Difference between revisions of "Richard Petty"
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Richard Lee Petty was born July 2nd, 1937 to Lee and Elizabeth Petty. His father Lee Petty had already made a name for himself throughout the decade of the 1950’s by winning three Grand National Championships and fifty-four races. | Richard Lee Petty was born July 2nd, 1937 to Lee and Elizabeth Petty. His father Lee Petty had already made a name for himself throughout the decade of the 1950’s by winning three Grand National Championships and fifty-four races. | ||
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Richard desired to follow in his father’s footsteps, knowing that he would be a tough act to follow. | Richard desired to follow in his father’s footsteps, knowing that he would be a tough act to follow. | ||
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Petty spent the better part of his childhood around race cars. He built engines, painted bodies and worked in the pits long before he was old enough to legally drive. When he did reach NASCAR's age limit, he asked his father, three-time NASCAR champion Lee Petty, for a chance. | Petty spent the better part of his childhood around race cars. He built engines, painted bodies and worked in the pits long before he was old enough to legally drive. When he did reach NASCAR's age limit, he asked his father, three-time NASCAR champion Lee Petty, for a chance. | ||
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Lee Petty pointed to an old car off in a corner and told him to cut the top off it and use it in a convertible series race at Columbia. | Lee Petty pointed to an old car off in a corner and told him to cut the top off it and use it in a convertible series race at Columbia. | ||
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Richard Petty jumped at the opportunity. No one knew it was the start of something special. | Richard Petty jumped at the opportunity. No one knew it was the start of something special. | ||
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"I just think I was a lucky son of a gun to be born at the right place at the right time under the right circumstances with a little bit of talent and a lot of talented people around me to put me in a position to be where I'm at today," Petty says. | "I just think I was a lucky son of a gun to be born at the right place at the right time under the right circumstances with a little bit of talent and a lot of talented people around me to put me in a position to be where I'm at today," Petty says. | ||
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Six days after his debut, Petty made his first Grand National (now the Sprint Cup Series) start. He finished 17th in a race his father won. On July 18th, 1958, Richard, at the ripe age of 21, competed in his first Grand National event in Toronto, Canada. He would drive his Petty Oldsmobile with the now legendary #43, to a 17th place finish. Just a year later he would become the NASCAR Rookie of the Year. He did so by impressively recording nine top ten finishes along with six top five finishes. | Six days after his debut, Petty made his first Grand National (now the Sprint Cup Series) start. He finished 17th in a race his father won. On July 18th, 1958, Richard, at the ripe age of 21, competed in his first Grand National event in Toronto, Canada. He would drive his Petty Oldsmobile with the now legendary #43, to a 17th place finish. Just a year later he would become the NASCAR Rookie of the Year. He did so by impressively recording nine top ten finishes along with six top five finishes. | ||
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In 1960, Richard Petty won his first of 200 career victories at the Southern States Fairgrounds. His sophomore season in stock car’s uppermost echelon of competition proved that his 1959 rookie season was no happenstance as he finished second in the final NASCAR Grand National Points standings. | In 1960, Richard Petty won his first of 200 career victories at the Southern States Fairgrounds. His sophomore season in stock car’s uppermost echelon of competition proved that his 1959 rookie season was no happenstance as he finished second in the final NASCAR Grand National Points standings. |
Revision as of 08:13, 31 May 2009
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Contents
Summary
Son of famous NASCAR Driver Lee Petty, father of NASCAR Driver Kyle Petty, Grandfather of NASCAR Driver Adam Petty, The King Richard Petty and his STP car #43 was the most famous of the Petty Dynasty -- and maybe the most famous NASCAR Driver of all time.
Personal Data
- Full Name: Richard Lee Petty
- DOB: July 2, 1937
- Place of Birth: Level Cross, North Carolina
- DOD:
- Place Interned:
- Spouse: Lynda
- Children:
- Kyle Petty
- Sharon Petty Farlow
- Lisa Petty Luck
- Rebecca Petty
Race Statistics
- First NASCAR Race: 1958 Jim Mideon 500 (Canadian Exposition Stadium)
- Last NASCAR Race: 1992 Hooters 500 (Atlanta)
- First NASCAR Win: 1960 untitled race (Southern States Fairgrounds)
- Number of NASCAR Starts: 1,184 races run over 35 years
- Number of NASCAR Wins: 200
- Number of NASCAR Poles: 126
- Number of NASCAR Top 10s: 712
- Number of NASCAR Championships: 7
- 1964
- 1967
- 1971
- 1972
- 1974
- 1975
- 1979
Childhood
Richard Lee Petty was born July 2nd, 1937 to Lee and Elizabeth Petty. His father Lee Petty had already made a name for himself throughout the decade of the 1950’s by winning three Grand National Championships and fifty-four races.
Richard desired to follow in his father’s footsteps, knowing that he would be a tough act to follow.
Petty spent the better part of his childhood around race cars. He built engines, painted bodies and worked in the pits long before he was old enough to legally drive. When he did reach NASCAR's age limit, he asked his father, three-time NASCAR champion Lee Petty, for a chance.
Lee Petty pointed to an old car off in a corner and told him to cut the top off it and use it in a convertible series race at Columbia.
Richard Petty jumped at the opportunity. No one knew it was the start of something special.
"I just think I was a lucky son of a gun to be born at the right place at the right time under the right circumstances with a little bit of talent and a lot of talented people around me to put me in a position to be where I'm at today," Petty says.
Six days after his debut, Petty made his first Grand National (now the Sprint Cup Series) start. He finished 17th in a race his father won. On July 18th, 1958, Richard, at the ripe age of 21, competed in his first Grand National event in Toronto, Canada. He would drive his Petty Oldsmobile with the now legendary #43, to a 17th place finish. Just a year later he would become the NASCAR Rookie of the Year. He did so by impressively recording nine top ten finishes along with six top five finishes.
In 1960, Richard Petty won his first of 200 career victories at the Southern States Fairgrounds. His sophomore season in stock car’s uppermost echelon of competition proved that his 1959 rookie season was no happenstance as he finished second in the final NASCAR Grand National Points standings.
Education
Driver/Owner
the 60s
the 70s
the 80s
In Retirement
Important Accomplishments
- 200 NASCAR wins
- 7 Championships
- 10 Consecutive wins in 1967
- 7 Daytona 500 Wins
- 1959 Rookie of the Year
- 513 consecutive starts from 1971-1989
- 127 Poles
- Over 700 Top Tens
- 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 in the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1989.
- He was awarded the Medal of Freedom by President George Bush in 1992, the first motorsports athlete ever to be honored with this award.