In 1967 Cale Yarborough won the 400 and then won the 500 in 1968, in 1976 and 1977 he did it again.
Bobby Alison did it 1987 and 1988; Jeff Gordon in 1998 and 1999; Dale Jarrett in 1999 and 2000; Micahel Waltrip in 2002 and 2003; and Jeff Gordon in 2004 and 2005.
Daytona 500 winners:
1959 - Lee Petty
1960 - Junior Johnson
1961 - Marvin Panch
1962 - Fireball Roberts
1963 - Tiny Lund
1964 - Richard Petty
1965 - Fred Lorenzen
1966 - Richard Petty
1967 - Mario Andretti
1968 - Cale Yarborough
1969 - LeeRoy Yarborough
1970 - Pete Hamilton
1971 - Richard Petty
1972 - AJ Foyt
1973 - Richard Petty
1974 - Richard Petty
1975 - Benny Parsons
1976 - David Pearson
1978 - Bobby Allison
1979 - Richard Petty
1980 - Buddy Baker
1981 - Richard Petty
1982 - Bobby Allison
1983 - Cale Yarborough
1984 - Cale Yarborough
1985 - Bill Elliot
1986 - Geoffrey Bodine
1987 - Bill Elliot
1988 - Bobby Allison
1989 - Darrell Waltrip
1990 - Derrike Cope
1991 - Ernie Irvan
1992 - Davey Allison
1993 - Dale Jarrett
1994 - Sterling Marlin
1995 - Sterling Marlin
1996 - Dale Jarrett
1997 - Jeff Gordon
1998 - Dale Earnhardt
1999 - Jeff Gordon
2000 - Dale Jarrett
2001 - Michael Waltrip
2002 - Ward Burton
2003 - Michael Waltrip
2004 - Dale Earnhardt Jr
2005 - Jeff Gordon
2006 - Jimmie Johnson
2007 - Kevin Harvick
2008 - Ryan Newman
2009 - Matt Kenseth
2010 - Jamie McMurray
2011 - Trevor Bayne
2012 - Matt Kenseth
2013 - Jimmie Johnson
There have been five drivers who won the Daytona 500 and the Nascar Cup Series championship in the same year.
Two drivers won the Daytona 500 at least four times.
There have been 21 drivers to race in both the Indy 500 and Daytona 500.
There are 43 drivers in the Daytona 500.
Danica Patrick has raced both open wheel race cars in the Indy Racing League, and stock cars in the Nascar Cup and Nationwide Series.
AJ Foyt made his career in an Indy car, winning the Indy 500 4 times. He also won the 1972 Daytona 500 for the Wood Brothers Mario Andretti also has won both races. He won the Indy 500 in 1969 and the Daytona 500 in 1967.
There have been four Nascar drivers who have won both the Bud Shootout and the Daytona 500 in one year.Bobby Allison - 1982Bill Elliott - 1987Dale Jarrett - 1996, 2000Jeff Gordon - 1997
In the 2008 Daytona 500 there will be 48 drivers. See the following link: http://www.daytona500.com/content-display.cfm/cat/Contending-Drivers Actually, there should only be 43 in the actual race. 54 ran qualifying yesterday, then that field will be split in half for the Duel 150's on Thursday and the combination of both will determine the 43 drivers for Sunday
they both raced horses
In 1994, Bill Elliott drove the #11 Budweiser Ford for Junior Johnson, in both the Daytona 500 and Pepsi 400 Daytona races.
As a driver, Rahal raced in Formula 1 and CART, including owning the team he drove for during most of his career. That team is now known as Rahal Letterman Racing. Bobby Rahal, who won the Indy 500 in 1986, won three championships. He has won the Indianapolis 500 as both a driver and an owner.
The most famous Indy 500 driver named Al are Al Unser Sr and Al Unser Jr. They are father and son and both have won the Indy 500, Al Sr 4 times.
The Daytona 500.
Until 1974, the two races weren't held on the same day, so it would have been impossible.From 1974 to 1992, they were held on the same day at the same time. So still impossible.From 1993 to 2004, the race in Charlotte was scheduled in the evening, with the one in Indianapolis starting at noon. This technically allowed drivers to compete in both events (with a pretty tight scheduling window) by completing the Indy 500, taking a helicopter to the airport, flying to an airport near Charlotte, and taking another helicopter to that race.John Andretti, Tony Stewart, and Robby Gordon attempted this. Only Stewart actually managed to complete the full distance of both races (in 2001).In 2005, Indy moved the start of their race to 1 PM. Since the schedule was already very tight, this made it effectively impossible to compete in both races again.However, starting in 2011, the starting time of Indy has been moved back to noon. I don't believe anyone has managed to qualify in both races yet since the change (as of 2014).
No. Schumacher retired from Formula 1 in 2006, Hamilton entered the sport in 2007. Hamilton would have raced Schumacher if he had taken part in the last few Race of Champions events, but he chose not to. (If you were talking about Michael's brother Ralf Schumacher, which is unlikely, then yes they both raced in 2007.)
Usually a person with a drivers license is both a city and suburban driver. Both city and suburban drivers need to have a valid drivers license. Both need good observation skills for good driving. Both need to take turns and curves at slower speeds. Both can get impatient at other drivers mistakes.