1993 The Winston
The 1993 edition of The Winston was a stock car racing competition that took place on May 22, 1993. Held at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, the 70-lap race was an exhibition race in the 1993 [NASCAR Winston Cup Series]. Ernie Irvan of Morgan–McClure Motorsports won the pole and led the most laps, but it was Dale Earnhardt of Richard Childress Racing who won the race and became the first three-time All-Star Race winner. This was also the final appearance of Davey Allison at The Winston, as he died from injuries sustained in a helicopter crash on July 13, 1993.
Background
The Winston was open to winning drivers and team owners from last season through the Save Mart Supermarkets 300K at Sears Point Raceway and all previous All-Star race winners and past NASCAR Winston Cup champions who had attempted to qualify for every race in 1993. The top five finishers of The Winston Open advanced to complete the starting grid.Alan Kulwicki, who was the defending 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup Series champion, was killed in a plane crash in Blountville, Tennessee on April 1, 1993. Jimmy Hensley substituted for him in this race.
1993 The Winston drivers and eligibility
Race winners in 1992 and 1993
- 2-Rusty Wallace
- 3-Dale Earnhardt
- 4-Ernie Irvan
- 5-Ricky Rudd
- 6-Mark Martin
- 11-Bill Elliott
- 15-Geoff Bodine
- 17-Darrell Waltrip
- 18-Dale Jarrett
- 21-Morgan Shepherd
- 28-Davey Allison
- 33-Harry Gant
- 42-Kyle Petty
Winning team owners in 1992 and 1993
- 7-AK Racing with new driver Jimmy Hensley
Previous NASCAR Winston Cup Champions
Top five finishers of The Winston Open
- 1-Rick Mast
- 8-Sterling Marlin
- 25-Ken Schrader
- 26-Brett Bodine
- 30-Michael Waltrip
Race summary
Segment 1
Ernie Irvan won the pole for the all-star event with a lap time of. Sterling Marlin, Ken Schrader, Brett Bodine, Michael Waltrip, and Rick Mast transferred from The Winston Open to make the field. Mark Martin and Geoff Bodine served as the onboard camera cars throughout the race. At the drop of the green flag, Dale Earnhardt and Rusty Wallace battled for second place while Geoff Bodine charged hard from 10th to fifth place in two laps and Dale Jarrett dropped from seventh to 20th. Irvan crossed the finish line to win the caution-free Segment 1 and the bonus while Martin, who started 14th, finished second.;Segment results
Segment 2
During the 10-minute break between segments, the fan balloting on whether or not to invert the field for the second 30-lap segment was unveiled. The fans had spoken and the result flashed on the Winston Cup scoreboard — INVERT!Kyle Petty, who was supposed to lead the field after finishing last on Segment 1, retired before the restart due to catastrophic valve issues; as a result, Morgan Shepherd assumed the point. On lap 31, Michael Waltrip spun and hit the turn 2 outside wall after contact with Harry Gant; in the midst of the chaos, Jimmy Hensley scraped the No. 30 while Jarrett lost control, hit Marlin on the right side, and collided with Hensley before hitting the outside wall head-on. After a seven-lap caution, Mast took the lead from Shepherd on lap 40. Earnhardt then overtook Shepherd for second while drivers from the back of the field aggressively charged towards the front. Ricky Rudd took his car to the garage on lap 43 as a result of engine failure. Mast kept the lead away from Earnhardt until the end of Segment 2 to collect the bonus.
;Segment results