Originally published on Dec. 27, 2024
By Zane Miller
First round
(8) #3 Dale Earnhardt v. (1) #24 Jeff Gordon
(7) #99 Jeff Burton v. (2) #6 Mark Martin
(6) #12 Jeremy Mayfield v. (3) #88 Dale Jarrett
(5) #18 Bobby Labonte v. (4) #2 Rusty Wallace
The playoffs began at Richmond, where the most
competitive series of the night was between teammates Jeff Burton and Mark
Martin. Burton ultimately won the battle by claiming the race win, though
Martin was not far behind in third. On the other end, Dale Earnhardt had a
rough time in his first race against Jeff Gordon, suffering major damage in an
early multi-car accident and spending many laps behind the wall to eventually
finish 38th. In contrast, Gordon grabbed the runner-up spot after leading
30 laps. Dale Jarrett bested Jeremy Mayfield in the postseason opener despite neither
driver running particularly well, with Jarrett finishing 16th and Mayfield
taking 22nd. Rusty Wallace also claimed a solid seventh, as Bobby
Labonte crashed out of the race in the waning laps.
Moving on to Dover, Martin was intent on not getting
upset in the first round, winning convincingly at the Monster Mile after
leading all but 21 laps in the event. This was absolutely overkill in this
case, as Burton crashed out near the three-fourths mark. This was true in
Gordon’s case as well, with him taking the second spot while Earnhardt bowed
out of the playoffs with a 23rd-place run. However, the other two
series would continue on into Martinsville, as Mayfield grabbed third to
Jarrett’s seventh and Labonte held off Wallace with a fourth-place result with
Wallace rounding out the top-five.
Martinsville would be a busy day as far as the
playoffs were concerned, with the nearly 100-degree weather only serving to add
even more pressure to the situation. The first to fall victim to the heat would
be Jarrett, who broke a camshaft just past the halfway point, ending his title
bid as Mayfield settled for 23rd. Also failing to get the job done
was Wallace, as the normally strong short track racer ended up multiple laps
down in 28th, with Labonte posting a 10th-place run to
advance to the semifinal round. The clear winner in terms of excitement was the
Martin-Burton series, as both drivers placed inside the top-five. It seemed that,
as the final 100 laps counted down, Burton would have the upper hand as he took
the lead from Sterling Marlin. However, his tires began to fade as the run went
on, getting passed by eventual race winner Ricky Rudd with 95 laps to go. Martin
got by his teammate shortly after a restart with 67 laps remaining and did not
look back, capturing third while Burton was knocked out of the semifinals in
fifth.
Semifinal
(6) #12 Jeremy Mayfield v. (1) #24 Jeff Gordon
(4) #18 Bobby Labonte v. (2) #6 Mark Martin
At Charlotte, Martin was the class of the field and
made a strong case for his second Cup Series championship, taking the race win
with 215 laps led, while Labonte was nowhere in sight after crashing out after
the halfway point. Also having a disappointing day was Mayfield, as he finished
25th after being caught up in the same accident as Labonte, while Gordon
continued his relentless charge with a fifth-place run.
Moving on to Talladega, Gordon started up front and stayed
there, nailing down a runner-up finish to race winner Dale Jarrett. Mayfield
made a furious charge behind him in an effort to push the series into the
rescheduled Daytona race, but he would come up just shy in fifth. Martin would
not be so lucky, as he was bitten by the Big One with just over 50 laps to go.
Although he was able to stay on track, he was well out of contention and
finished 34th. The race went on without further incident and Labonte
took the sixth spot to keep his title hopes alive.
The Pepsi 400 at Daytona, originally scheduled for July
4th, was pushed back to October due to major wildfires impacting the
area, causing a massive shakeup in the postseason itinerary. Now with
back-to-back restrictor plate races, both Martin and Labonte would need to be
vigilant against the ever-looming Big One. On a wild, rainy night in Daytona
Beach, there would actually be two Big Ones, claiming a combined 20 cars in the
wreckage. However, both Martin and Labonte were ahead of each crash, and free
to battle it out for the remaining spot in the finals. Labonte was able to keep
Martin at an arm’s length throughout the final stretch, though a late caution
came out for rain to set up a three-lap shootout. Just five cars behind
Labonte, Martin looked for drafting help to close the gap. However, him and his
Roush Racing teammates were unable to get linked up, and Labonte would have a
chance to defend his title with a runner-up finish against Martin’s 16th.
Final
(5) #18 Bobby Labonte v. (1) #24 Jeff Gordon
For the first time in Cup Series history, the final
round would begin at Phoenix International Raceway (now Phoenix Raceway). Although
neither Gordon nor Labonte had anything for eventual race winner Rusty Wallace,
Gordon stayed inside the top-10 all race long and came home with a
seventh-place finish when the event was concluded early due to rain. Meanwhile,
Labonte, who had been forced from the rear of the field, did not make much
headway and wound up two laps down in 23rd.
After being denied of a championship at the doorstep in
1996, that door would finally open this time at Rockingham. As Labonte was
mostly a non-factor in the race, finishing 15th, Gordon grabbed the
lead from Wallace with 10 laps to go and captured his dozenth race win of the
season and, most importantly, his first Cup Series title.
Jeff Gordon’s stats for 1998 were 13 victories, 26
top-fives and 28 top-10s, easily taking the real-life championship as well.

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