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Richard Petty

Richard Lee Petty (born July 2, 1937), nicknamed "The King", is an American former stock car racing driver who competed from 1958 to 1992 in the former NASCAR Grand National and Winston Cup Series (now called the NASCAR Cup Series), most notably driving the No. 43 Plymouth/Pontiac for Petty Enterprises. He is a member of the Petty racing family. He was the first driver to win the Cup Series championship seven times (a record now tied with Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson),[1] while also winning a record 200 races during his career.[1] This included winning the Daytona 500 a record seven times and winning a record 27 races[1] in one season (1967).[2]

Richard Petty
Petty at Allegiant Stadium in 2021
BornRichard Lee Petty
(1937-07-02) July 2, 1937 (age 85)
Level Cross, Randolph County, North Carolina, U.S.
Achievements1964, 1967, Grand National Series Champion
1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1979 Winston Cup Series Champion
Tied with Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson for most NASCAR Cup Series Championships (7)
1964, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1979, 1981 Daytona 500 Winner
1967 Southern 500 Winner
1975, 1977 World 600 Winner
1983 Winston 500 Winner
All-Time Wins Leader in NASCAR Cup Series (200)
All-Time Poles Leader in NASCAR Cup Series (123)
Holds record for most NASCAR Cup Series wins in a season (27 in 1967)
Holds record for most consecutive NASCAR Cup Series wins (10 in 1967)
Most all time wins at Daytona International Speedway (10)
Awards1959 Grand National Series Rookie of the Year
NASCAR's Most Popular Driver (1962, 1964, 1968, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978)
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America (1989)
International Motorsports Hall of Fame (1997)
NASCAR Hall of Fame (2010)
Diecast Hall of Fame (2011)
Named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers (1998)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (1992)
NASCAR Cup Series career
1,184 races run over 35 years
Best finish1st (1964, 1967, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1979)
First race1958 Jim Mideon 500 (Toronto)
Last race1992 Hooters 500 (Atlanta)
First win1960 untitled race (Southern States)
Last win1984 Firecracker 400 (Daytona)
Wins Top tens Poles
200 712 123
NASCAR Convertible Division career
15 races run over 2 years
Best finish4th (1959)
First race1958 Race No. 14 (Columbia)
Last race1959 Race No. 14 (Greenville-Pickens)
First win1959 Race No. 13 (Columbia)
Wins Top tens Poles
1 8 10

He earns broad respect in motorsport as, statistically, the most accomplished driver in the history of NASCAR,[citation needed] where he remains very active as both a team owner (GMS Racing) in the Cup Series and owner of Petty's Garage (a car restoration and modification shop) in Level Cross, North Carolina. During his 35-year career, Petty collected a record number of poles (123) and over 700 top 10 finishes in a record 1,184 starts, including 513 consecutive starts from 1971 to 1989. Petty was the first driver to win in his 500th race start, being joined by Matt Kenseth in 2013. He was inducted into the inaugural class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2010.[3]

The Richard Petty Museum was formerly in nearby Randleman, North Carolina, but moved back to its original location in Level Cross in March 2014.

Petty has also voiced a role in Disney's animated films Cars and Cars 3, playing The King, a character partially based on himself.

Personal life

Petty is a second-generation driver. His father, Lee Petty, won the first Daytona 500 in 1959 and was also a three-time NASCAR champion. In 1958, Petty married Lynda Owens, who would die of cancer on March 25, 2014, at her home in Level Cross, North Carolina at age 72.[4][5] They had four children, including Kyle Petty.[6] The family resides in Petty's home town of Level Cross, North Carolina.

Petty's son Kyle was also a NASCAR driver. His grandson, Adam (Kyle's son), was killed in a practice crash at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on May 12, 2000, five weeks after the death of Lee Petty. Adam's brother Austin is Emeritus Chairman and Founder of Victory Junction, a SeriousFun Children's Network camp established by the Pettys after Adam's death.

Racing career

Petty was born in Level Cross, North Carolina, the son of Elizabeth Petty (née Toomes) and Lee Arnold Petty, also a NASCAR driver, and the older brother of NASCAR personality Maurice Petty.[7] He was educated in Randleman, North Carolina and attended Randleman High School, where he was an All-Conference guard on the football team.[8] After his 1955 graduation, he took a business course at Greensboro Junior College, then began work for his father's racing company, Petty Enterprises.[8] He began his NASCAR career on July 18, 1958, 16 days after his 21st birthday. His first race was held at CNE Stadium in Toronto, Ontario, Canada (the site of BMO Field and the Honda Indy Toronto currently). In 1959, he was named NASCAR Rookie of the Year, after he produced 9 top 10 finishes, including six Top 5 finishes. That year, he had participated in the inaugural Daytona 500 at the new Daytona International Speedway, but after his day ended due to engine trouble, he joined his father Lee's pit crew, who won the race.[9] In Lakewood, Georgia in 1959, Petty won his first race, but his father Lee protested, complaining of a scoring error on the officials' part. Hours later, Lee was awarded the win.

The 1960s

 
Petty's famous Plymouth Superbird, on display at The Richard Petty Museum in Randleman, North Carolina

In 1960, he finished 2nd in the NASCAR Grand National Points Race, and got his first career win at the Charlotte Fairgrounds Speedway. 1963 was his breakout year, winning at tracks like Martinsville and Bridgehampton. In 1964, driving a potent Plymouth with a new Hemi engine, Petty led 184 of the 200 laps to capture his first Daytona 500, en route to 9 victories, earning over $114,000 and his first Grand National championship.

Joining in the Chrysler boycott of NASCAR due to the organizing body's ban of the Hemi engine, Petty spent much of 1965 competing as a drag racer. Petty Enterprises installed the Hemi in the new compact Barracuda and lettered "OUTLAWED" on the door. He crashed this car at Southeastern Dragway, in Dallas, Georgia, on February 28, 1965, killing an eight-year-old boy and injuring seven others.[10][11] Petty, his father Lee, and Chrysler Corporation faced lawsuits totaling more than $1 million, though Petty and his team came to settlements with the lawsuits within 1 month of the suits being filed.[12] Afterwards, a second Hemi Barracuda was built, this time with an altered wheelbase and eventually with Hilborn fuel injection. This car was lettered with a large "43 JR" on the door. The car was very successful, winning its class at the Bristol Spring Nationals and competing in many match races against well-known racers such as Ronnie Sox, Don Nicholson, Phil Bonner, Huston Platt, Hubert Platt and Dave Strickler. Even after returning to NASCAR once the Hemi was reinstated, Richard continued drag racing the 43 JR until early 1966. ± On February 27, 1966, Richard Petty overcame a 2-lap deficit to win his second Daytona 500 when the race was stopped on lap 198 of 200 because of a thunderstorm. This made him the first driver to win the event twice. In 1966, he won the first ever race at Middle Georgia Raceway (Morelock 200). Petty broke the half-mile NASCAR record for half-mile tracks with an average speed of 82.023 miles per hour during the 100-mile (160 km) event.[13] He would end up recording 4 wins there in his career, including one in 1970 in which he was very ill before the race. 1967 was a milestone year. In that year, Petty won 27 of the 48 races he entered, including a record 10 wins in a row (between August 12 and October 1, 1967). He won his second Grand National Championship. One of the 27 victories was the Southern 500 at Darlington, which would be his only Southern 500 victory. His dominance in this season earned him the nickname "King Richard". He had previously been known as "the Randleman Rocket".[14]

In 1968, Petty won 16 races including the last ever race at Occoneechee Speedway.

In 1969 Ford significantly ratcheted up their factory involvement in NASCAR when they introduced the Ford Torino Talladega. The Talladega was specifically designed to give Ford a competitive race advantage by being more aerodynamic and thus faster, especially on super-speedway tracks more than a mile long. Petty switched brands to Ford, due to his belief the Plymouth was not competitive on super-speedways; he wanted a slippery Dodge Daytona but Chrysler executives insisted he stay with Plymouth. He would win 10 races and finish second in points. Won back in 1970 by the sleek new Plymouth Superbird with shark nose and towel rack wing, Petty returned to Plymouth for the 1970 season. This is the car in which Petty is cast in the Pixar film Cars (2006), in which Richard and Lynda Petty had voice roles.

The 1970s

 
Petty's IROC Porsche 911 from the 1970s
 
Petty's car used for his 1979 Daytona 500 win, on display at Daytona USA
 
1983 racecar

On February 14, 1971, Petty won his third Daytona 500, driving a brand-new (for 1971) Plymouth Road Runner and beating Buddy Baker, by little more than a car length en route to another historic year, making him the first driver to win the race 3 times. He won 20 more races (which would make him become the first driver to earn more than $1 million in career earnings) and claimed his 3rd Grand National Championship. At the end of the 1971 season, Chrysler told the Pettys they no longer would receive direct factory funding support; this caused the Petty team great concern. In 1972, STP began what would turn into a successful 28-year sponsorship arrangement with Petty, however, it marked the end of his famous all "Petty Blue" paint job. STP previously insisted on an all STP orangish-red color for the cars, but Petty balked and after an all-night negotiation session, the familiar STP orange/"Petty blue" paint scheme was agreed to as a compromise that would later become part of STP's motorsport paint schemes, most notably Gordon Johncock's win in the 1982 Indianapolis 500 (where the car had a primarily "Petty Blue" scheme). Thanks to his 28 Top 10 finishes (25 Top 5 finishes and 8 victories), Petty went on to win his 4th NASCAR Cup Series championship. 1972 was a year of change in other ways, as it was the last year where Petty would campaign a Plymouth-based race car; as in the middle of the year, he debuted to drive a newly built 1972 Dodge Charger in a few races (winning one of them), as he believed that the car would have a slight aero advantage over the Plymouth body style. In a driver's duel on February 18, 1973, Petty, in a newly built 1973 Dodge Charger (a body style he would use exclusively until the end of 1977), outlasted Baker (now with the K&K Insurance Dodge race team) to win his 4th Daytona 500 after Baker's engine gave out with 6 laps to go. A year later, Petty won the Daytona "450" (shortened 20 laps {50 mi/80 km} due to the energy crisis) for the fifth time en route to his 5th Winston Cup Championship.

1975 was another historic year for Petty, as he won the World 600 for the first time in his career, one of 13 victories en route to his 6th Winston Cup. The 13 victories is a modern (1972–present) NASCAR record for victories in a season and was tied in 1998 by Jeff Gordon, although Gordon won 13 out of 33 races, compared to Petty's 13 out of 30 races. In 1976, Petty was involved in one of the most famous finishes in NASCAR history. Petty and David Pearson were racing on the last lap out of turn 4 in the Daytona 500. As Petty tried to pass Pearson, at the exit of turn 4, Petty's right rear bumper hit Pearson's left front bumper. Pearson and Petty both spun and hit the front stretch wall. Petty's car came to rest just yards from the finish line, but his engine stalled. Pearson's car had hit the front stretch wall and clipped another car, but his engine was running. Members of Petty's pit crew came out onto the track and tried to push the car to the finish line, but ultimately failed. Pearson was able to drive his car toward the finish line, while Petty's car would not restart. Pearson passed Petty on the infield grass and won the Daytona 500. Petty was given credit for second place.

Oddly 1978 will stand out as the one year during his prime that Petty did not visit the winner's circle. The Petty Enterprises Team could not get the new 1978 Dodge Magnum to handle properly, even though much time, effort, and faith were spent massaging the cars. Unhappy with the seven top-five and eleven top-ten finishes (including three-second places), Petty decided that his longtime relationship with Chrysler could not continue and he instead began racing a secondhand 1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo at the fall race at Michigan. Returning to the General Motors fold proved successful as Petty recorded six top-ten finishes in the final ten races of the 1978 season and finished sixth in the final standings. He would go on to even better results in 1979. Petty won the Daytona 500 in an Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme in the "Famous Finish" and ran most of the remaining races in a Chevrolet, winning four additional races and taking the NASCAR championship for the seventh, and last, time by 11 points which was the closest points margin in NASCAR history until 1992.

Twilight years (1980–1991)

 
1989 car at Phoenix

Petty won two more Daytona 500s in 1979 and 1981. In 1979, he snapped a 45-race drought, winning his sixth Daytona 500, the first to be televised live flag-to-flag; it would become notorious for a fistfight between competitors following the controversial finish. Petty won the race as the first and second place cars of Donnie Allison and Cale Yarborough crashed on the last lap. Petty held off Darrell Waltrip and A. J. Foyt. The race is also regarded as being the genesis of the current surge in NASCAR's popularity. The East Coast was snowed in by a blizzard, giving CBS a captive audience. The win was part of Petty's seventh and last NASCAR Winston Cup Championship. He was able to hold off Waltrip to win the title in 1979.

In 1980, Petty won two races early in the year at North Wilkesboro and Nashville but a violent crash at Pocono in July ended his championship hopes. He finished 4th in points. For 1981, NASCAR dictated that all teams had to show up with the new downsized cars of 110" wheel-base, that Detroit had been building since 1979. Though Petty had been successful with the Chevrolet and Oldsmobile cars he had been running, he wanted to get back to his Mopar roots. After taking a phone call from Lee Iacocca (who personally asked Petty to campaign a Dodge for 1981), the Petty team built a stunning 1981 Dodge Mirada and took it to Daytona in January 1981 for high speed tests. Petty's fans were also in a large part fans of his Dodges, so when word got out about the Mirada testing, 15,000 or so showed up on January 17, 1981, at Daytona Speedway to watch Petty put the Dodge through its paces. Sadly for the fans, the car could do no better than 186 miles per hour, about eight miles per hour slower than the GM and Ford cars. Petty gave up on returning to Dodge knowing that for the superspeedways the Mirada would not be competitive, and bought a Buick Regal for the Daytona race. In the 1981 Daytona 500, Petty used a "fuel only" for his last pit stop, with 25 laps to go, to outfox Bobby Allison and grab his seventh and final Daytona 500 win. This win marked a large change in Petty's racing team. Dale Inman, Petty's longtime crew chief, left the team after the Daytona victory (Inman would win an eighth championship as crew chief in 1984 with Terry Labonte).

While the 1981 season gave Petty 3 wins, he felt the season was a failure, and the Regals being ill-handling and poor in reliability. For 1982, he made the move to the Pontiac Grand Prix, with the promise of substantial factory support from Pontiac. 1982 was a repeat of 1978, and no victories were to be had. At first, the Grand Prix behaved much like the Dodge Magnum of 1978, with handling and speed problems. Toward the end of 1982 things improved with several top-10 finishes, which opened the door to a successful 1983 season with three victories, and several top-5 and top-10 finishes. In 1983, he broke his 43-race winless streak from 1982 with a win in the 1983 Carolina 500, barely edging out a young Bill Elliott. After a controversial win at Charlotte in October 1983 (recognised by NASCAR as win No. 198), Petty left the race team his father founded for the 1984 season. He spent '84 and '85 driving for Mike Curb before returning to Petty Enterprises in 1986.[15]

Because of the 1971 Myers Brothers 250 combination race in 1971 that Petty finished second in a Grand National Car while winner Bobby Allison drove a Grand American car, there is a technical dispute regarding which race is credited as his 200th win. NASCAR did not credit Petty with a class win, which was a dispute that affected two other drivers, Elmo Langley and Charlie Glotzbach, both of whom drove in combination races that season, finishing second to Grand American cars. Under modern NASCAR combination race rules for various series, Petty would be credited with that would be recognized as his 135th win. On May 20, 1984, Petty won what under modern regulations would be recognized as his 200th Cup class win, the Budweiser 500 at Dover International Speedway, when the Winston-Salem class win is recognized.

 
Petty in 1985

On July 4, 1984, Petty won his officially-recognized 200th (and what would turn out to be his final victory) race at the Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway. The race was memorable: On lap 158, Doug Heveron crashed, bringing out the yellow caution flag, essentially turning lap 158 into the last lap as the two drivers battled back to the start-finish line. Petty and Cale Yarborough diced it out on that lap, with Yarborough drafting and taking an early lead before Petty managed to cross the start/finish line only a fender-length ahead. (This is no longer possible because of the 2003 rule change freezing the field immediately upon caution. Furthermore, in 2004 the green-white-checkered rule was created for cases when the yellow flag waved with two laps, but not just one, remaining. Also, under current combination race rules, Petty would be recognized for his 201st win.) President Ronald Reagan was in attendance, the first sitting president to attend a NASCAR race. Reagan celebrated the milestone with Petty and his family in victory lane.[16]

In early 1988, Petty traveled to Australia to help promote a NASCAR exhibition race at the then new Calder Park Thunderdome, the first NASCAR race outside of North America. While he did not compete in the track's inaugural race, the Goodyear NASCAR 500 (though his son Kyle did), Richard Petty, in testing at the 1.119 mi (1.801 km) track which owner Bob Jane had modeled on the Charlotte Motor Speedway, set an unofficial lap record of 28.2 seconds (142.85 mp/h). This would have in fact landed him on pole position for the race, as the fastest time in official qualifying was by Alabama Gang member Neil Bonnett, who recorded a 28.829-second lap (139.734 mp/h) in his Pontiac Grand Prix.

Petty's last ride (1992)

 
Petty driving the No. 43 during the Brickyard 400 Open Test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
Flag stand from Petty's first win

On October 1, 1991, Petty announced he would retire after the 1992 season. Petty's final top ten finish came at the 1991 Budweiser at the Glen which was the same race J. D. McDuffie was killed in a fifth lap accident. Petty chose to run the entire 1992 season, not just selected events as other drivers have done before retirement. His year-long Fan Appreciation Tour took him around the country, participating in special events, awards ceremonies, and fan-related meetings. Racing Champions ran a promotional line of diecast cars for every race in Petty's Farewell Tour.

At the 1992 Pepsi 400 on July 4, Petty qualified on the front row for the first time since 1986. Before the start of the race, he was honored with a gift ceremony which included a visit from President George H. W. Bush. When the green flag dropped, Petty led the opening five laps as the holiday crowd cheered wildly. Unfortunately, the oppressive heat forced him to drop out after completing just 84 laps.

Despite the busy appearance schedule and mediocre race results, Petty managed to qualify for all 29 races in 1992. On his final visit to each track, Petty would lead the field on the pace lap to salute the fans. Petty's final race, the season-ending Hooters 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, which also marked the start of Jeff Gordon's NASCAR career and the second-closest points championship in NASCAR history, with six drivers mathematically eligible to win the championship, is hailed to this day as the greatest race in NASCAR history. A record 160,000 spectators attended the race and celebrated Petty's farewell. In the intense title race, the championship contender, Davey Allison, got mixed up in a crash with Ernie Irvan, dashing his title hopes. Long-shot contenders Mark Martin, Kyle Petty and Harry Gant fell behind in the long run, which left Bill Elliott and Alan Kulwicki to compete for the title. The race went down to the final lap with Elliott winning and Kulwicki taking the championship by 10 points because he had led the most laps, one more than Elliott, which gave him a five-point bonus.

Facing intense pressure, Petty barely managed to qualify at Atlanta, posting the 39th fastest speed out of 41 cars. He would not have been eligible for the provisional starting position, and had to qualify on speed. On the 94th lap, Petty became tangled up in an accident, and his car caught fire. Petty pulled the car off the track, and climbed out of the burning machine uninjured. His pit crew worked diligently with less than 20 laps to go to get the car running again, and with two laps to go, Petty pulled out of the pits and was credited as running at the finish in his final race. He took his final checkered flag, finishing in 35th position. After the race, Petty circled the track to salute the fans one final time in his trademark STP Pontiac.

Thereafter he made a few public show appearances at racetracks. On August 18, 1993, NASCAR participated in a tire test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, in preparations for the 1994 Brickyard 400. Petty drove several laps around the track, and then donated his car to the Speedway's museum. He would again step into a racecar in 2003 on the week of the final race under the Winston banner at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he took a solo lap honoring his seven Winston Cup Championships for Winston's salute to the champions. In 2009 at the Coke Zero 400 in Daytona, for the 25th anniversary of his final, 200th victory in 1984, Petty drove one of his 1980s Pontiac racecars during the pace laps, leading the field for the first one. The field split him and he followed it for one more pace lap before he pulled his car in. Finally, at the 2017 Southern 500 at Darlington, Petty led the field through several pace laps in his Plymouth Belvedere. He apparently stayed out a lap longer than expected and was humorously black flagged by the starter. Petty followed the pace car down pit road at the start of the race.

Petty as an owner

In later years of his career, Petty developed the career of crew leader Robbie Loomis, who was at the helm of Petty Enterprises as crew chief in the 1990s and won three races—the 1996 Checker Auto Parts 500 at Phoenix, the 1997 ACDelco 400 at North Carolina Speedway, both with Bobby Hamilton driving, and the 1999 Goody's Body Pain 500 at Martinsville Speedway, with John Andretti driving. Petty remained as operating owner until his son Kyle Petty took over day-to-day operations a decade later.

However, in 2008, Kyle Petty was released by Petty Enterprises, and, because of lack of sponsorship, Petty Enterprises was bought out by Gillett-Evernham Motorsports. The name was originally going to stay the same, but when Evernham left the team, it was renamed Richard Petty Motorsports, despite George Gillett continuing to own the majority.

In November 2010, an investment group including Medallion Financial Corp., Douglas G. Bergeron and Petty, signed and closed sale on racing assets of Richard Petty Motorsports.[17][18] Andrew M. Murstein, president of Medallion, had been seeking a sports investment since 2008 when he formed a special-purpose acquisition company together with Hank Aaron, a Medallion board member, and others.[19][20]

Petty as a broadcaster

In 1995, Petty moved to the television broadcast booth, joining CBS as a color commentator.

Sponsorship

Petty promised his mother not to accept alcohol sponsorship.[21] Therefore, he never collected purses for the Bud Pole Award, and he competed at the Busch Clash only once, in 1980.

Close calls

As well as his numerous victories, Petty is remembered for three of the many disastrous crashes that he survived:

  • In the 1970 Rebel 400 at Darlington, Petty was injured when his Plymouth Road Runner cut a tire and slammed hard into the wall separating the track from the pit area. The car flipped several times before coming to rest on its side. This accident injured Petty's shoulder and helped Bobby Isaac to win the 1970 Grand National Championship. During the accident, Petty's head hit the track pavement several times, a mishap that, along with Joe Weatherly's fatal crash six years earlier, led NASCAR to mandate the installation of the Petty-developed safety net that covers the driver's side window.
  • In a 1980 race at Pocono, Petty slammed the Turn 2 wall, nearly flipping the car. He barely escaped breaking his neck in the wreck and kept his injury hidden from NASCAR officials for the ensuing races, knowing that another wreck might kill him.[citation needed] Such a deception is unlikely to happen now because of modern NASCAR rules requiring an official series medical liaison to clear a driver after a crash.
  • In the 1988 Daytona 500, on Lap 106, Petty got turned by Phil Barkdoll out of turn 4. Petty's car went aloft, tumbled many times, rode along the catch fence, and hurled parts all over the front stretch at the Daytona International Speedway. After several flips, Petty was t-boned by Brett Bodine before coming to a stop. Petty walked away with no serious injuries, except for temporary sight loss due to excessive g-forces. The crash was similar to the accident suffered by Bobby Allison during the 1987 Winston 500 at Talladega Superspeedway and Carl Edwards's 2009 Talladega crash in that, in all three cases, the racers' cars became airborne after turning sideways and damaged the spectator fencing (though much less in Petty's case). Petty's car became airborne despite the use of the carburetor restrictor plate, which was mandated by NASCAR for races at Talladega Superspeedway and Daytona International Speedway just prior to the start of the 1988 season.

Career awards

 

Politics

In 1978, Petty was elected to the Randolph County Commission as a Republican.[23] In 1980 he endorsed John Connally for the Republican nomination for president. According to Petty, it was a "tossup" between Connally and Ronald Reagan, but he chose Connally "basically on personality. And Connally's been there in Washington a lot of times doing a lot of things. He knows the system better."[24] He was reelected to the county commission in 1982, 1986, and 1990.[25][26] During his 1992 retirement tour, Petty took a parade lap before every race with the exception of the Southern 500, where Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton served as grand marshal.[27] In 1993, Petty formed a political action committee to support Republican candidates.[28] In 1996, he was the Republican nominee for North Carolina Secretary of State, but was defeated by State Senator Elaine Marshall in the general election. Petty was mistakenly seen as a shoo-in, and his campaigning was sporadic. Following his loss, Petty stated, "If I had known I wasn't going to win, I wouldn't have run."[29] In June 2016 he made an appearance on stage with Donald Trump.[30]

Life after racing

 
Petty with President George W. Bush in 2006

Petty is currently a spokesman for Liberty Medical, Cheerios and the GlaxoSmithKline products Nicorette and Goody's Headache Powder. His portrait was featured on Brawny paper towels during a limited time when the company replaced their image with several "real Brawny men". General Mills created a Petty-themed packaged cereal, "43's," its boxes featuring his image and story.[31] Petty also played himself in the 2008 film Swing Vote, where he commends the film's protagonist by allowing him to briefly drive his famous "43" Plymouth.[32]

For public benefit, Petty and his son Kyle have lent their talent to host "Lifting It Right", an automotive lift safety training DVD produced and distributed by the Automotive Lift Institute (ALI); it is used in high school vocational programs and community colleges. He has recorded public service announcements for Civitan International, a nonprofit organization of which he is a former member.[33] He has also established a summer camp known as "Victory Junction", which is intended to give seriously ill children an outdoors, summer-camp experience and has medical staff on hand around the clock in case of emergencies.

In May 2011, Petty was chosen to be the Grand Marshal for the 2011 STP 400 of the Sprint Cup Series.[34] In public, he is usually seen wearing his trademark sunglasses and a Charlie 1 Horse cowboy hat, with a large snakeskin hat band and a plume of rooster feathers at the front.

After retirement, Petty purchased a 90-acre (36 ha) ranch south of Jackson, Wyoming.[35]

Motorsports career results

NASCAR

(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)

Grand National Series

NASCAR Grand National Series results
Year Team No. Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 NGNC Pts Ref
1958 Petty Enterprises 142 Olds FAY DAB CON FAY WIL HBO FAY CLB PIF ATL CLT MAR ODS OBS GPS GBF STR NWS BGS TRN RSD CLB NBS REF LIN HCY AWS RSP MCC SLS TOR
17
37th 1016 [36]
42A BUF
11
MCF BEL
9
BRR CLB NSV AWS
2 BGS
20
MBS
16
DAR CLT BIR CSF GAF RCH HBO
31
SAS
22
MAR NWS
23
42 ATL
35
1959 24 FAY
13
DAY 15th 3694 [37]
43 DAY
57
HBO CON ATL WIL
3
MAR
7
TRN
12
CLT
19
NSV ASP PIF GPS ATL
2
CLB WIL RCH BGS
24
AWS CLT
12
MBS
27
CLT
20
42 BGS
9
CLB NWS REF HCY
43 Plymouth DAY
26
HEI NSV
29
AWS
26
BGS GPS CLB DAR
4
HCY RCH CSF HBO
3
MAR
15
AWS
5
NWS
3
CON
7
1960 CLT
12
CLB
6
DAY
10
DAY DAY
3
CLT
1
NWS
18
PHO CLB
6
MAR
1
HCY
3
WIL
7
BGS
4
GPS
3
AWS
9
DAR
2
PIF
11
HBO
6
RCH
6
HMS CLT
55
BGS
4
DAY
11
HEI
2
MAB
2
MBS
5
ATL
20
BIR
2
NSV
6
AWS
15
PIF
13
CLB
2
BGS
9
DAR
6
HCY
12
CSF GSP
7
HBO
1*
MAR
22
NWS
6
CLT
2
RCH
4
ATL
7
2nd 17228 [38]
42 SBO
6
1961 43 CLT
11
JSP
4
DAY
16
DAY DAY
DNQ
PIF
2
AWS
4
HMS ATL
24
GPS
2
BGS
3
MAR
8
NWS
3
CLB
6
HCY
20
RCH
1*
MAR
23
DAR
32
CLT
1
CLT RSD ASP CLT
30
PIF
15
BIR GPS
16
BGS
5
NOR HAS
17
STR
4
DAY ATL
3
CLB
7
MBS
17
BRI
4
NSV
14*
BGS
5
AWS
11
RCH
9
SBO
20
DAR
26
ATL
5
MAR
17
CLT
2
BRI
23
HBO
10
8th 14984 [39]
42 HBO
2
HCY
17
RCH
18
CSF NWS
3
GPS
4
1962 CON
13
CHT
4*
STR
1
HCY
10
RCH
4
DTS
11
2nd 28440 [40]
43 AWS
7
DAY DAY
4
DAY
2
CON
2
AWS
8
SVH
14
HBO
2
RCH
20
CLB
7
NWS
1*
GPS
11
MBS
2
MAR
1
BGS
5
BRI
16
RCH
3
HCY
6
CON
9*
DAR
15
PIF
3
CLT
4
ATL
23
BGS
3
AUG
3
RCH
19
SBO
3
DAY
30
CLB
20
ASH
3
GPS
1
AUG
2
SVH
3
MBS
16
BRI
3
NSV
2
HUN
1*
AWS
7
BGS
1
PIF
1
VAL
2
DAR
5*
MAR
2
NWS
1*
CLT
16
ATL
4
41 AUG
2
1963 43 BIR
2
GGS
1*
THS
11
RSD
41
DAY
12
DAY DAY
6
PIF
1
AWS
1
HBO
3
ATL
8
HCY
2
BRI
4
AUG
2
SBO
1*
MAR
1
NWS
1*
CLT
36
ATL
12
DAY
8
DTS
11
ASH
2
OBS
16
BRR
1*
BRI
2
NSV
4
CLB
1*
AWS
2
PIF
2
BGS
2
ONA
10
DAR
12
HCY
15
THS
1
CLT
6
RSD
36
2nd 31170 [41]
41 RCH
6
GPS
4
BGS
11
CLB
1
THS
13
ODS
1
RCH
2
BIR
1*
MBS
15
GPS
1
RCH
6
MAR
5
NWS
26
SBO
1*
42 DAR
3*
SVH
15
BGS
8
DTS
4
HBO
6
1964 CON
3
JSP
5*
1st 40252 [42]
43 AUG
19*
SVH
1*
RSD
26
DAY DAY
3*
DAY
1*
RCH
2
BRI
8
GPS
16
BGS
3
ATL
7
AWS
17
HBO
12
PIF
15
CLB
15
NWS
7
MAR
6
SVH
3
DAR
10
LGY
17
HCY
3
SBO
1*
CLT
2
GPS
2
ASH
2
ATL
2
CON
1
NSV
1*
CHT
2
BIR
2
VAL
13
PIF
1
DAY
16*
ODS
8
OBS
3
BRR
13
GLN
21
BRI
2*
NSV
1*
MBS
2
AWS
25
DTS
3
ONA
1*
CLB
17
BGS
2
DAR
3*
HCY
5
HBO
16
MAR
2
SVH
2
NWS
19
CLT
3*
JAC
2
41 ISP
3
LIN
2
STR
15
RCH
3
ODS
3
HAR
1*
AUG
25
1965 43 RSD DAY DAY DAY PIF ASW RCH HBO ATL GPS NWS MAR CLB BRI DAR LGY BGS HCY CLT CCF ASH HAR NSV BIR ATL GPS MBS VAL DAY ODS OBS ISP GLN BRI
17
NSV
1*
CCF
2
AWS
1*
SMR
3*
PIF AUG CLB
2
DTS
3
BLV
20
BGS
2
DAR HCY
1
LIN
19
ODS
1
RCH MAR
2
NWS
33
CLT HBO CAR
36
DTS 38th 5638 [43]
1966 42 AUG
1
CLB
2
AWS
18
BLV
20
BGS
2
HCY
2
RCH
12
HBO 3rd 22952 [44]
43 RSD
25
DAY
2*
DAY DAY
1*
CAR BRI ATL
25
HCY
10
CLB
6
GPS
2
BGS
3
NWS
11
MAR
3
DAR
1*
LGY
1*
MGR
1*
MON RCH
2
CLT
22
DTS
18
ASH
17
PIF SMR AWS
1*
BLV
21
GPS DAY
29
ODS BRR OXF
3
FON
2
ISP
15
BRI
2*
SMR
29
NSV
1*
ATL
1*
DAR
2*
MAR
23
NWS
26
CLT
38
CAR
28
1967 AUG
1*
RSD
21
DAY DAY
5
DAY
8
AWS
1*
BRI
34
GPS
19
BGS
2*
ATL
22
CLB
1*
HCY
1
NWS
7
MAR
1
SVH
2
RCH
1*
DAR
1*
BLV
2*
LGY
1*
CLT
4
ASH
3
MGR
1*
SMR
1*
BIR
3
CAR
1*
GPS
1
MGY
2
DAY
11
TRN
1*
OXF
2*
FDA
1*
ISP
1
BRI
1*
SMR
2
NSV
1*
ATL
17*
BGS
1*
CLB
1
SVH
1*
DAR
1*
HCY
1
RCH
1*
BLV
1*
HBO
1*
MAR
1
NWS
1*
CLT
18
CAR
28
AWS
2
1st 42472 [45]
1968 MGR
2
MGY
1*
RSD
10
DAY
8
BRI
2
RCH
17
ATL
6
HCY
1
GPS
1
CLB
5
NWS
26
MAR
15*
AUG
18
AWS
3
DAR
3
BLV
14*
LGY
6
CLT
38
ASH
1*
MGR
3
SMR
1*
BIR
1*
CAR
26
GPS
1
DAY
21
ISP
4*
OXF
1*
FDA
1*
TRN
22
BRI
24
SMR
1*
NSV
2*
ATL
5
CLB
21
BGS
2*
AWS
26
SBO
1*
LGY
2
DAR
20
HCY
4
RCH
1*
BLV
3
HBO
1*
MAR
1*
NWS
1*
AUG
3
CLT
32
CAR
1*
JFC
2
3rd 3123 [46]
1969 MGR
1*
MGY
2*
2nd 3813 [47]
Ford RSD
1*
DAY DAY
6
DAY
8
CAR
5
AUG
2
BRI
7
ATL
9
CLB
3
HCY
2
GPS
5
RCH
2
NWS
7
MAR
1
AWS
23
DAR
11
BLV LGY CLT
19
MGR
3
SMR
20
MCH
3
KPT
1
GPS
3
NCF
2
DAY
5
DOV
1*
TPN
25
TRN
29
BLV
1
BRI
23
NSV
1*
SMR
1*
ATL
3
MCH
3
SBO
3
BGS
1
AWS
23
DAR
9
HCY
3
RCH
19
TAL
Wth
CLB
2*
MAR
1
NWS
2*
CLT
27
SVH
2
AUG
2
CAR
32
JFC
3
MGR
6
TWS
21
1970 Plymouth RSD
5
DAY
6
DAY DAY
39
RCH
2*
CAR
1*
SVH
1*
ATL
5
BRI
24
TAL
7
NWS
1*
DAR
18
BLV LGY CLT SMR MAR MCH
28*
RSD
1*
HCY KPT
1*
GPS
19
DAY
18
AST
1*
TPN
2
TRN
1*
BRI
5
SMR
1*
NSV
16
ATL
1*
CLB
2
ONA
1*
MCH
14
TAL
7
BGS
1*
SBO
1*
DAR
5
HCY
2
RCH
1*
DOV
1*
NWS
2*
CLT
23
MAR
1*
MGR
1
CAR
6
LGY 4th 3447 [48]
Robertson Racing CLB
1*
NCF
1*
1971 Petty Enterprises RSD
20
DAY
3
DAY DAY
1*
ONT
3
RCH
1*
CAR
1*
HCY
1*
BRI
2*
ATL
2
CLB
1
GPS
7
SMR
1*
NWS
1
MAR
1
DAR
20
SBO
2
TAL
38
ASH
1*
KPT
17
CLT
4
DOV
3
MCH
6
RSD
13
HOU
7
GPS
1
DAY
2
BRI
3
AST
1*
ISP
1*
TRN
1*
NSV
1*
ATL
1*
BGS
2
ONA
1*
MCH
2
TAL
2
CLB
1
HCY
3
DAR
2
MAR
3
CLT
4*
DOV
1
CAR
1
MGR RCH
1*
NWS
3*
TWS
1*
1st 4435 [49]

Winston Cup Series

NASCAR Winston Cup Series results
Year Team No. Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 NWCC Pts Ref
1972 Petty Enterprises 43 Plymouth RSD
1
DAY
26
RCH
1
ONT
4
CAR
2
ATL
6
BRI
3
DAR
2
NWS
1
MAR
1
RSD
23*
BRI
2
TRN
3
NSV
2
RCH
1*
DOV
2
MAR
1
NWS
1
CAR
2
1st 8701.4 [50]
Dodge TAL
5
CLT
19
DOV
2
MCH
3
TWS
1*
DAY
2
ATL
2
TAL
7
MCH
4
DAR
3
CLT
10
TWS
3
1973 RSD
21
DAY
1
RCH
1*
CAR
23
BRI
2
ATL
34
NWS
1*
DAR
7
MAR
21
TAL
35
NSV
13
CLT
13
DOV
4
TWS
1
RSD
2
MCH
3
DAY
2
BRI
21
ATL
33
TAL
14
NSV
2
DAR
4
RCH
1*
DOV
7
NWS
2*
MAR
1
CLT
2
CAR
35
5th 6877.95 [51]
1974 RSD
2
DAY
1
RCH
2
CAR
1*
BRI
23
ATL
6
DAR
20
NWS
1*
MAR
2
TAL
3
NSV
1
DOV
3
CLT
2
RSD
25
MCH
1*
DAY
2
BRI
3
NSV
13*
ATL
1
POC
1*
TAL
1
MCH
2
DAR
35
RCH
1*
DOV
1*
NWS
2
MAR
29
CLT
2
CAR
3
ONT
15*
1st 5037.75 [52]
1975 RSD
7
DAY
7
RCH
1*
CAR
3
BRI
1*
ATL
1*
NWS
1*
DAR
26
MAR
1*
TAL
19
NSV
7
DOV
3
CLT
1*
RSD
1
MCH
2
DAY
1
NSV
2
POC
2
TAL
2
MCH
1
DAR
2*
DOV
1*
NWS
1*
MAR
22
CLT
1*
RCH
28
CAR
35
BRI
1*
ATL
3
ONT
16
1st 4783 [53]
1976 RSD
25
DAY
2
CAR
1*
RCH
2
BRI
27
ATL
28
NWS
2
DAR
23
MAR
4
TAL
4
NSV
2
DOV
6
CLT
2
RSD
9
MCH
4
DAY
22
NSV
2
POC
1
TAL
20
MCH
3
BRI
2
DAR
2
RCH
3
DOV
2
MAR
4
NWS
3
CLT
8
CAR
1*
ATL
28
ONT
27
2nd 4449 [54]
1977 RSD
3
DAY
26
RCH
6
CAR
1*
ATL
1
NWS
2
DAR
3
BRI
3
MAR
3
TAL
20
NSV
5
DOV
3
CLT
1*
RSD
1*
MCH
2
DAY
1*
NSV
3
POC
2
TAL
11
MCH
8
BRI
22
DAR
4
RCH
2
DOV
23
MAR
4
NWS
24*
CLT
32
CAR
2
ATL
6
ONT
2
2nd 4614 [55]
1978 RSD
16
DAY
33
RCH
22
CAR
4
ATL
26
BRI
25
DAR
5
NWS
2
MAR
3
TAL
11
DOV
7
CLT
8
NSV
3
RSD
2
MCH
6
DAY
4
NSV
23
POC
30
TAL
7
6th 3949 [56]
Chevy MCH
14
BRI
5
DAR
3
RCH
20
DOV
27
MAR
6
NWS
4
CLT
27
CAR
6
ATL
2
ONT
34
1979 RSD
32
CAR
32
RCH
5
NWS
2*
DAR
2
MAR
1*
NSV
2*
CLT
2
TWS
6
RSD
3
MCH
5
NSV
5
POC
2
MCH
1
BRI
2
DAR
9
RCH
6
DOV
1
MAR
2
CLT
4
NWS
3
CAR
1
ATL
6
ONT
5
1st 4830 [57]
Olds DAY
1
ATL
11
BRI
4
TAL
4
DOV
30
DAY
5
TAL
4
1980 Chevy RSD
3
RCH
3
CAR
2
ATL
33
BRI
8
DAR
9
NWS
1*
MAR
3
NSV
1
DOV
2
CLT
4
TWS
2
RSD
8
MCH
5
NSV
5
POC
33
MCH
5
BRI
4
DAR
9
RCH
2
DOV
17
NWS
18
MAR
15
CLT
27
CAR
14
ATL
21
ONT
30
4th 4255 [58]
Olds DAY
25
TAL
31
DAY
5
TAL
18
1981 42 Chevy RSD
5
8th 3880 [59]
43 Buick DAY
1
RCH
3
CAR
3
ATL
38
BRI
29
NWS
1
DAR
33
MAR
28
TAL
39
NSV
4
DOV
19
CLT
24
TWS
4
RSD
3
MCH
6
DAY
3
NSV
9
POC
2
TAL
40
MCH
1*
BRI
24
DAR
30
RCH
11
DOV
10
MAR
18
NWS
21
CLT
30
CAR
4
ATL
26
RSD
7
1982 Pontiac DAY
27
RCH
2
BRI
7
ATL
2
CAR
30
DAR
31
NWS
5
MAR
15
TAL
27
NSV
9
DOV
24
CLT
8
POC
7
RSD
36
MCH
26
DAY
25
NSV
7
POC
2*
TAL
3
MCH
2
BRI
26
DAR
2
RCH
13
DOV
30
NWS
4
CLT
8
MAR
3
CAR
6
ATL
15
RSD
31
5th 3814 [60]
1983 DAY
38
RCH
8
CAR
1
ATL
5
DAR
25
NWS
10
MAR
17
TAL
1*
NSV
6
DOV
7
BRI
5
CLT
2
RSD
10
POC
3
MCH
11
DAY
33
NSV
19
POC
10
TAL
4
MCH
6
BRI
9
DAR
12
RCH
6
DOV
9
MAR
9
NWS
12
CLT
1
CAR
26
ATL
5
RSD
10
4th 4042 [61]
1984 Curb Racing DAY
31
RCH
15
CAR
4
ATL
4
BRI
8
NWS
12
DAR
7
MAR
12
TAL
6
NSV
7
DOV
1
CLT
34
RSD
23
POC
13
MCH
34
DAY
1
NSV
25
POC
27
TAL
23
MCH
9
BRI
17
DAR
29
RCH
5
DOV
37
MAR
8
CLT
9
NWS
18
CAR
15
ATL
8
RSD
14
10th 3643 [62]
1985 DAY
34
RCH
26
CAR
8
ATL
13
BRI
8
DAR
33
NWS
21
MAR
7
TAL
27
DOV
7
CLT
26
RSD
7
POC
33
MCH
30
DAY
29
POC
27
TAL
6
MCH
37
BRI
8
DAR
12
RCH
3
DOV
9
MAR
22
NWS
8
CLT
10
CAR
33
ATL
10
RSD
8
14th 3140 [63]
1986 Petty Enterprises DAY
36
RCH
20
CAR
3
ATL
11
BRI
14
DAR
7
NWS
29
MAR
28
TAL
7
DOV
6
CLT
Wth
RSD
6
POC
19
MCH
13
DAY
22
POC
34
TAL
37
GLN
10
MCH
18
BRI
7
DAR
40
RCH
4
DOV
12
MAR
16
NWS
3
CLT
35
CAR
8
ATL
2
RSD
21
14th 3314 [64]
U.S. Racing 6 Chevy CLT
38
1987 Petty Enterprises 43 Pontiac DAY
3
CAR
15
RCH
23
ATL
14
DAR
3
NWS
6
BRI
2
MAR
22
TAL
16
CLT
4
DOV
36
POC
29
RSD
6
MCH
12
DAY
26
POC
8
TAL
37
GLN
14
MCH
11
BRI
5
DAR
3
RCH
5
DOV
9
MAR
13
NWS
9
CLT
5
CAR
17
RSD
4
ATL
30
8th 3708 [65]
1988 DAY
34
RCH
3
CAR
41
ATL
23
DAR
41
BRI
6
NWS
6
MAR
32
TAL
20
CLT
15
DOV
15
RSD
6
POC
26
MCH
24
DAY
20
POC
28
TAL
21
GLN
17
MCH
39
BRI
8
DAR
33
RCH
34
DOV
38
MAR
27
CLT
38
NWS
18
CAR
25
PHO
35
ATL
36
22nd 2644 [66]
1989 DAY
17
CAR
16
ATL
27
RCH
DNQ
DAR
15
BRI
DNQ
NWS
DNQ
MAR
24
TAL
23
CLT
19
DOV
20
SON
26
POC
25
MCH
30
DAY
20
POC
38
TAL
21
GLN
13
MCH
18
BRI
DNQ
DAR
35
RCH
33
DOV
30
MAR
24
CLT
34
NWS
32
CAR
34
PHO
42
ATL
28
29th 2148 [67]
1990 DAY
34
RCH
35
CAR
32
ATL
25
DAR
21
BRI
26
NWS
29
MAR
20
TAL
29
CLT
27
DOV
21
SON
26
POC
38
MCH
11
DAY
36
POC
9
TAL
29
GLN
18
MCH
33
BRI
29
DAR
34
RCH
21
DOV
16
MAR
29
NWS
17
CLT
20
CAR
21
PHO
23
ATL
17
26th 2556 [68]
1991 DAY
19
RCH
11
CAR
15
ATL
38
DAR
37
BRI
17
NWS
16
MAR
14
TAL
40
CLT
20
DOV
17
SON
34
POC
11
MCH
35
DAY
22
POC
31
TAL
18
GLN
9
MCH
23
BRI
12
DAR
16
RCH
24
DOV
20
MAR
30
NWS
19
CLT
12
CAR
16
PHO
41
ATL
22
24th 2817 [69]
1992 DAY
16
CAR
16
RCH
21
ATL
16
DAR
32
BRI
27
NWS
31
MAR
29
TAL
15
CLT
41
DOV
20
SON
21
POC
16
MCH
15
DAY
36
POC
20
TAL
15
GLN
28
MCH
18
BRI
16
DAR
20
RCH
16
DOV
28
MAR
18
NWS
27
CLT
27
CAR
25
PHO
22
ATL
35
26th 2731 [70]
– After his backup car was deemed ineligible to race, Petty bought the race slot from D. K. Ulrich
Daytona 500
Year Team Manufacturer Start Finish
1959 Petty Enterprises Oldsmobile 6 57
1960 Plymouth 19 3
1961 DNQ
1962 10 2
1963 23 6
1964 2 1
1966 Petty Enterprises Plymouth 1 1
1967 2 8
1968 2 8
1969 Ford 12 8
1970 Plymouth 11 39
1971 5 1
1972 32 26
1973 Dodge 7 1
1974 2 1
1975 4 7
1976 6 2
1977 3 26
1978 6 33
1979 Oldsmobile 13 1
1980 4 25
1981 Buick 8 1
1982 Pontiac 21 27
1983 6 38
1984 Curb Racing Pontiac 34 31
1985 8 34
1986 Petty Enterprises Pontiac 10 36
1987 11 3
1988 34 34
1989 34 17
1990 11 34
1991 3 19
1992 32 16

International Race of Champions

(key) (Bold – Pole position. * – Most laps led.)

International Race of Champions results
Season Make 1 2 3 4 Pos. Pts Ref
1973–74 Porsche RSD
7
RSD
10
RSD
10
DAY 10th NA [71]
1974–75 Chevy MCH
10
RSD
5
RSD
10
DAY 10th NA [72]
1975–76 MCH
6
RSD
6
RSD
11
DAY 10th NA [73]
1976–77 MCH
6
RSD
3
RSD
9
DAY
4
6th NA [74]
1977–78 MCH
4
RSD
2
RSD
5
DAY
8
5th NA [75]
1989 Chevy DAY
9
NZH
12
MCH
11
GLN
12
12th 16 [76]

Film and TV appearances

  • In 2011, Petty was featured in the show Modern HotrodZ. Petty's Garage now builds Custom cars for the general public, most of which are Limited Edition.
  • He appeared as himself in the movie Swing Vote driving in his famous blue No. 43 car, and letting Bud drive his car to Air Force One to meet the President.
  • Petty voiced Strip Weathers (a fictionalized version of himself), also known as "The King", in the Disney/Pixar animated movie Cars (2006). His car, the Road Runner Superbird with the distinctive "Petty Blue" tint and the number 43, is also the model used for the car in the movie. He is hoping to get one more victory in him before he can retire from racing on the Piston Cup circuit. Though The King's accident caused by his longtime running rival Chick Hicks at the end of the film was a re-creation of Rusty Wallace's real-life Winston 500 accident in 1993, the bit in which rookie racer Lightning McQueen assists him to the finish line is based on the 1976 incident, albeit by the pit crew. Petty's wife Lynda voiced The King's wife, a 1976 Chrysler Town & Country station-wagon (based on Petty's family car), in that movie as well. Petty's character did not appear in Cars 2 (2011), but did return in Cars 3 (2017), in which Petty voiced his character as the crew chief of his nephew and new Dinoco racer Hank/Cal Weathers, who was voiced by driver Kyle Petty, who is Richard Petty's son.
  • Petty appeared in the Tom Cruise movie Days of Thunder (1990).
  • He appeared in the Burt Reynolds movie Stroker Ace (1983) as himself.
  • Petty appeared as himself in the movie 43: The Richard Petty Story (1972) (a Victory Lane Production, released by Video Gems, distributed by United American Video in 1986).
  • In 1989, Petty appeared as himself in the movie Speed Zone, driving in his famous blue No. 43 car.
  • In 1967, Petty appeared in the opening credits of the Elvis Presley movie Speedway that was shot and filmed at the Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. This movie was released in 1968.
  • He was in Petty Blue, a documentary by NASCAR.
  • Petty guest-starred in the Alley Oop daily comic strip from June 7 to June 20, 1994, in which he drove a pickup truck to help corral an escaped dinosaur (that had been transported to the 20th century).
  • Petty appeared as himself in the (1965) Howard Hawks film Red Line 7000

References

  1. ^ a b c Hinton, Ed (2001). Daytona: From the Birth of Speed to the Death of the Man in Black. New York: Warner Books. p. 118. ISBN 0-446-52677-0.
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  3. ^ "Meet the Inductees". NASCAR Hall of Fame. from the original on May 28, 2014. Retrieved May 26, 2014.
  4. ^ "First Lady of NASCAR" Lynda Petty Dies April 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, allvoices.com; accessed March 31, 2014.
  5. ^ Bruce, Kenny (March 25, 2014). "LYNDA PETTY, WIFE OF RICHARD PETTY, DIES AT AGE 72". NASCAR. from the original on March 26, 2014. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  6. ^ "Lynda Petty". IMDb.
  7. ^ "Ancestry of Richard Petty". wargs.com. from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved April 5, 2007.
  8. ^ a b "Biography: Petty, Lee Richard". Encyclopedia.com. from the original on April 23, 2021. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
  9. ^ Baime, A. J. (February 16, 2016). "Richard Petty's Greatest Moments, According to Richard Petty". The Drive. from the original on October 29, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
  10. ^ Times-Picayune, March 1, 1965, p. 1
  11. ^ Trenton Evening Times, March 1, 1965, p. 1.
  12. ^ Plain Dealer, May 19, 1965, pp. 35, 40.
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  17. ^ "Taxi tycoon Andrew Murstein is revved to build race track in New York, bring sport to fans" June 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, nydailynews.com, December 14, 2010.
  18. ^ ”Ambrose victory validates investment into RPM” April 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, nbcsports.msnbc.com, August 16, 2011.
  19. ^ “Industry Information”, New York City Taxi & Limousine Commission website September 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved October 7, 2010.
  20. ^ "Medallion Financial Corp" March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, finance.yahoo.com, April 8, 2010.
  21. ^ Petty in a Catch-43 March 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine – Jenna Fryer, AP, October 30, 2009
  22. ^ Richard Petty September 25, 2019, at the Wayback Machine at the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America
  23. ^ Pash, Phil (January 14, 1979). "Auto Agenda for 1979 Gets More Big Races". The New York Times.
  24. ^ "Some race car drivers have become so successful they have become capitalists". The Boston Globe. February 13, 1980.
  25. ^ Cadigan, Barry (January 28, 1983). "Petty sure he'll win this year". The Boston Globe.
  26. ^ Tuttle, Tim (June 12, 1988). "Petty's front-runner status confined to politics". The Orange County Register.
  27. ^ Flick, Shav. "He Doesn't Think Marshal Was So Grand". The Los Angeles Times.
  28. ^ "Petty Moves to Front in Politics". Greensboro News Record. October 15, 1993.
  29. ^ "The Fix's Grab Bag of Celebrity Politicians". The Washington Post. from the original on November 30, 2011. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  30. ^ "On 70th Birthday Trump Holds Greensboro Rally". ABC. from the original on June 18, 2016. Retrieved June 17, 2016.
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  32. ^ Manohla Dargis (August 1, 2008). "Hey, America, This Guy's for You". The New York Times. from the original on May 22, 2020. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  33. ^ Public Service Announcement for Civitan International featuring Richard Petty May 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ "Richard Petty Named Grand Marshal of STP 400 at Kansas Speedway". Kansas Speedway. May 26, 2011. from the original on April 21, 2013. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
  35. ^ "Wyoming's Best Race Car Drivers". KIGN-FM.
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  51. ^ "Richard Petty – 1973 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  52. ^ "Richard Petty – 1974 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  53. ^ "Richard Petty – 1975 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  54. ^ "Richard Petty – 1976 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
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  58. ^ "Richard Petty – 1980 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
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  61. ^ "Richard Petty – 1983 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  62. ^ "Richard Petty – 1984 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
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  65. ^ "Richard Petty – 1987 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  66. ^ "Richard Petty – 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  67. ^ "Richard Petty – 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  68. ^ "Richard Petty – 1990 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  69. ^ "Richard Petty – 1991 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  70. ^ "Richard Petty – 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
  71. ^ "Richard Petty – 1974 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  72. ^ "Richard Petty – 1975 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  73. ^ "Richard Petty – 1976 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  74. ^ "Richard Petty – 1977 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  75. ^ "Richard Petty – 1978 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  76. ^ "Richard Petty – 1989 IROC Results". Racing-Reference. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved September 30, 2015.

External links

  • Official website
  • Richard Petty driver statistics at Racing-Reference
  • Richard Petty at IMDb
  • Richard Petty discography at Discogs
Sporting positions
Preceded by NASCAR Grand National champion
1964
1967
Succeeded by
Ned Jarrett
David Pearson
Preceded by NASCAR Winston Cup champion
1971, 1972
1974, 1975
1979
Succeeded by
Benny Parsons
Cale Yarborough
Dale Earnhardt
Achievements
Preceded by Daytona 500 Winner
1964
1966
1971
1973, 1974
1979
1981
Succeeded by
Fred Lorenzen
Mario Andretti
A.J. Foyt
Benny Parsons
Buddy Baker
Bobby Allison
Preceded by Southern 500 Winner
1967
Succeeded by
Preceded by
David Pearson
David Pearson
World 600 Winner
1975
1977
Succeeded by
David Pearson
Darrell Waltrip
Awards
Preceded by NASCAR Rookie of the Year
1959
Succeeded by
David Pearson

richard, petty, former, president, maple, leafs, sports, entertainment, richard, peddie, psychology, professor, richard, petty, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, me. For the former president amp C E O of Maple Leafs Sports amp Entertainment see Richard Peddie For the psychology professor see Richard E Petty This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information Please remove or replace such wording and instead of making proclamations about a subject s importance use facts and attribution to demonstrate that importance November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Richard Lee Petty born July 2 1937 nicknamed The King is an American former stock car racing driver who competed from 1958 to 1992 in the former NASCAR Grand National and Winston Cup Series now called the NASCAR Cup Series most notably driving the No 43 Plymouth Pontiac for Petty Enterprises He is a member of the Petty racing family He was the first driver to win the Cup Series championship seven times a record now tied with Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson 1 while also winning a record 200 races during his career 1 This included winning the Daytona 500 a record seven times and winning a record 27 races 1 in one season 1967 2 Richard PettyPetty at Allegiant Stadium in 2021BornRichard Lee Petty 1937 07 02 July 2 1937 age 85 Level Cross Randolph County North Carolina U S Achievements1964 1967 Grand National Series Champion1971 1972 1974 1975 1979 Winston Cup Series ChampionTied with Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson for most NASCAR Cup Series Championships 7 1964 1966 1971 1973 1974 1979 1981 Daytona 500 Winner1967 Southern 500 Winner1975 1977 World 600 Winner1983 Winston 500 WinnerAll Time Wins Leader in NASCAR Cup Series 200 All Time Poles Leader in NASCAR Cup Series 123 Holds record for most NASCAR Cup Series wins in a season 27 in 1967 Holds record for most consecutive NASCAR Cup Series wins 10 in 1967 Most all time wins at Daytona International Speedway 10 Awards1959 Grand National Series Rookie of the YearNASCAR s Most Popular Driver 1962 1964 1968 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 Motorsports Hall of Fame of America 1989 International Motorsports Hall of Fame 1997 NASCAR Hall of Fame 2010 Diecast Hall of Fame 2011 Named one of NASCAR s 50 Greatest Drivers 1998 Presidential Medal of Freedom 1992 NASCAR Cup Series career1 184 races run over 35 yearsBest finish1st 1964 1967 1971 1972 1974 1975 1979 First race1958 Jim Mideon 500 Toronto Last race1992 Hooters 500 Atlanta First win1960 untitled race Southern States Last win1984 Firecracker 400 Daytona Wins Top tens Poles200 712 123NASCAR Convertible Division career15 races run over 2 yearsBest finish4th 1959 First race1958 Race No 14 Columbia Last race1959 Race No 14 Greenville Pickens First win1959 Race No 13 Columbia Wins Top tens Poles1 8 10He earns broad respect in motorsport as statistically the most accomplished driver in the history of NASCAR citation needed where he remains very active as both a team owner GMS Racing in the Cup Series and owner of Petty s Garage a car restoration and modification shop in Level Cross North Carolina During his 35 year career Petty collected a record number of poles 123 and over 700 top 10 finishes in a record 1 184 starts including 513 consecutive starts from 1971 to 1989 Petty was the first driver to win in his 500th race start being joined by Matt Kenseth in 2013 He was inducted into the inaugural class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2010 3 The Richard Petty Museum was formerly in nearby Randleman North Carolina but moved back to its original location in Level Cross in March 2014 Petty has also voiced a role in Disney s animated films Cars and Cars 3 playing The King a character partially based on himself Contents 1 Personal life 2 Racing career 2 1 The 1960s 2 2 The 1970s 2 3 Twilight years 1980 1991 2 4 Petty s last ride 1992 2 5 Petty as an owner 2 6 Petty as a broadcaster 2 7 Sponsorship 2 8 Close calls 2 9 Career awards 3 Politics 4 Life after racing 5 Motorsports career results 5 1 NASCAR 5 1 1 Grand National Series 5 1 2 Winston Cup Series 5 1 2 1 Daytona 500 5 2 International Race of Champions 6 Film and TV appearances 7 References 8 External linksPersonal lifePetty is a second generation driver His father Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500 in 1959 and was also a three time NASCAR champion In 1958 Petty married Lynda Owens who would die of cancer on March 25 2014 at her home in Level Cross North Carolina at age 72 4 5 They had four children including Kyle Petty 6 The family resides in Petty s home town of Level Cross North Carolina Petty s son Kyle was also a NASCAR driver His grandson Adam Kyle s son was killed in a practice crash at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on May 12 2000 five weeks after the death of Lee Petty Adam s brother Austin is Emeritus Chairman and Founder of Victory Junction a SeriousFun Children s Network camp established by the Pettys after Adam s death Racing careerSee also List of NASCAR race wins by Richard Petty Petty was born in Level Cross North Carolina the son of Elizabeth Petty nee Toomes and Lee Arnold Petty also a NASCAR driver and the older brother of NASCAR personality Maurice Petty 7 He was educated in Randleman North Carolina and attended Randleman High School where he was an All Conference guard on the football team 8 After his 1955 graduation he took a business course at Greensboro Junior College then began work for his father s racing company Petty Enterprises 8 He began his NASCAR career on July 18 1958 16 days after his 21st birthday His first race was held at CNE Stadium in Toronto Ontario Canada the site of BMO Field and the Honda Indy Toronto currently In 1959 he was named NASCAR Rookie of the Year after he produced 9 top 10 finishes including six Top 5 finishes That year he had participated in the inaugural Daytona 500 at the new Daytona International Speedway but after his day ended due to engine trouble he joined his father Lee s pit crew who won the race 9 In Lakewood Georgia in 1959 Petty won his first race but his father Lee protested complaining of a scoring error on the officials part Hours later Lee was awarded the win The 1960s Petty s famous Plymouth Superbird on display at The Richard Petty Museum in Randleman North Carolina In 1960 he finished 2nd in the NASCAR Grand National Points Race and got his first career win at the Charlotte Fairgrounds Speedway 1963 was his breakout year winning at tracks like Martinsville and Bridgehampton In 1964 driving a potent Plymouth with a new Hemi engine Petty led 184 of the 200 laps to capture his first Daytona 500 en route to 9 victories earning over 114 000 and his first Grand National championship Joining in the Chrysler boycott of NASCAR due to the organizing body s ban of the Hemi engine Petty spent much of 1965 competing as a drag racer Petty Enterprises installed the Hemi in the new compact Barracuda and lettered OUTLAWED on the door He crashed this car at Southeastern Dragway in Dallas Georgia on February 28 1965 killing an eight year old boy and injuring seven others 10 11 Petty his father Lee and Chrysler Corporation faced lawsuits totaling more than 1 million though Petty and his team came to settlements with the lawsuits within 1 month of the suits being filed 12 Afterwards a second Hemi Barracuda was built this time with an altered wheelbase and eventually with Hilborn fuel injection This car was lettered with a large 43 JR on the door The car was very successful winning its class at the Bristol Spring Nationals and competing in many match races against well known racers such as Ronnie Sox Don Nicholson Phil Bonner Huston Platt Hubert Platt and Dave Strickler Even after returning to NASCAR once the Hemi was reinstated Richard continued drag racing the 43 JR until early 1966 On February 27 1966 Richard Petty overcame a 2 lap deficit to win his second Daytona 500 when the race was stopped on lap 198 of 200 because of a thunderstorm This made him the first driver to win the event twice In 1966 he won the first ever race at Middle Georgia Raceway Morelock 200 Petty broke the half mile NASCAR record for half mile tracks with an average speed of 82 023 miles per hour during the 100 mile 160 km event 13 He would end up recording 4 wins there in his career including one in 1970 in which he was very ill before the race 1967 was a milestone year In that year Petty won 27 of the 48 races he entered including a record 10 wins in a row between August 12 and October 1 1967 He won his second Grand National Championship One of the 27 victories was the Southern 500 at Darlington which would be his only Southern 500 victory His dominance in this season earned him the nickname King Richard He had previously been known as the Randleman Rocket 14 In 1968 Petty won 16 races including the last ever race at Occoneechee Speedway In 1969 Ford significantly ratcheted up their factory involvement in NASCAR when they introduced the Ford Torino Talladega The Talladega was specifically designed to give Ford a competitive race advantage by being more aerodynamic and thus faster especially on super speedway tracks more than a mile long Petty switched brands to Ford due to his belief the Plymouth was not competitive on super speedways he wanted a slippery Dodge Daytona but Chrysler executives insisted he stay with Plymouth He would win 10 races and finish second in points Won back in 1970 by the sleek new Plymouth Superbird with shark nose and towel rack wing Petty returned to Plymouth for the 1970 season This is the car in which Petty is cast in the Pixar film Cars 2006 in which Richard and Lynda Petty had voice roles The 1970s Petty s IROC Porsche 911 from the 1970s Petty s car used for his 1979 Daytona 500 win on display at Daytona USA 1983 racecar On February 14 1971 Petty won his third Daytona 500 driving a brand new for 1971 Plymouth Road Runner and beating Buddy Baker by little more than a car length en route to another historic year making him the first driver to win the race 3 times He won 20 more races which would make him become the first driver to earn more than 1 million in career earnings and claimed his 3rd Grand National Championship At the end of the 1971 season Chrysler told the Pettys they no longer would receive direct factory funding support this caused the Petty team great concern In 1972 STP began what would turn into a successful 28 year sponsorship arrangement with Petty however it marked the end of his famous all Petty Blue paint job STP previously insisted on an all STP orangish red color for the cars but Petty balked and after an all night negotiation session the familiar STP orange Petty blue paint scheme was agreed to as a compromise that would later become part of STP s motorsport paint schemes most notably Gordon Johncock s win in the 1982 Indianapolis 500 where the car had a primarily Petty Blue scheme Thanks to his 28 Top 10 finishes 25 Top 5 finishes and 8 victories Petty went on to win his 4th NASCAR Cup Series championship 1972 was a year of change in other ways as it was the last year where Petty would campaign a Plymouth based race car as in the middle of the year he debuted to drive a newly built 1972 Dodge Charger in a few races winning one of them as he believed that the car would have a slight aero advantage over the Plymouth body style In a driver s duel on February 18 1973 Petty in a newly built 1973 Dodge Charger a body style he would use exclusively until the end of 1977 outlasted Baker now with the K amp K Insurance Dodge race team to win his 4th Daytona 500 after Baker s engine gave out with 6 laps to go A year later Petty won the Daytona 450 shortened 20 laps 50 mi 80 km due to the energy crisis for the fifth time en route to his 5th Winston Cup Championship 1975 was another historic year for Petty as he won the World 600 for the first time in his career one of 13 victories en route to his 6th Winston Cup The 13 victories is a modern 1972 present NASCAR record for victories in a season and was tied in 1998 by Jeff Gordon although Gordon won 13 out of 33 races compared to Petty s 13 out of 30 races In 1976 Petty was involved in one of the most famous finishes in NASCAR history Petty and David Pearson were racing on the last lap out of turn 4 in the Daytona 500 As Petty tried to pass Pearson at the exit of turn 4 Petty s right rear bumper hit Pearson s left front bumper Pearson and Petty both spun and hit the front stretch wall Petty s car came to rest just yards from the finish line but his engine stalled Pearson s car had hit the front stretch wall and clipped another car but his engine was running Members of Petty s pit crew came out onto the track and tried to push the car to the finish line but ultimately failed Pearson was able to drive his car toward the finish line while Petty s car would not restart Pearson passed Petty on the infield grass and won the Daytona 500 Petty was given credit for second place Oddly 1978 will stand out as the one year during his prime that Petty did not visit the winner s circle The Petty Enterprises Team could not get the new 1978 Dodge Magnum to handle properly even though much time effort and faith were spent massaging the cars Unhappy with the seven top five and eleven top ten finishes including three second places Petty decided that his longtime relationship with Chrysler could not continue and he instead began racing a secondhand 1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo at the fall race at Michigan Returning to the General Motors fold proved successful as Petty recorded six top ten finishes in the final ten races of the 1978 season and finished sixth in the final standings He would go on to even better results in 1979 Petty won the Daytona 500 in an Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme in the Famous Finish and ran most of the remaining races in a Chevrolet winning four additional races and taking the NASCAR championship for the seventh and last time by 11 points which was the closest points margin in NASCAR history until 1992 Twilight years 1980 1991 1989 car at Phoenix Petty won two more Daytona 500s in 1979 and 1981 In 1979 he snapped a 45 race drought winning his sixth Daytona 500 the first to be televised live flag to flag it would become notorious for a fistfight between competitors following the controversial finish Petty won the race as the first and second place cars of Donnie Allison and Cale Yarborough crashed on the last lap Petty held off Darrell Waltrip and A J Foyt The race is also regarded as being the genesis of the current surge in NASCAR s popularity The East Coast was snowed in by a blizzard giving CBS a captive audience The win was part of Petty s seventh and last NASCAR Winston Cup Championship He was able to hold off Waltrip to win the title in 1979 In 1980 Petty won two races early in the year at North Wilkesboro and Nashville but a violent crash at Pocono in July ended his championship hopes He finished 4th in points For 1981 NASCAR dictated that all teams had to show up with the new downsized cars of 110 wheel base that Detroit had been building since 1979 Though Petty had been successful with the Chevrolet and Oldsmobile cars he had been running he wanted to get back to his Mopar roots After taking a phone call from Lee Iacocca who personally asked Petty to campaign a Dodge for 1981 the Petty team built a stunning 1981 Dodge Mirada and took it to Daytona in January 1981 for high speed tests Petty s fans were also in a large part fans of his Dodges so when word got out about the Mirada testing 15 000 or so showed up on January 17 1981 at Daytona Speedway to watch Petty put the Dodge through its paces Sadly for the fans the car could do no better than 186 miles per hour about eight miles per hour slower than the GM and Ford cars Petty gave up on returning to Dodge knowing that for the superspeedways the Mirada would not be competitive and bought a Buick Regal for the Daytona race In the 1981 Daytona 500 Petty used a fuel only for his last pit stop with 25 laps to go to outfox Bobby Allison and grab his seventh and final Daytona 500 win This win marked a large change in Petty s racing team Dale Inman Petty s longtime crew chief left the team after the Daytona victory Inman would win an eighth championship as crew chief in 1984 with Terry Labonte While the 1981 season gave Petty 3 wins he felt the season was a failure and the Regals being ill handling and poor in reliability For 1982 he made the move to the Pontiac Grand Prix with the promise of substantial factory support from Pontiac 1982 was a repeat of 1978 and no victories were to be had At first the Grand Prix behaved much like the Dodge Magnum of 1978 with handling and speed problems Toward the end of 1982 things improved with several top 10 finishes which opened the door to a successful 1983 season with three victories and several top 5 and top 10 finishes In 1983 he broke his 43 race winless streak from 1982 with a win in the 1983 Carolina 500 barely edging out a young Bill Elliott After a controversial win at Charlotte in October 1983 recognised by NASCAR as win No 198 Petty left the race team his father founded for the 1984 season He spent 84 and 85 driving for Mike Curb before returning to Petty Enterprises in 1986 15 Because of the 1971 Myers Brothers 250 combination race in 1971 that Petty finished second in a Grand National Car while winner Bobby Allison drove a Grand American car there is a technical dispute regarding which race is credited as his 200th win NASCAR did not credit Petty with a class win which was a dispute that affected two other drivers Elmo Langley and Charlie Glotzbach both of whom drove in combination races that season finishing second to Grand American cars Under modern NASCAR combination race rules for various series Petty would be credited with that would be recognized as his 135th win On May 20 1984 Petty won what under modern regulations would be recognized as his 200th Cup class win the Budweiser 500 at Dover International Speedway when the Winston Salem class win is recognized Petty in 1985 On July 4 1984 Petty won his officially recognized 200th and what would turn out to be his final victory race at the Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway The race was memorable On lap 158 Doug Heveron crashed bringing out the yellow caution flag essentially turning lap 158 into the last lap as the two drivers battled back to the start finish line Petty and Cale Yarborough diced it out on that lap with Yarborough drafting and taking an early lead before Petty managed to cross the start finish line only a fender length ahead This is no longer possible because of the 2003 rule change freezing the field immediately upon caution Furthermore in 2004 the green white checkered rule was created for cases when the yellow flag waved with two laps but not just one remaining Also under current combination race rules Petty would be recognized for his 201st win President Ronald Reagan was in attendance the first sitting president to attend a NASCAR race Reagan celebrated the milestone with Petty and his family in victory lane 16 In early 1988 Petty traveled to Australia to help promote a NASCAR exhibition race at the then new Calder Park Thunderdome the first NASCAR race outside of North America While he did not compete in the track s inaugural race the Goodyear NASCAR 500 though his son Kyle did Richard Petty in testing at the 1 119 mi 1 801 km track which owner Bob Jane had modeled on the Charlotte Motor Speedway set an unofficial lap record of 28 2 seconds 142 85 mp h This would have in fact landed him on pole position for the race as the fastest time in official qualifying was by Alabama Gang member Neil Bonnett who recorded a 28 829 second lap 139 734 mp h in his Pontiac Grand Prix Petty s last ride 1992 This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Richard Petty news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Petty driving the No 43 during the Brickyard 400 Open Test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Flag stand from Petty s first win On October 1 1991 Petty announced he would retire after the 1992 season Petty s final top ten finish came at the 1991 Budweiser at the Glen which was the same race J D McDuffie was killed in a fifth lap accident Petty chose to run the entire 1992 season not just selected events as other drivers have done before retirement His year long Fan Appreciation Tour took him around the country participating in special events awards ceremonies and fan related meetings Racing Champions ran a promotional line of diecast cars for every race in Petty s Farewell Tour At the 1992 Pepsi 400 on July 4 Petty qualified on the front row for the first time since 1986 Before the start of the race he was honored with a gift ceremony which included a visit from President George H W Bush When the green flag dropped Petty led the opening five laps as the holiday crowd cheered wildly Unfortunately the oppressive heat forced him to drop out after completing just 84 laps Despite the busy appearance schedule and mediocre race results Petty managed to qualify for all 29 races in 1992 On his final visit to each track Petty would lead the field on the pace lap to salute the fans Petty s final race the season ending Hooters 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway which also marked the start of Jeff Gordon s NASCAR career and the second closest points championship in NASCAR history with six drivers mathematically eligible to win the championship is hailed to this day as the greatest race in NASCAR history A record 160 000 spectators attended the race and celebrated Petty s farewell In the intense title race the championship contender Davey Allison got mixed up in a crash with Ernie Irvan dashing his title hopes Long shot contenders Mark Martin Kyle Petty and Harry Gant fell behind in the long run which left Bill Elliott and Alan Kulwicki to compete for the title The race went down to the final lap with Elliott winning and Kulwicki taking the championship by 10 points because he had led the most laps one more than Elliott which gave him a five point bonus Facing intense pressure Petty barely managed to qualify at Atlanta posting the 39th fastest speed out of 41 cars He would not have been eligible for the provisional starting position and had to qualify on speed On the 94th lap Petty became tangled up in an accident and his car caught fire Petty pulled the car off the track and climbed out of the burning machine uninjured His pit crew worked diligently with less than 20 laps to go to get the car running again and with two laps to go Petty pulled out of the pits and was credited as running at the finish in his final race He took his final checkered flag finishing in 35th position After the race Petty circled the track to salute the fans one final time in his trademark STP Pontiac Thereafter he made a few public show appearances at racetracks On August 18 1993 NASCAR participated in a tire test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in preparations for the 1994 Brickyard 400 Petty drove several laps around the track and then donated his car to the Speedway s museum He would again step into a racecar in 2003 on the week of the final race under the Winston banner at Homestead Miami Speedway where he took a solo lap honoring his seven Winston Cup Championships for Winston s salute to the champions In 2009 at the Coke Zero 400 in Daytona for the 25th anniversary of his final 200th victory in 1984 Petty drove one of his 1980s Pontiac racecars during the pace laps leading the field for the first one The field split him and he followed it for one more pace lap before he pulled his car in Finally at the 2017 Southern 500 at Darlington Petty led the field through several pace laps in his Plymouth Belvedere He apparently stayed out a lap longer than expected and was humorously black flagged by the starter Petty followed the pace car down pit road at the start of the race Petty as an owner In later years of his career Petty developed the career of crew leader Robbie Loomis who was at the helm of Petty Enterprises as crew chief in the 1990s and won three races the 1996 Checker Auto Parts 500 at Phoenix the 1997 ACDelco 400 at North Carolina Speedway both with Bobby Hamilton driving and the 1999 Goody s Body Pain 500 at Martinsville Speedway with John Andretti driving Petty remained as operating owner until his son Kyle Petty took over day to day operations a decade later However in 2008 Kyle Petty was released by Petty Enterprises and because of lack of sponsorship Petty Enterprises was bought out by Gillett Evernham Motorsports The name was originally going to stay the same but when Evernham left the team it was renamed Richard Petty Motorsports despite George Gillett continuing to own the majority In November 2010 an investment group including Medallion Financial Corp Douglas G Bergeron and Petty signed and closed sale on racing assets of Richard Petty Motorsports 17 18 Andrew M Murstein president of Medallion had been seeking a sports investment since 2008 when he formed a special purpose acquisition company together with Hank Aaron a Medallion board member and others 19 20 Petty as a broadcaster In 1995 Petty moved to the television broadcast booth joining CBS as a color commentator Sponsorship Petty promised his mother not to accept alcohol sponsorship 21 Therefore he never collected purses for the Bud Pole Award and he competed at the Busch Clash only once in 1980 Close calls As well as his numerous victories Petty is remembered for three of the many disastrous crashes that he survived In the 1970 Rebel 400 at Darlington Petty was injured when his Plymouth Road Runner cut a tire and slammed hard into the wall separating the track from the pit area The car flipped several times before coming to rest on its side This accident injured Petty s shoulder and helped Bobby Isaac to win the 1970 Grand National Championship During the accident Petty s head hit the track pavement several times a mishap that along with Joe Weatherly s fatal crash six years earlier led NASCAR to mandate the installation of the Petty developed safety net that covers the driver s side window In a 1980 race at Pocono Petty slammed the Turn 2 wall nearly flipping the car He barely escaped breaking his neck in the wreck and kept his injury hidden from NASCAR officials for the ensuing races knowing that another wreck might kill him citation needed Such a deception is unlikely to happen now because of modern NASCAR rules requiring an official series medical liaison to clear a driver after a crash In the 1988 Daytona 500 on Lap 106 Petty got turned by Phil Barkdoll out of turn 4 Petty s car went aloft tumbled many times rode along the catch fence and hurled parts all over the front stretch at the Daytona International Speedway After several flips Petty was t boned by Brett Bodine before coming to a stop Petty walked away with no serious injuries except for temporary sight loss due to excessive g forces The crash was similar to the accident suffered by Bobby Allison during the 1987 Winston 500 at Talladega Superspeedway and Carl Edwards s 2009 Talladega crash in that in all three cases the racers cars became airborne after turning sideways and damaged the spectator fencing though much less in Petty s case Petty s car became airborne despite the use of the carburetor restrictor plate which was mandated by NASCAR for races at Talladega Superspeedway and Daytona International Speedway just prior to the start of the 1988 season Career awards Petty receiving the Medal of Freedom from President George H W Bush and First Lady Barbara Bush in 1992 Petty was inducted into the first class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame on May 23 2010 In 1997 he was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame He was named one of NASCAR s 50 Greatest Drivers in 1998 He was sole stock car representative in the first class inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1989 22 He was awarded the Medal of Freedom by President George Bush in 1992 the first motorsports athlete ever to be honored with this award PoliticsIn 1978 Petty was elected to the Randolph County Commission as a Republican 23 In 1980 he endorsed John Connally for the Republican nomination for president According to Petty it was a tossup between Connally and Ronald Reagan but he chose Connally basically on personality And Connally s been there in Washington a lot of times doing a lot of things He knows the system better 24 He was reelected to the county commission in 1982 1986 and 1990 25 26 During his 1992 retirement tour Petty took a parade lap before every race with the exception of the Southern 500 where Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton served as grand marshal 27 In 1993 Petty formed a political action committee to support Republican candidates 28 In 1996 he was the Republican nominee for North Carolina Secretary of State but was defeated by State Senator Elaine Marshall in the general election Petty was mistakenly seen as a shoo in and his campaigning was sporadic Following his loss Petty stated If I had known I wasn t going to win I wouldn t have run 29 In June 2016 he made an appearance on stage with Donald Trump 30 Life after racing Petty with President George W Bush in 2006 Petty is currently a spokesman for Liberty Medical Cheerios and the GlaxoSmithKline products Nicorette and Goody s Headache Powder His portrait was featured on Brawny paper towels during a limited time when the company replaced their image with several real Brawny men General Mills created a Petty themed packaged cereal 43 s its boxes featuring his image and story 31 Petty also played himself in the 2008 film Swing Vote where he commends the film s protagonist by allowing him to briefly drive his famous 43 Plymouth 32 For public benefit Petty and his son Kyle have lent their talent to host Lifting It Right an automotive lift safety training DVD produced and distributed by the Automotive Lift Institute ALI it is used in high school vocational programs and community colleges He has recorded public service announcements for Civitan International a nonprofit organization of which he is a former member 33 He has also established a summer camp known as Victory Junction which is intended to give seriously ill children an outdoors summer camp experience and has medical staff on hand around the clock in case of emergencies In May 2011 Petty was chosen to be the Grand Marshal for the 2011 STP 400 of the Sprint Cup Series 34 In public he is usually seen wearing his trademark sunglasses and a Charlie 1 Horse cowboy hat with a large snakeskin hat band and a plume of rooster feathers at the front After retirement Petty purchased a 90 acre 36 ha ranch south of Jackson Wyoming 35 Motorsports career resultsNASCAR key Bold Pole position awarded by qualifying time Italics Pole position earned by points standings or practice time Most laps led Grand National Series NASCAR Grand National Series resultsYear Team No Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 NGNC Pts Ref1958 Petty Enterprises 142 Olds FAY DAB CON FAY WIL HBO FAY CLB PIF ATL CLT MAR ODS OBS GPS GBF STR NWS BGS TRN RSD CLB NBS REF LIN HCY AWS RSP MCC SLS TOR17 37th 1016 36 42A BUF11 MCF BEL9 BRR CLB NSV AWS2 BGS20 MBS16 DAR CLT BIR CSF GAF RCH HBO31 SAS22 MAR NWS2342 ATL351959 24 FAY13 DAY 15th 3694 37 43 DAY57 HBO CON ATL WIL3 MAR7 TRN12 CLT19 NSV ASP PIF GPS ATL2 CLB WIL RCH BGS24 AWS CLT12 MBS27 CLT2042 BGS9 CLB NWS REF HCY43 Plymouth DAY26 HEI NSV29 AWS26 BGS GPS CLB DAR4 HCY RCH CSF HBO3 MAR15 AWS5 NWS3 CON71960 CLT12 CLB6 DAY10 DAY DAY3 CLT1 NWS18 PHO CLB6 MAR1 HCY3 WIL7 BGS4 GPS3 AWS9 DAR2 PIF11 HBO6 RCH6 HMS CLT55 BGS4 DAY11 HEI2 MAB2 MBS5 ATL20 BIR2 NSV6 AWS15 PIF13 CLB2 BGS9 DAR6 HCY12 CSF GSP7 HBO1 MAR22 NWS6 CLT2 RCH4 ATL7 2nd 17228 38 42 SBO61961 43 CLT11 JSP4 DAY16 DAY DAYDNQ PIF2 AWS4 HMS ATL24 GPS2 BGS3 MAR8 NWS3 CLB6 HCY20 RCH1 MAR23 DAR32 CLT1 CLT RSD ASP CLT30 PIF15 BIR GPS16 BGS5 NOR HAS17 STR4 DAY ATL3 CLB7 MBS17 BRI4 NSV14 BGS5 AWS11 RCH9 SBO20 DAR26 ATL5 MAR17 CLT2 BRI23 HBO10 8th 14984 39 42 HBO2 HCY17 RCH18 CSF NWS3 GPS41962 CON13 CHT4 STR1 HCY10 RCH4 DTS11 2nd 28440 40 43 AWS7 DAY DAY4 DAY2 CON2 AWS8 SVH14 HBO2 RCH20 CLB7 NWS1 GPS11 MBS2 MAR1 BGS5 BRI16 RCH3 HCY6 CON9 DAR15 PIF3 CLT4 ATL23 BGS3 AUG3 RCH19 SBO3 DAY30 CLB20 ASH3 GPS1 AUG2 SVH3 MBS16 BRI3 NSV2 HUN1 AWS7 BGS1 PIF1 VAL2 DAR5 MAR2 NWS1 CLT16 ATL441 AUG21963 43 BIR2 GGS1 THS11 RSD41 DAY12 DAY DAY6 PIF1 AWS1 HBO3 ATL8 HCY2 BRI4 AUG2 SBO1 MAR1 NWS1 CLT36 ATL12 DAY8 DTS11 ASH2 OBS16 BRR1 BRI2 NSV4 CLB1 AWS2 PIF2 BGS2 ONA10 DAR12 HCY15 THS1 CLT6 RSD36 2nd 31170 41 41 RCH6 GPS4 BGS11 CLB1 THS13 ODS1 RCH2 BIR1 MBS15 GPS1 RCH6 MAR5 NWS26 SBO1 42 DAR3 SVH15 BGS8 DTS4 HBO61964 CON3 JSP5 1st 40252 42 43 AUG19 SVH1 RSD26 DAY DAY3 DAY1 RCH2 BRI8 GPS16 BGS3 ATL7 AWS17 HBO12 PIF15 CLB15 NWS7 MAR6 SVH3 DAR10 LGY17 HCY3 SBO1 CLT2 GPS2 ASH2 ATL2 CON1 NSV1 CHT2 BIR2 VAL13 PIF1 DAY16 ODS8 OBS3 BRR13 GLN21 BRI2 NSV1 MBS2 AWS25 DTS3 ONA1 CLB17 BGS2 DAR3 HCY5 HBO16 MAR2 SVH2 NWS19 CLT3 JAC241 ISP3 LIN2 STR15 RCH3 ODS3 HAR1 AUG251965 43 RSD DAY DAY DAY PIF ASW RCH HBO ATL GPS NWS MAR CLB BRI DAR LGY BGS HCY CLT CCF ASH HAR NSV BIR ATL GPS MBS VAL DAY ODS OBS ISP GLN BRI17 NSV1 CCF2 AWS1 SMR3 PIF AUG CLB2 DTS3 BLV20 BGS2 DAR HCY1 LIN19 ODS1 RCH MAR2 NWS33 CLT HBO CAR36 DTS 38th 5638 43 1966 42 AUG1 CLB2 AWS18 BLV20 BGS2 HCY2 RCH12 HBO 3rd 22952 44 43 RSD25 DAY2 DAY DAY1 CAR BRI ATL25 HCY10 CLB6 GPS2 BGS3 NWS11 MAR3 DAR1 LGY1 MGR1 MON RCH2 CLT22 DTS18 ASH17 PIF SMR AWS1 BLV21 GPS DAY29 ODS BRR OXF3 FON2 ISP15 BRI2 SMR29 NSV1 ATL1 DAR2 MAR23 NWS26 CLT38 CAR281967 AUG1 RSD21 DAY DAY5 DAY8 AWS1 BRI34 GPS19 BGS2 ATL22 CLB1 HCY1 NWS7 MAR1 SVH2 RCH1 DAR1 BLV2 LGY1 CLT4 ASH3 MGR1 SMR1 BIR3 CAR1 GPS1 MGY2 DAY11 TRN1 OXF2 FDA1 ISP1 BRI1 SMR2 NSV1 ATL17 BGS1 CLB1 SVH1 DAR1 HCY1 RCH1 BLV1 HBO1 MAR1 NWS1 CLT18 CAR28 AWS2 1st 42472 45 1968 MGR2 MGY1 RSD10 DAY8 BRI2 RCH17 ATL6 HCY1 GPS1 CLB5 NWS26 MAR15 AUG18 AWS3 DAR3 BLV14 LGY6 CLT38 ASH1 MGR3 SMR1 BIR1 CAR26 GPS1 DAY21 ISP4 OXF1 FDA1 TRN22 BRI24 SMR1 NSV2 ATL5 CLB21 BGS2 AWS26 SBO1 LGY2 DAR20 HCY4 RCH1 BLV3 HBO1 MAR1 NWS1 AUG3 CLT32 CAR1 JFC2 3rd 3123 46 1969 MGR1 MGY2 2nd 3813 47 Ford RSD1 DAY DAY6 DAY8 CAR5 AUG2 BRI7 ATL9 CLB3 HCY2 GPS5 RCH2 NWS7 MAR1 AWS23 DAR11 BLV LGY CLT19 MGR3 SMR20 MCH3 KPT1 GPS3 NCF2 DAY5 DOV1 TPN25 TRN29 BLV1 BRI23 NSV1 SMR1 ATL3 MCH3 SBO3 BGS1 AWS23 DAR9 HCY3 RCH19 TALWth CLB2 MAR1 NWS2 CLT27 SVH2 AUG2 CAR32 JFC3 MGR6 TWS211970 Plymouth RSD5 DAY6 DAY DAY39 RCH2 CAR1 SVH1 ATL5 BRI24 TAL7 NWS1 DAR18 BLV LGY CLT SMR MAR MCH28 RSD1 HCY KPT1 GPS19 DAY18 AST1 TPN2 TRN1 BRI5 SMR1 NSV16 ATL1 CLB2 ONA1 MCH14 TAL7 BGS1 SBO1 DAR5 HCY2 RCH1 DOV1 NWS2 CLT23 MAR1 MGR1 CAR6 LGY 4th 3447 48 Robertson Racing CLB1 NCF1 1971 Petty Enterprises RSD20 DAY3 DAY DAY1 ONT3 RCH1 CAR1 HCY1 BRI2 ATL2 CLB1 GPS7 SMR1 NWS1 MAR1 DAR20 SBO2 TAL38 ASH1 KPT17 CLT4 DOV3 MCH6 RSD13 HOU7 GPS1 DAY2 BRI3 AST1 ISP1 TRN1 NSV1 ATL1 BGS2 ONA1 MCH2 TAL2 CLB1 HCY3 DAR2 MAR3 CLT4 DOV1 CAR1 MGR RCH1 NWS3 TWS1 1st 4435 49 Winston Cup Series NASCAR Winston Cup Series resultsYear Team No Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 NWCC Pts Ref1972 Petty Enterprises 43 Plymouth RSD1 DAY26 RCH1 ONT4 CAR2 ATL6 BRI3 DAR2 NWS1 MAR1 RSD23 BRI2 TRN3 NSV2 RCH1 DOV2 MAR1 NWS1 CAR2 1st 8701 4 50 Dodge TAL5 CLT19 DOV2 MCH3 TWS1 DAY2 ATL2 TAL7 MCH4 DAR3 CLT10 TWS31973 RSD21 DAY1 RCH1 CAR23 BRI2 ATL34 NWS1 DAR7 MAR21 TAL35 NSV13 CLT13 DOV4 TWS1 RSD2 MCH3 DAY2 BRI21 ATL33 TAL14 NSV2 DAR4 RCH1 DOV7 NWS2 MAR1 CLT2 CAR35 5th 6877 95 51 1974 RSD2 DAY1 RCH2 CAR1 BRI23 ATL6 DAR20 NWS1 MAR2 TAL3 NSV1 DOV3 CLT2 RSD25 MCH1 DAY2 BRI3 NSV13 ATL1 POC1 TAL1 MCH2 DAR35 RCH1 DOV1 NWS2 MAR29 CLT2 CAR3 ONT15 1st 5037 75 52 1975 RSD7 DAY7 RCH1 CAR3 BRI1 ATL1 NWS1 DAR26 MAR1 TAL19 NSV7 DOV3 CLT1 RSD1 MCH2 DAY1 NSV2 POC2 TAL2 MCH1 DAR2 DOV1 NWS1 MAR22 CLT1 RCH28 CAR35 BRI1 ATL3 ONT16 1st 4783 53 1976 RSD25 DAY2 CAR1 RCH2 BRI27 ATL28 NWS2 DAR23 MAR4 TAL4 NSV2 DOV6 CLT2 RSD9 MCH4 DAY22 NSV2 POC1 TAL20 MCH3 BRI2 DAR2 RCH3 DOV2 MAR4 NWS3 CLT8 CAR1 ATL28 ONT27 2nd 4449 54 1977 RSD3 DAY26 RCH6 CAR1 ATL1 NWS2 DAR3 BRI3 MAR3 TAL20 NSV5 DOV3 CLT1 RSD1 MCH2 DAY1 NSV3 POC2 TAL11 MCH8 BRI22 DAR4 RCH2 DOV23 MAR4 NWS24 CLT32 CAR2 ATL6 ONT2 2nd 4614 55 1978 RSD16 DAY33 RCH22 CAR4 ATL26 BRI25 DAR5 NWS2 MAR3 TAL11 DOV7 CLT8 NSV3 RSD2 MCH6 DAY4 NSV23 POC30 TAL7 6th 3949 56 Chevy MCH14 BRI5 DAR3 RCH20 DOV27 MAR6 NWS4 CLT27 CAR6 ATL2 ONT341979 RSD32 CAR32 RCH5 NWS2 DAR2 MAR1 NSV2 CLT2 TWS6 RSD3 MCH5 NSV5 POC2 MCH1 BRI2 DAR9 RCH6 DOV1 MAR2 CLT4 NWS3 CAR1 ATL6 ONT5 1st 4830 57 Olds DAY1 ATL11 BRI4 TAL4 DOV30 DAY5 TAL41980 Chevy RSD3 RCH3 CAR2 ATL33 BRI8 DAR9 NWS1 MAR3 NSV1 DOV2 CLT4 TWS2 RSD8 MCH5 NSV5 POC33 MCH5 BRI4 DAR9 RCH2 DOV17 NWS18 MAR15 CLT27 CAR14 ATL21 ONT30 4th 4255 58 Olds DAY25 TAL31 DAY5 TAL181981 42 Chevy RSD5 8th 3880 59 43 Buick DAY1 RCH3 CAR3 ATL38 BRI29 NWS1 DAR33 MAR28 TAL39 NSV4 DOV19 CLT24 TWS4 RSD3 MCH6 DAY3 NSV9 POC2 TAL40 MCH1 BRI24 DAR30 RCH11 DOV10 MAR18 NWS21 CLT30 CAR4 ATL26 RSD71982 Pontiac DAY27 RCH2 BRI7 ATL2 CAR30 DAR31 NWS5 MAR15 TAL27 NSV9 DOV24 CLT8 POC7 RSD36 MCH26 DAY25 NSV7 POC2 TAL3 MCH2 BRI26 DAR2 RCH13 DOV30 NWS4 CLT8 MAR3 CAR6 ATL15 RSD31 5th 3814 60 1983 DAY38 RCH8 CAR1 ATL5 DAR25 NWS10 MAR17 TAL1 NSV6 DOV7 BRI5 CLT2 RSD10 POC3 MCH11 DAY33 NSV19 POC10 TAL4 MCH6 BRI9 DAR12 RCH6 DOV9 MAR9 NWS12 CLT1 CAR26 ATL5 RSD10 4th 4042 61 1984 Curb Racing DAY31 RCH15 CAR4 ATL4 BRI8 NWS12 DAR7 MAR12 TAL6 NSV7 DOV1 CLT34 RSD23 POC13 MCH34 DAY1 NSV25 POC27 TAL23 MCH9 BRI17 DAR29 RCH5 DOV37 MAR8 CLT9 NWS18 CAR15 ATL8 RSD14 10th 3643 62 1985 DAY34 RCH26 CAR8 ATL13 BRI8 DAR33 NWS21 MAR7 TAL27 DOV7 CLT26 RSD7 POC33 MCH30 DAY29 POC27 TAL6 MCH37 BRI8 DAR12 RCH3 DOV9 MAR22 NWS8 CLT10 CAR33 ATL10 RSD8 14th 3140 63 1986 Petty Enterprises DAY36 RCH20 CAR3 ATL11 BRI14 DAR7 NWS29 MAR28 TAL7 DOV6 CLTWth RSD6 POC19 MCH13 DAY22 POC34 TAL37 GLN10 MCH18 BRI7 DAR40 RCH4 DOV12 MAR16 NWS3 CLT35 CAR8 ATL2 RSD21 14th 3314 64 U S Racing 6 Chevy CLT381987 Petty Enterprises 43 Pontiac DAY3 CAR15 RCH23 ATL14 DAR3 NWS6 BRI2 MAR22 TAL16 CLT4 DOV36 POC29 RSD6 MCH12 DAY26 POC8 TAL37 GLN14 MCH11 BRI5 DAR3 RCH5 DOV9 MAR13 NWS9 CLT5 CAR17 RSD4 ATL30 8th 3708 65 1988 DAY34 RCH3 CAR41 ATL23 DAR41 BRI6 NWS6 MAR32 TAL20 CLT15 DOV15 RSD6 POC26 MCH24 DAY20 POC28 TAL21 GLN17 MCH39 BRI8 DAR33 RCH34 DOV38 MAR27 CLT38 NWS18 CAR25 PHO35 ATL36 22nd 2644 66 1989 DAY17 CAR16 ATL27 RCHDNQ DAR15 BRIDNQ NWSDNQ MAR24 TAL23 CLT19 DOV20 SON26 POC25 MCH30 DAY20 POC38 TAL21 GLN13 MCH18 BRIDNQ DAR35 RCH33 DOV30 MAR24 CLT34 NWS32 CAR34 PHO42 ATL28 29th 2148 67 1990 DAY34 RCH35 CAR32 ATL25 DAR21 BRI26 NWS29 MAR20 TAL29 CLT27 DOV21 SON26 POC38 MCH11 DAY36 POC9 TAL29 GLN18 MCH33 BRI29 DAR34 RCH21 DOV16 MAR29 NWS17 CLT20 CAR21 PHO23 ATL17 26th 2556 68 1991 DAY19 RCH11 CAR15 ATL38 DAR37 BRI17 NWS16 MAR14 TAL40 CLT20 DOV17 SON34 POC11 MCH35 DAY22 POC31 TAL18 GLN9 MCH23 BRI12 DAR16 RCH24 DOV20 MAR30 NWS19 CLT12 CAR16 PHO41 ATL22 24th 2817 69 1992 DAY16 CAR16 RCH21 ATL16 DAR32 BRI27 NWS31 MAR29 TAL15 CLT41 DOV20 SON21 POC16 MCH15 DAY36 POC20 TAL15 GLN28 MCH18 BRI16 DAR20 RCH16 DOV28 MAR18 NWS27 CLT27 CAR25 PHO22 ATL35 26th 2731 70 After his backup car was deemed ineligible to race Petty bought the race slot from D K UlrichDaytona 500 Year Team Manufacturer Start Finish1959 Petty Enterprises Oldsmobile 6 571960 Plymouth 19 31961 DNQ1962 10 21963 23 61964 2 11966 Petty Enterprises Plymouth 1 11967 2 81968 2 81969 Ford 12 81970 Plymouth 11 391971 5 11972 32 261973 Dodge 7 11974 2 11975 4 71976 6 21977 3 261978 6 331979 Oldsmobile 13 11980 4 251981 Buick 8 11982 Pontiac 21 271983 6 381984 Curb Racing Pontiac 34 311985 8 341986 Petty Enterprises Pontiac 10 361987 11 31988 34 341989 34 171990 11 341991 3 191992 32 16International Race of Champions key Bold Pole position Most laps led International Race of Champions resultsSeason Make 1 2 3 4 Pos Pts Ref1973 74 Porsche RSD7 RSD10 RSD10 DAY 10th NA 71 1974 75 Chevy MCH10 RSD5 RSD10 DAY 10th NA 72 1975 76 MCH6 RSD6 RSD11 DAY 10th NA 73 1976 77 MCH6 RSD3 RSD9 DAY4 6th NA 74 1977 78 MCH4 RSD2 RSD5 DAY8 5th NA 75 1989 Chevy DAY9 NZH12 MCH11 GLN12 12th 16 76 Film and TV appearancesIn 2011 Petty was featured in the show Modern HotrodZ Petty s Garage now builds Custom cars for the general public most of which are Limited Edition He appeared as himself in the movie Swing Vote driving in his famous blue No 43 car and letting Bud drive his car to Air Force One to meet the President Petty voiced Strip Weathers a fictionalized version of himself also known as The King in the Disney Pixar animated movie Cars 2006 His car the Road Runner Superbird with the distinctive Petty Blue tint and the number 43 is also the model used for the car in the movie He is hoping to get one more victory in him before he can retire from racing on the Piston Cup circuit Though The King s accident caused by his longtime running rival Chick Hicks at the end of the film was a re creation of Rusty Wallace s real life Winston 500 accident in 1993 the bit in which rookie racer Lightning McQueen assists him to the finish line is based on the 1976 incident albeit by the pit crew Petty s wife Lynda voiced The King s wife a 1976 Chrysler Town amp Country station wagon based on Petty s family car in that movie as well Petty s character did not appear in Cars 2 2011 but did return in Cars 3 2017 in which Petty voiced his character as the crew chief of his nephew and new Dinoco racer Hank Cal Weathers who was voiced by driver Kyle Petty who is Richard Petty s son Petty appeared in the Tom Cruise movie Days of Thunder 1990 He appeared in the Burt Reynolds movie Stroker Ace 1983 as himself Petty appeared as himself in the movie 43 The Richard Petty Story 1972 a Victory Lane Production released by Video Gems distributed by United American Video in 1986 In 1989 Petty appeared as himself in the movie Speed Zone driving in his famous blue No 43 car In 1967 Petty appeared in the opening credits of the Elvis Presley movie Speedway that was shot and filmed at the Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord North Carolina This movie was released in 1968 He was in Petty Blue a documentary by NASCAR Petty guest starred in the Alley Oop daily comic strip from June 7 to June 20 1994 in which he drove a pickup truck to help corral an escaped dinosaur that had been transported to the 20th century Petty appeared as himself in the 1965 Howard Hawks film Red Line 7000References a b c Hinton Ed 2001 Daytona From the Birth of Speed to the Death of the Man in Black New York Warner Books p 118 ISBN 0 446 52677 0 A 1972 rule change eliminated races under 250 miles 400 km in length reducing the schedule to 30 now 36 races Meet the Inductees NASCAR Hall of Fame Archived from the original on May 28 2014 Retrieved May 26 2014 First Lady of NASCAR Lynda Petty Dies Archived April 7 2014 at the Wayback Machine allvoices com accessed March 31 2014 Bruce Kenny March 25 2014 LYNDA PETTY WIFE OF RICHARD PETTY DIES AT AGE 72 NASCAR Archived from the original on March 26 2014 Retrieved March 25 2014 Lynda Petty IMDb Ancestry of Richard Petty wargs com Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved April 5 2007 a b Biography Petty Lee Richard Encyclopedia com Archived from the original on April 23 2021 Retrieved August 24 2020 Baime A J February 16 2016 Richard Petty s Greatest Moments According to Richard Petty The Drive Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 Times Picayune March 1 1965 p 1 Trenton Evening Times March 1 1965 p 1 Plain Dealer May 19 1965 pp 35 40 Race Results at Middle Georgia Raceway Racing Reference info www racing reference info Archived from the original on July 22 2020 Retrieved July 22 2020 Freedman Lew March 14 2013 Encyclopedia of Stock Car Racing 2 Volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313387104 Archived from the original on April 23 2021 Retrieved October 20 2020 Richard Petty Road To 200 Wins YouTube Archived from the original on March 11 2016 Retrieved November 26 2015 Richard Petty s 200th Victory Car National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on June 30 2011 Retrieved June 17 2008 Taxi tycoon Andrew Murstein is revved to build race track in New York bring sport to fans Archived June 29 2011 at the Wayback Machine nydailynews com December 14 2010 Ambrose victory validates investment into RPM Archived April 7 2014 at the Wayback Machine nbcsports msnbc com August 16 2011 Industry Information New York City Taxi amp Limousine Commission website Archived September 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine retrieved October 7 2010 Medallion Financial Corp Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine finance yahoo com April 8 2010 Petty in a Catch 43 Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine Jenna Fryer AP October 30 2009 Richard Petty Archived September 25 2019 at the Wayback Machine at the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America Pash Phil January 14 1979 Auto Agenda for 1979 Gets More Big Races The New York Times Some race car drivers have become so successful they have become capitalists The Boston Globe February 13 1980 Cadigan Barry January 28 1983 Petty sure he ll win this year The Boston Globe Tuttle Tim June 12 1988 Petty s front runner status confined to politics The Orange County Register Flick Shav He Doesn t Think Marshal Was So Grand The Los Angeles Times Petty Moves to Front in Politics Greensboro News Record October 15 1993 The Fix s Grab Bag of Celebrity Politicians The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 30 2011 Retrieved May 22 2010 On 70th Birthday Trump Holds Greensboro Rally ABC Archived from the original on June 18 2016 Retrieved June 17 2016 Take a Bite Out of The King Richard Petty 43 s Cereal Motor Trend February 6 2003 Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved July 2 2013 Manohla Dargis August 1 2008 Hey America This Guy s for You The New York Times Archived from the original on May 22 2020 Retrieved May 21 2020 Public Service Announcement for Civitan International featuring Richard Petty Archived May 29 2008 at the Wayback Machine Richard Petty Named Grand Marshal of STP 400 at Kansas Speedway Kansas Speedway May 26 2011 Archived from the original on April 21 2013 Retrieved August 25 2013 Wyoming s Best Race Car Drivers KIGN FM Richard Petty 1958 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1959 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1960 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 7 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1961 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1962 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1963 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1964 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1965 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1966 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1967 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1968 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1969 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1970 NASCAR Grand National Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1971 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 28 2015 Richard Petty 1972 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1973 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1974 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1975 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1976 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1977 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1978 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1979 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1980 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1981 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1982 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1983 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1984 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1985 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1986 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1987 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1990 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1991 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 29 2015 Richard Petty 1974 IROC Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 Richard Petty 1975 IROC Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 Richard Petty 1976 IROC Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 Richard Petty 1977 IROC Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 Richard Petty 1978 IROC Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 Richard Petty 1989 IROC Results Racing Reference Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Petty Official website Richard Petty driver statistics at Racing Reference Richard Petty Gives a Tour of Petty Enterprises Richard Petty at IMDb Richard Petty discography at DiscogsSporting positionsPreceded byJoe WeatherlyDavid Pearson NASCAR Grand National champion19641967 Succeeded byNed JarrettDavid PearsonPreceded byBobby IsaacBenny ParsonsCale Yarborough NASCAR Winston Cup champion1971 19721974 19751979 Succeeded byBenny ParsonsCale YarboroughDale EarnhardtAchievementsPreceded byTiny LundFred LorenzenPete HamiltonA J FoytBobby AllisonBuddy Baker Daytona 500 Winner1964196619711973 197419791981 Succeeded byFred LorenzenMario AndrettiA J FoytBenny ParsonsBuddy BakerBobby AllisonPreceded byDarel Dieringer Southern 500 Winner1967 Succeeded byCale YarboroughPreceded byDavid PearsonDavid Pearson World 600 Winner19751977 Succeeded byDavid PearsonDarrell WaltripAwardsPreceded byShorty Rollins NASCAR Rookie of the Year1959 Succeeded byDavid Pearson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Petty amp oldid 1152546557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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