Track Details:
Turns: 33°
Straights: 16.5° Front, 2° Back
Distance: 2.660 miles, Shape: Tri-Oval
Last updated: 4/30/11
BY THE NUMBERS SCHEDULE PAST RESULTS
Magnum Cup Series Race Record
Q-Ball 171.139 mph
10/15/2007
Mieser 1:58:27.693
04/17/2011

Magnum Cup Series Qual Record

Billy the Kid 191.233 mph
10/15/2007
Eddie Stephens 50.727
04/17/2011

Sportsman Cup Series Race Record
Duck 144.977 mph
04/25/2007

Sportsman Cup Series Qual Record

Wally Zahurancik 189.478 mph
10/28/2003

Diamond Series Race Record
Griff 154.959 mph
05/07/2009

Diamond Series Qual Record
Speedshine 184.353 mph
05/27/2010
2011 Race Schedule

Magnum Cup Series
Aaron's 499
04/18/2011 Mieser

Magnum Cup Series
AMP Energy 500
10/24/2011

Sportsman Cup Series
Aaron's 312
04/06/2011 Bone-Driver
2011 - Magnum 4/18
2011 - Magnum 10/24
2011 - Sportsman 4/6

2010 - Magnum 4/26
2010 - Magnum 11/1
2010 - Sportsman 4/21
2010 - Diamond 5/27

2009 - Magnum 4/27
2009 - Magnum 11/3
2009 - Sportsman 4/22
2009 - Diamond 5/7

2008 - Magnum 4/28
2008 - Magnum 10/13
2008 - Sportsman 4/30
     
TRACK HISTORY

On an unassuming stretch of land suited for soybean farming located next to a couple of abandoned airport runways, crews constructed the biggest superspeedway in NASCAR, Talladega Superspeedway.  Since Alabama International Motor Speedway (as it was called until 1989) opened its gates in September 1969, the track has surpassed every initial expectation.

Anniston insurance executive Bill Ward, a race driver and fan himself, helped NASCAR and International Speedway Corporation founder William H.G. (Bill) France find the land in Alabama, following a casual conversation with France in Daytona in the mid-1960s. Ward found what he thought was the perfect site in north Talladega County near an airport that the U.S. Government had sold to the City of Talladega after World War II. He set up a meeting with then-Talladega mayor James Hardwick and other city officials, and in a restaurant in Anniston in 1966, France got the group to consider the idea of putting a major track on the site. After a trip to the Firecracker 400 in Daytona to observe first-hand the potential economic impact, the group was sold.

The practice and qualifying speeds were so high (Charlie Glotzbach won the pole at 199.466 mph) that the tire companies could not come up with a compound that held together for many laps. The Professional Drivers Association (PDA), led by Richard Petty, declared the situation unsafe, and left the track Saturday afternoon.

France decided the race would go on, using the drivers that decided not to participate in the boycott, plus some of those who had raced the day before. The full 500 miles were run without a major incident.

In 1987, Bill Elliott established a world stock car record when he posted a speed of 212.809 mph in qualifying. Mark Martin established a 500-mile stock car record in 1997 when he won the caution-free spring race with an average speed of 188.354 mph.

But the track's true dominator was Dale Earnhardt, who posted 10 Cup wins at Talladega.

The grandstands seating capacity is 143,231 including the most recent expansion of the O.V. Hill South Tower. The 212-acre all-reserved infield holds many thousands more.

Perhaps the greatest 1-2-3 finish in motorsports occurred a 1981 race, when rookie Ron Bouchard passed both Darrell Waltrip and Terry Labonte in the final 500 yards to win by less than a foot over Waltrip and two feet over Labonte.