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Mario Andretti and his wife, DeeAnn, celebrate his Daytona 500 win in 1967.

Daytona Upset: No. 4

Greatest Daytona 500 upsets countdown: Andretti in '67

By NASCAR
February 9, 2007
03:37 PM EST
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- As hard as it might be to imagine any Mario Andretti victory being considered an upset, his victory in the 1967 Daytona 500 most certainly was just that.

The label of greatness had only just begun to attach itself to Andretti, an Italian immigrant whose family had settled in Nazareth, Pa., upon arriving in America. His sole Indianapolis 500 victory was two years away. His Formula One title wouldn't be won until 1978. He had captured Indy-car driving championships in 1965 and '66 but in NASCAR that made him interesting, but by no means intimidating.

And so he arrived in Daytona Beach that year, having raced in the Daytona 500 only once previously. In 1966, Andretti wrecked early in a Chevrolet owned by Smokey Yunick, and ended up 39th. In 1967, he returned in a factory-backed Ford readied by Holman-Moody, the manufacturer's top NASCAR team, and stunned the stock-car world.

Daytona 500 Upset No. 4: Mario Andretti, 1967

• The Favorites: Fred Lorenzen, Richard Petty, David Pearson.

• The Intangible: The daring driving style of the 26-year-old Andretti, considered both courageous and foolish, depending on who you talked to.

• The Winner's Stats: Started 12th; led 112 laps; average speed 146.926; won $48,900.

• The Rundown: Andretti attacked Daytona's 2.5-mile tri-oval like none before him, disdaining the traditional high line around the top of the banking and instead racing around at the bottom, diving there when he came off the straightaways.

The result: This one wasn't even close. The official under-caution finish -- caused by a Richard Petty blown engine -- wiped away an approximate 20-second lead Andretti was enjoying on his teammate Lorenzen.

• Andretti's Take: "Lorenzen and I were teammates and he got out of the pits ahead of me on our last pit stops. I chased him down and passed him. But I knew I couldn't shake him because he was a master of the draft. But with about three laps to go we were coming down the back straightaway to lap Tiny Lund. As we approached, Tiny motioned to me to go to the outside while he went to the middle. Instead, I passed him going way down on the inside, which startled Lorenzen for an instant, and I think he backed off. That's all I needed."

• The Follow-Up: Andretti raced in the Daytona 500 only once more, crashing in 1968 and ending up 29th. His 14th and final Cup start came in '69 at Riverside, Calif. He finished 28th. Four months later he won the Indianapolis 500. He remains the only driver to win the Daytona 500, the Indy 500 and the F-1 championship. ... He retired from Indy-car racing after the 1994 season. ... Today he has a variety of business interests but also helps guide the racing career of grandson Marco Andretti.

The End

Also

1967 Daytona 500

Feb. 26, 1967, at Daytona
Fin. St. Driver Status
1 12 Mario Andretti running
2 4 Fred Lorenzen running
3 19 James Hylton running
4 11 Tiny Lund out of gas
5 43 Jerry Grant running
6 6 Darel Dieringer running
7 18 Sonny Hutchins running
8 2 Richard Petty engine
9 42 Jim Hurtubise running
10 26 Neil Castles running
11 44 Donnie Allison running
12 24 John Sears running
13 47 Roy Mayne differential
14 29 Dorus Wisecraver running
15 38 Wendell Scott running
16 7 Paul Goldsmith engine
17 36 Henley Gray running
18 30 H.B. Bailey running
19 23 Bobby Isaac oil leak
20 33 Elmo Langley running
21 40 Clyde Lynn running
22 41 Sam McQuagg engine
23 25 Ramo Stott running
24 15 David Pearson engine
25 1 Curtis Turner engine
26 32 Joel Davis hub
27 20 Innes Ireland engine
28 9 Buddy Baker engine
29 46 J.T. Putney running
30 22 Gordon Johncock engine
31 21 Gary Bettenhausen overheating
32 13 Jim Paschal engine
33 17 Charlie Glotzbach fuel pump
34 3 LeeRoy Yarbrough engine
35 39 Ken Spikes engine
36 10 Dick Hutcherson crash
37 5 A.J. Foyt clutch
38 14 Don White crash
39 8 Cale Yarborough suspension
40 31 Bobby Allison oil leak
41 49 Bob Pickell axle
42 28 Red Farmer engine
43 37 Bobby Johns distributor
44 45 G.C. Spencer engine
45 50 Blackie Watt overheating
46 16 Paul Lewis hub
47 35 Frank Warren oil leak
48 34 Friday Hassler crash
49 48 George England engine
50 27 Coo Coo Marlin transmission

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