While points and victories are a valid means of comparing talent over the past 20 years, such criteria were not applicable forty years ago. In the early and intermediate years of NASCAR many race teams ran only the big events, choosing not to participate in the weekly 100 milers which filled out the Grand National schedule. In those days the Grand National (now Winston Cup) champion was laughingly referred to as the Grand National LAP champion. Because of vast differences in the number of quality cars entered, and the length of events, races were at that time classified as "major" and "minor." A major event being 250 miles or more on a half mile or larger paved track. By the mid 1970's, NASCAR historians unofficially decided to simply drop the sub group and combine all Grand National/ Winston Cup wins. The result was a fiasco. Suddenly hundred mile "heat" races at Bowman-Gray Stadiums quarter mile track, with three factory cars entered, counted as one career victory just like a 500 miler on a superspeedway, with fifteen factory cars entered. In the 1960's many of NASCAR's all time greats, including Fred Lorenzen and Firewall had numerous year ending finishes in the top ten in points, while running only HALF the scheduled races. The $1,000 winner's check at the Savannah Fairgrounds wasn't worth the drive to pick up. Can you imagine that?
updated by @johnny-mallonee: 08/08/18 04:26:29AM