By HENRY FREDERICK / Headline Surfer
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Rusty Wallace flipped violently down the backstretch during the second 1983 Twin 125 Qualifier at Daytona, a qualifier for the Daytona 500.
Wallace was tapped by Rick Wilson, sending him airborne and into a series of violent flips in the infield grass. He was hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries. He missed the Daytona 500, which was won by Cale Yarborough.
Wallace has tempted fate many times over in big crashes along the way. After his racing career ended, Wallace continued his hand in racing from a safer vantage point as a studio analyst for ABC and ESPN.
Neil Bonnett was leading at the time and would go on to win the 50-lap qualifier for a sport in the Daytona 500. Dale Earnhardt won the first qualifier. Eleven years later,
Bonnett would die in a crash during the first practice session for the 1994 Daytona 500. Bonnett was 47 years old. Earnhardt would win his lone 500 in 1998, before losing his wife in the 2001 Daytona 500, at the age of 49.
Rusty Wallace has tempted fate many times over in big crashes along the way. After his racing career ended, Wallace continued his hand in racing from a safer vantage point as a studio analyst for ABC and ESPN. Neil Bonnett was leading at the time and would go on to win the 50-lap qualifier for a sport in the Daytona 500. Dale Earnhardt won the first qualifier. Eleven years later, Bonnett would die in a crash during the first practice session for the 1994 Daytona 500. Bonnett was 47 years old. Earnhardt would win his lone 500 in 1998, before losing his wife in the 2001 Daytona 500, at the age of 49.
Wallace would go on to secure the 1984 NASCAR Winston Cup Rookie of the Year award and before the decade was over, the 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Championship.
In 1993, Wallace had two massive flips – both at restrictor plate tracks. The first was in the 1993 Daytona 500, where he was tapped by the crashing cars of Michael Waltrip and Derrike Cope, and barrel rolled multiple times in the grass on the back straightaway several feet in the air. Months later, at Talladega, Wallace was racing towards the checkered flag when he was hit from behind by Dale Earnhardt, which turned him backwards before his car flew into the air, then violently rolling in the grass past the start-finish line. A visibly shaken Earnhardt went to check on him immediately after the race. Wallace escaped with a broken wrist.
Earnhardt would go on to win the 1998 Daytona 500. But in the 2001 Daytona 500, Earnhardt would lose his life on the final lap when he was sent into the outside retaining wall coming off turn 4. He was killed instantly.
Rusty Wallace started 12th in the 2001 Daytona 500 and finished third behind Michael Waltrip and Dale Earnhardt, Jr., who were 1-2 with the elder Earnhardt in third, behind his two DEI drivers when he was bumped from behind by Sterling Marlon, who was charging for the lead, sending the No. 3 Chevrolet nearly head-on into the wall. Earnhardt collected Ken Schrader in the process.
Wallace also had an airborne crash in his last Gatorade Twin in 2005, when Dave Blaney clipped his right rear tire and sent his car off the ground. The car never turned over though.
Fast Facts: Rusty Wallace won win 55 NASCAR races, but the one race he failed to conquer by the time retired after the 2005 season was the Daytona 500. Regardless, Wallace was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2013.