end awards banquet two new events that would define NASCAR for years to come. The first was an invitation only, "all-star" exhibition race called The Winston (now known as the
NASCAR All-Star Race
). The other announcement was that they were formally elevating the sport's four majors (sometimes referred to as the "crown jewels") into a formal Grand Slam with a cash prize bonus, known as the
Winston Million
. The long established and recognized major events were as follows:
- Daytona 500
(known as the richest race on the circuit) ? held in February at
Daytona International Speedway
- Winston 500
(known as the fastest race) ? held in late April or early May at
Talladega Superspeedway
- Coca-Cola 600
(known as the longest race) ? held
Memorial Day
weekend at
Charlotte Motor Speedway
- Southern 500
(known as the oldest superspeedway race) ? held
Labor Day
weekend at
Darlington Raceway
- The Southern 500 was moved to November in 2004, then eliminated by the
Ferko settlement
in 2005. Winners of the 500-mile spring races at Darlington from 2005 to 2008 were retroactively named winners of the Southern 500. The Southern 500 name returned in 2009, and the race returned to Labor Day weekend in 2015. The
Rebel 400
returned in 2020 due to scheduling changes related to the
COVID-19 pandemic
, and the "throwback weekend" moved from the Southern 500 to the Rebel 400 in 2021.
- The
Brickyard 400
, which began in 1994, has often been referred to as either a fifth major or as the fourth major in place of Talladega.
- The Winston 500, now the GEICO 500, at Talladega has usually been considered the major, but the Fall race at the track has sometimes been recognized as such.
Prior to 1985, no driver had ever won all four races in the same season. Only once had a driver claimed a "Small Slam", winning three out of the four races:
David Pearson
in 1976.
LeeRoy Yarbrough
won Daytona, Charlotte, and Darlington in 1969, although it was considered a "Triple Crown" at the time as the Talladega event was not established until 1970.
Winston Million
[
edit
]
From 1985 to 1997,
R. J. Reynolds
and brand sponsor
Winston
offered a
US$
1 million bonus to any driver who won three out of the four races (a "Small Slam") in a single calendar year season. If there was no million-dollar winner, a $100,000 consolation bonus would be given to the first driver to win two of the four races.
If a driver went into the Coca-Cola 600 or the Southern 500 with a chance to win the million, the race was advertised as the "Winston Million Running of the Coca-Cola 600" or the "Winston Million Running of the Southern 500". From 1994 to 1996, the program was advertised as the "Winston Select Million", as R. J. Reynolds elected to promote Winston's "Select" brand of cigarettes.
Initial success
[
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]
In the Winston Million program's first year (1985),
Bill Elliott
captured the million-dollar bonus, and the victory thrust him into superstardom. He dominated the season-opening Daytona 500, then won the Winston 500 at an all-time NASCAR record speed. He remarkably came back from two laps down, having lost the laps due to having to pit due to a broken oil fitting, and he subsequently made the laps up under green. After suffering mechanical problems at Charlotte, Elliott captured the million dollar bonus at Darlington, taking command after
Cale Yarborough
lost power steering.
Elliott became known as "Million Dollar Bill" and appeared on the September 9, 1985 cover of
Sports Illustrated
.
Frustration
[
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]
The relative ease with which Elliott had won the Winston Million led many to believe that the bonus would be awarded fairly often in subsequent seasons. This would ultimately prove untrue, as the award was difficult to win, and at times, it was difficult to even have a driver in contention to win.
- In 1989,
Darrell Waltrip
became the first driver since Elliott to have a chance at the Million, after he won at
Daytona
and
Charlotte
. He was never a factor at Darlington, though, hitting the notorious Turn 4 (now Turn 2) wall during the
Southern 500
(a race he had not won in his career at the time). Waltrip settled for the $100,000 consolation prize.
- In 1990,
Dale Earnhardt
was leading the
Daytona 500
on the final lap when he cut a tire and failed to win the race. He went on to win at Talladega and
Darlington
, meaning that he would have claimed the bonus had he held on to win at Daytona.
- In 1992, rain cut the
Southern 500
short, robbing
Davey Allison
of a chance to clinch both the Million and the Career Grand Slam. He had been in contention much of the race, but finished fifth after a late pit stop shuffle. That race ended on fuel strategy as Waltrip stayed out on the track and was leading when rain stopped the race on lap 293. With the win, Waltrip finished off a Career Grand Slam.
- In 1996,
Dale Jarrett
had a chance to win the Million. He won at
Daytona
and
Charlotte
, and had finished just 0.22 seconds shy of winning at Talladega (coming in second to
Sterling Marlin
), but hit the wall early in the notoriously narrow Turn 3 at
Darlington
, which led to a 14th-place finish.
Final running
[
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]
It would not be until 1997, the program's final year of existence, that the Million was won again.
Jeff Gordon
won the season-opening
Daytona 500
, but finished fifth in the
Winston 500
. He had to win the
Coca-Cola 600
to keep his Winston Million opportunity alive, which he did. Gordon clinched the Winston Million by winning the
Southern 500
, holding off a hard-charging
Jeff Burton
on the final lap. The two cars touched coming around Turn 4 to take the white flag side-by-side, with Gordon holding on to win his third of four consecutive Southern 500 wins, a record in NASCAR majors. A
Brinks
truck led him around the victory lap, spewing
bags
of Winston
play money
.
Winston Million race winners/results (1985?1997)
[
edit
]
Winston No Bull 5
[
edit
]
In 1998, in preparations for the 50th anniversary of NASCAR, R. J. Reynolds decided to revamp and reintroduce the million dollar award program. Several factors contributed to the change. After thirteen seasons, the Winston Million had been won only twice, and several times, no driver won even two events. R. J. Reynolds, along with NASCAR, the drivers, and fans, wanted a new format for the award, which allowed it to be won more often and have more drivers involved.
The four established crown jewels on the circuit were experiencing worthy competition. In
1994
, the inaugural
Brickyard 400
at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
was held, and for several years, actually dethroned the Daytona 500 as the richest race of the season. The events at
Richmond International Raceway
were also fast becoming fan and driver favorites. In addition, several new venues were introduced to the schedule, all of which were offering large base purses.
The new program for 1998, titled the
No Bull 5
(after a Winston marketing campaign) consisted of three legs of the original Grand Slam (Daytona 500, Coca-Cola 600, Southern 500) along with the Brickyard 400. The race at Talladega used for the program, however, was switched from the spring race to the October race. As a result, that event changed sponsorship names and became referred to as the
Winston 500
.
[1]
The rules were as follows:
- The drivers who finished in the top 5 of a
No Bull 5
race qualified themselves for the bonus at the next
No Bull 5
race.
- If one of those five drivers went on to win that next
No Bull 5
race, he won a $1 million bonus.
- Five fans were chosen for each
No Bull 5
race, and were paired with each of the five qualified drivers. If the driver won the bonus, the lucky fan paired with him also won $1 million.
During the No Bull 5 races, the No Bull 5 eligible drivers raced with special paint jobs. The number on the roof and the rear spoiler was painted day-glow orange because many cars were painted red, and a day-glow "$" was affixed to the passenger window along with a red dot on the windshield in races prior to 2001. Other special decals were sometimes present. This allowed fans to quickly identify and follow the progress of the five eligible drivers. The only exception was the 1998 Daytona 500 where eligible drivers had silver numbers instead of the orange.
In subsequent seasons, the races chosen for the No Bull 5 program varied. The Brickyard 400 was dropped after only one year, replaced by the
Las Vegas 400
. Eventually the Daytona 500 was replaced with the
Pepsi 400
, and the Southern 500 was replaced by the fall event at
Richmond
.
In its five-year span, which totalled twenty-five races, 125 eligible driver spots, and 124 eligible fans (one fan qualified twice, winning neither), the million dollar bonus was won thirteen times. Jeff Gordon won it a record four times. Including his 1997 Winston Million victory, Gordon won a total of $5 million from the bonus program.
Winston No Bull 5 winners/results
[
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]
The top five finishers in each race listed qualified to race for the bonus in the next No-Bull 5 race. For the first No-Bull 5 race, the 1998 Daytona 500, the top five finishers from the 1997
DieHard 500
were used.
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Crown Jewel races
[
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]
NASCAR Crown Jewel races generally include the Daytona 500, Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, and Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway, along with the
Brickyard 400
, which has been considered by many to be a Crown Jewel event since its inception in 1994.
[2]
[3]
Despite being included in the Winston Million, Talladega is generally not included as a Crown Jewel race in modern sources.
[4]
[5]
Some drivers and media members consider the Bristol Night Race as a fourth Crown Jewel event.
[6]
[7]
Jeff Gordon
has the most career Crown Jewel wins at 21, followed by
Jimmie Johnson
with 14 and
Bobby Allison
with 13. None of Allison's wins included the Brickyard 400, as he was retired by its inception.
Brickyard 400 or the Rebel 400 as a Major?
[
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]
After the Ferko lawsuit originally brought an end to the fourth major, fans have consistently discussed the possibility of elevating either the
Rebel 400
(first run in 1957 as a Convertible Division race, and became a NASCAR Cup race in 1960, although was restricted to convertibles until 1962, and first run with hardtops in 1963) or the
Brickyard 400
(first run in 1994) as new "majors". However, the 500-mile races at Darlington from 2005 to 2008 were retroactively named a continuation of the Southern 500, before the original Southern 500 name returned in 2009 and the original race weekend (Labor Day) returned in 2015. Additionally, the traditional Brickyard 400 was discontinued in 2021 in favor of running on the Indianapolis Road Course.
In recent years, the Talladega race has also been questioned as a major, though the original concept from R. J. Reynolds Tobacco for the 1985 season established the four majors based on richest, fastest, longest, and oldest. It has also been disputed as to whether the spring or fall Talladega race is the true major, but the spring race has traditionally held the major status.
Four career Grand Slam winners (
Jeff Gordon
,
Dale Earnhardt
,
Jimmie Johnson
, and
Kevin Harvick
) have completed a career grand slam with the addition of the Brickyard 400, for a
Grand Slam +1
, with Gordon, Johnson, and Harvick also having won a Southern 500 each while the race was run in the spring. Additionally, Gordon, Earnhardt, and Johnson won the
Rebel 400
before its original discontinuance after 2004, and Harvick won the first race when it was revived in 2020. Of the top five all-time NASCAR Cup race winners, only two (Gordon and
Darrell Waltrip
) have started a Brickyard 400. Official "major" status has never been granted to this race, but it is widely recognized as being a major, usually in place of or alongside Talladega.
When Kevin Harvick won the
2011 Coca-Cola 600
, he completed his run of winning all three majors (
Daytona 2007
,
Talladega 2010
,
Charlotte 2011
), but he made four Darlington fall starts (2001?2004), so his Career Triple Crown status was originally questionable.
[8]
He also won the Brickyard 400 in 2003, 2019, and 2020, and the last edition of the spring Southern 500 in 2014. These victories allowed Harvick to become the fourth driver to complete the
Grand Slam +1
. In 2020, Harvick won two of the three Darlington dates, with wins in the return of the Rebel 400 (
The Real Heroes 400
) in May and the
Southern 500
in September.
More recently, there have been suggestion that the
Bristol Motor Speedway
's
night race
, one of NASCAR's most popular short track races, should be considered a "crown jewel" race instead of either aforementioned races.
[6]
[7]
Crown Jewel statistics by driver
[
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]
From 1998 to 2004, after the Winston Million program was discontinued, no driver managed to win three of the four majors in the same season. For 2004, NASCAR announced the new
Chase format
and moved Darlington's major to November. As a result of the
Ferko lawsuit
, it was discontinued outright in 2005, much to the dismay of fans and competitors. The 500-mile race was moved to the spring and the 400-mile spring race was discontinued. Scheduling issues as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic
led to Darlington regaining its second race, the
Rebel 400
, in 2020; this change was made permanent in 2021.
Winners of the 500-mile spring races at Darlington from 2005 to 2008 were retroactively named winners of the Southern 500. The Southern 500 name returned in 2009, and the race returned to Labor Day weekend in 2015, becoming a "NASCAR throwback weekend". The throwback weekend was moved from the Southern 500 to the Rebel 400 in 2021.
Career Crown Jewel wins
[
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]
Driver
|
Daytona
|
Talladega
|
Charlotte
|
Darlington
|
GS Race Wins
|
GS Titles
|
Jeff Gordon
*
|
3
: 1997, 1999, 2005
|
4
: 2000, 2004, 2005, 2007
|
3
: 1994, 1997, 1998
|
6
: 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2007
|
16
|
3
|
Bobby Allison
|
3
: 1978, 1982, 1988
|
3
: 1979, 1981, 1986
|
3
: 1971, 1981, 1984
|
4
: 1971, 1972, 1975, 1983
|
13
|
3
|
Richard Petty
|
7
: 1964, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1979, 1981
|
1
: 1983
|
2
: 1975, 1977
|
1
: 1967
|
11
|
1
|
David Pearson
|
1
: 1976
|
3
: 1972, 1973, 1974
|
3
: 1961, 1974, 1976
|
3
: 1976, 1977, 1979
|
10
|
1
|
Dale Earnhardt
*
|
1
: 1998
|
3
: 1990, 1994, 1999
|
3
: 1986, 1992, 1993
|
3
: 1987, 1989, 1990
|
10
|
1
|
Jimmie Johnson
*
|
2
: 2006, 2013
|
2
: 2006, 2011
|
4
: 2003, 2004, 2005, 2014
|
2
: 2004, 2012
|
10
|
2
|
Darrell Waltrip
|
1
: 1989
|
2
: 1977, 1982
|
5
: 1978, 1979, 1985, 1988, 1989
|
1
: 1992
|
9
|
1
|
Buddy Baker
|
1
: 1980
|
3
: 1975, 1976, 1980
|
3
: 1968, 1972, 1973
|
1
: 1970
|
8
|
1
|
Denny Hamlin
|
3
: 2016, 2019, 2020
|
1
: 2014
|
1
: 2022
|
3
: 2010, 2017, 2021
|
8
|
1
|
Kevin Harvick
*
|
1
: 2007
|
1
: 2010
|
2
: 2011, 2013
|
2
: 2014, 2020
|
6
|
1
|
- Note:
Gordon, Earnhardt, Johnson, and Harvick each won the
Brickyard 400
to complete a
Grand Slam +1
. Gordon won the event five times, Johnson four times, and Harvick three times.
Crown Jewel race results
[
edit
]
Pre-Grand Slam (1950?1984)
[
edit
]
The first running of the Southern 500 at
Darlington Raceway
in 1950 was the first NASCAR race on a large speedway. It has become known as NASCAR's "oldest superspeedway race". The Talladega event was originally known as the Alabama 500 in 1970, becoming the
Winston 500
from 1971 to 1997. It has been scheduled in April or May since its inception. With the addition of this race, it became possible to win all four majors in a season to complete a Grand Slam, although that feat has never been accomplished. The Daytona 500 and Coca-Cola 600 have held relatively constant dates since their inaugural race, with the Daytona 500 always held in February and the Coca-Cola 600 always scheduled for Memorial Day weekend.
Winston Million era (1985?1997)
[
edit
]
The
Brickyard 400
event was established in 1994, held in early August during the time between the
Coca-Cola 600
and the
Southern 500
. With the addition of Indianapolis, it became possible to achieve a
Grand Slam +1
if a driver was able to win the four original majors and the Brickyard 400.
Dale Earnhardt
was the first to accomplish this feat, having won all five events by 1998, followed by
Jeff Gordon
in 2000,
Jimmie Johnson
in 2006, and
Kevin Harvick
in 2014. No driver has won four or five of the events in a single season.
Crown Jewel era (1998?present)
[
edit
]
The Southern 500 was moved to November for 2004, then to
Mother's Day
weekend in May from 2005 to 2013, held on Saturday night. It was held in April in 2014 and moved back to Labor Day weekend in 2015. The Brickyard 400 was moved up a week to late July in 2007 and moved to the weekend after the Southern 500 in September for 2018 and 2019. It then moved to
Independence Day
weekend in 2020, in place of the
Coke Zero 400
, which was held the week before the Southern 500. In 2021, the Brickyard 400 was dropped in favor of the
Verizon 200 at the Brickyard
at the
Indianapolis road course
, with the date being moved back to August. With the move, NASCAR, the media, and drivers no longer referred to the event as a Crown Jewel.
[4]
[5]
The Brickyard 400 returned to the calendar in 2024.
Related programs
[
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]
Xfinity Series Dash 4 Cash Program
[
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]
A similar program to the No Bull 5 occurs in the
Xfinity Series
, which began in 2009 under the series' Nationwide Insurance sponsorship. At a race prior to the first race in the program will be designated the top four finishers for the first race in the bonus. Those drivers in the first race in the program are eligible for a $100,000 bonus. Fans will select one of those four drivers, and a lucky fan will also win $100,000. The highest championship driver (as of 2011) finisher in the race, eligible for points in the Xfinity race, wins the bonus and automatically qualify's for the next event. The next three highest finishers eligible for points in the series also get a chance to race for the bonus at the next Dash4Cash race.
Starting in 2015, the 30th anniversary of the million dollar cash bonus, Comcast (the new sponsor of the second-tier series), announced modifications to the five-race program, including a million dollar bonus.
[9]
Unlike past years where the races were typically assigned to conflicting weekends to prevent Sprint Cup drivers from participating under pre-2011 rules, the four races are Dover, the Lilly Diabetes 250 (Indianapolis), Food City 250 (Bristol), and Darlington. As usual, the top four finishers at Charlotte participate in the program starting at Dover.
The rules are the same, but Xfinity drivers will have a chance to qualify for the Dash 4 Cash at Charlotte. After that, that next four races are Dover, Indianapolis, Bristol, and Darlington. If a driver wins the first three cash prizes, and then wins outright Darlington, the driver's winnings in the bonus program will be augmented to one million dollars. The driver must claim the Dover, Indianapolis, and Bristol bonuses, finish first overall in the Darlington race, and earn the 47 (or 48 if the driver leads the most laps) points for the win at Darlington to claim the $600,000 bonus.
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Winston No Bull 5 replaces Winston Million"
.
Motorsport Network
. October 10, 1997
. Retrieved
September 17,
2019
.
- ^
"NASCAR: Who could sweep the Crown Jewel races?"
.
beyondtheflag.com
. 22 May 2020.
- ^
"Active drivers with the most crown-jewel victories"
. NASCAR.
- ^
a
b
"DRIVERS WITH THE MOST CROWN JEWEL RACE WINS"
.
NASCAR.com
. 7 September 2020.
- ^
a
b
"ACTIVE DRIVERS WITH CROWN-JEWEL VICTORIES"
.
NASCAR.com
. 2022-02-20.
- ^
a
b
Brichfield, Jeff (2020-09-19).
"Bristol Night Race deserves recognition as 'Crown Jewel'
"
.
Johnson City Press
. Retrieved
2022-02-07
.
- ^
a
b
Harrison, Brad (2021-09-20).
"2-Headed Monster: Should Bristol Host the Championship Race?"
.
Frontstretch
. Retrieved
2022-02-07
.
- ^
Bowles, Tom (April 14, 2014).
"Kevin Harvick secures NASCAR career Grand Slam with win at Darlington"
.
Athlon Sports
. Retrieved
September 16,
2019
.
- ^
Kraft, RJ (April 3, 2018).
"Dash 4 Cash: Format explained, recapping each Xfinity Series race"
.
NASCAR.com
. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC
. Retrieved
September 16,
2019
.