Originally published on Jul. 13, 2024
By Zane Miller
First round
(8) #3 Richard Childress v. (1) #2 Dale Earnhardt
(7) #90 Jody Ridley v. (2) #11 Cale Yarborough
(6) #15 Bobby Allison v. (3) #43 Richard Petty
(5) #88 Darrell Waltrip v. (4) #27 Benny Parsons
In the opening round of the playoffs at Darlington,
Dale Earnhardt scored the early advantage over his future car owner, taking a
seventh-place finish to Childress’ 12th. Meanwhile, Cale Yarborough
suffered an oil fire early in the event, though he was able to get back out on
track which proved vital later on as competitor Jody Ridley dropped out with
steering issues. Yarborough had just enough laps left to get by Ridley in the
running order to get out of the Palmetto State with the series lead. Bobby
Allison finished a lap ahead of Richard Petty to grab the early advantage too,
while Darrell Waltrip was bitten by mechanical problems, thus allowing Benny
Parsons to take the lead with a fourth-place finish. In the second round at Richmond,
Allison got the race win to knock out Petty, while Earnhardt nabbed a
fourth-place result to Childress’ 11th to continue his sensational
sophomore season. Yarborough fell out of the event near the midway point after sustaining
a broken cylinder head with Ridley finishing an impressive fifth, while Waltrip
also staved off elimination thanks to a sixth-place finish. The first round
finale at Dover posed no problem for Waltrip, as he captured the race win after
leading 264 of the race’s 500 laps in spite of a solid fifth-place run from
Parsons. Meanwhile, Ridley’s playoff campaign came to a halt as Yarborough took
a fourth-place finish to Ridley’s ninth.
Semifinal
(6) #15 Bobby Allison v. (1) #2 Dale Earnhardt
(5) #88 Darrell Waltrip v. (2) #11 Cale Yarborough
North Wilkesboro Speedway kicked off the semifinal
round, which turned out to be fortuitous for Allison as he captured the
checkered flag after leading 166 laps. Waltrip earned the runner-up spot to get
the leg up on Yarborough for the second race at Martinsville. Not to be outdone
by Allison, Earnhardt made his presence known with a dominating race win, with
Allison suffering mechanical failure just past the halfway point. Not long
after Allison’s misfortune, Waltrip fell out with a blown engine to hand the middle
race to Yarborough, who led 51 laps on the way to a third-place finish. The
final race at Charlotte saw all four drivers still in contention, though the
battles themselves would end up being somewhat anticlimactic. Allison dropped
out early for the second week in a row due to a faulty ball joint, enabling
Earnhardt to cap off his breakthrough season with a championship final
appearance. Despite leading several laps early, Waltrip blew his engine once
again, thereby securing Yarborough’s shot at a record sixth Cup Series title.
Final
(2) #11 Cale Yarborough v. (1) #2 Dale Earnhardt
Despite technically being the lower seed, Yarborough
came into Rockingham as the odds-on favorite against the relative newcomer in
Earnhardt. Yarborough would prove those predictions right with a race win at
the North Carolina track, leading the final 72 laps while Earnhardt only
managed an 18th-place run. With the momentum now firmly on his side,
Yarborough found another gear in Atlanta, leading nearly all of the race’s 328
laps. Unlike another certain event involving Atlanta and the numbers 3 and 28,
Yarborough did not lose his massive advantage, taking the race win. Although Earnhardt
put up a fight in third, it would not be enough to stop the pride of
Timmonsville, South Carolina, from winning his sixth championship.
Cale Yarborough’s stats for 1980 saw six wins, 19
top-fives and 22 top-10s to finish second in the final standings to real-life
champion Dale Earnhardt.

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