Best Daytona 500 Finishes, No. 5
1993: Dale Vs. Dale Results In Father-Son Moment

(Note: This is the
first installment in a five-part series on some of
the best Daytona 500 finishes in the history of “The
Great American Race.” Finishes were chosen based on
the drama they created — and the historical value
that resulted.
Today, we take a look at No. 5 in the countdown:
Dale Jarrett’s scant .16-second victory over Dale
Earnhardt, in 1993.)
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 8, 2010) — The 1993
Daytona 500 provided a photo-finish fit for a family
album, provided that family was the Jarretts.
In the record book, the result reads cold and
concise — a .16-second margin of victory by Dale
Jarrett over Dale Earnhardt. But this was a result
with ramifications beyond the checkered flag, as it
became one of NASCAR’s signature moments, memorable
to say the least.
On the Daytona International Speedway tri-oval, the
competition evolved into a fantastic “Dale vs. Dale”
battle, with Jarrett chasing down Earnhardt in the
closing laps. Jarrett was trying to win his first
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race. Earnhardt was trying
to finally win the Daytona 500 on what was then his
15th attempt.
Up in the television booth, Ned Jarrett had his own
battle ongoing — to keep his composure. The
invariably unflappable CBS commentator found himself
torn between doing his job and cheering his son down
the stretch. CBS’s Bob Stenner black-flagged
protocol in deciding to see if the father could
somehow do both. Stenner told play-by-play man Ken
Squier to “lay out,” television lingo for basically
getting out of the way and letting a situation
develop naturally.
And develop it did.
Jarrett, a 36-year-old driver with the
then-fledgling Joe Gibbs Racing organization, had
the audacity to horn in on another late-race duel,
that one involving Earnhardt and a heralded rookie
named Jeff Gordon. Using an aerodynamic boost from
longtime Earnhardt adversary Geoff Bodine, Jarrett
went from third to first, getting past Earnhardt
after their cars bumped in Turn 3.
Coming out of Turn 4, entering the DIS tri-oval and
finish line, the nation’s television viewers heard
Ned Jarrett at his finest.
“Come on Dale! Go, baby go! He’s gonna make it …
Dale Jarrett’s gonna win the Daytona 500!”
Moments after that memorable call, the cameras found
Martha Jarrett, Dale’s mother, crying her eyes out,
happily. As for Ned, he was having the same
experience, and became the welcome recipient of a
box of tissues in the booth.
Dale Jarrett had delivered car owner Joe Gibbs his
first NASCAR Sprint Cup win — in the sport’s biggest
race, no less. There was serendipity at work; Ned
Jarrett won two series championships in the 1960s
but never won the Daytona 500. Interviewed
post-race, Dale dedicated the victory to Ned and the
rest of his family.
The 1993 Daytona 500
finish was NASCAR at its finest.
