Kyle Petty

Kyle Petty

Petty in 2011
Born (1960-06-02) June 2, 1960
Level Cross, North Carolina
Achievements 1987 Coca-Cola 600 Winner
Awards 1998, 2000 NASCAR USG Person of the Year
1999, 2000 NASCAR Illustrated Person of the Year
2000, 2004 National Motorsports Press Association Myers Brothers Award
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career
829 races run over 31 years
Best finish 5th (1992, 1993)
First race 1979 Talladega 500 (Talladega)
Last race 2008 Checker O'Reilly Auto Parts 500 (Phoenix)
First win 1986 Miller High Life 400 (Richmond)
Last win 1995 Miller Genuine Draft 500 (Dover)
Wins Top tens Poles
8 173 8
NASCAR Xfinity Series career
55 races run over 14 years
Best finish 21st (1986)
First race 1982 Kroger 200 (IRP)
Last race 2000 Miami 300 (Homestead)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 11 0
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career
1 race run over 1 year
Best finish 100th (1997)
First race 1997 The No Fear Challenge (California)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 0 0
Statistics current as of February 16, 2015.

Kyle Eugene Petty (born June 2, 1960) is an American stock car racing driver. Now retired, he formerly competed in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, and is currently a television analyst for NBC's pre- and post-race shows. He formerly was a color commentator for TNT's NASCAR coverage from 2006 through 2014. He is the son of racer Richard Petty, grandson of racer Lee Petty, and father of Adam Petty. He and his ex—wife Pattie have two other children: Austin and Montgomery Lee. He last drove the No. 45 Dodge Charger for Petty Enterprises, where he formerly served as CEO. He appeared in the 1983 Burt Reynolds movie Stroker Ace. Petty was born in Randleman, North Carolina.[1]

Early career

Petty began racing at a young age and made his major-league stock car debut at the age of 18. He won the very first race he entered: the 1979 Daytona ARCA 200, in one of his father's mothballed 1978 Dodge Magnum race cars; at the time becoming the youngest driver to win a major-league stock car race. Later in the season, he made his Winston Cup Series debut; again driving a passed down STP Dodge Magnum numbered #42 (a number used by his grandfather Lee Petty) for his family's team. He ran five races and had a ninth-place finish in his first series race at Talladega. In 1980, he made a total of fifteen starts in the #42 (after crashing the last of his father's Dodge Magnums in one of the Daytona 125 qualifying races) and had six top-ten finishes (using what ever hand-me-down race car his father could spare), garnering a twenty-eighth-place points finish. He began the 1981 season driving his father's #43 for one race, before running a full schedule in his regular #42, finishing in the top-ten ten times and finishing twelfth in points.

Kyle Petty's 1983 Pontiac Grand Prix

He began the 1982 season with two top-ten finishes, but later began splitting time between his #42 and the #1 UNO/STP car owned by Hoss Ellington, and ended the season fifteenth in points.

In 1983, he picked up funding from 7-Eleven and switched his number to #7 accordingly. He had only two top-ten finishes but improved to thirteenth in the standings. He followed that season up with six top-tens the following year, but fell three spots in points.

1985–1996

Petty's 1985 car

Petty took his number and sponsorship to Wood Brothers Racing in 1985, where he had a then career-high seven top-fives and his first top-ten points finish. The next season, he won his first career race at Richmond and finished tenth in the final standings. In 1987, he switched to the #21 and received new sponsorship from Citgo, as well as picking up a win at Charlotte. He failed to pick up a win in 1988, and fell to thirteenth in points, causing him to be released from the ride.

He signed on to a part-time schedule in 1989 for the new SABCO Racing team. Originally beginning the season unsponsored, he and SABCO later picked up sponsorship from Peak Antifreeze after he drove their car to a top-ten finish at the Daytona 500, filling in for Eddie Bierschwale, as well as Ames Department Stores. Petty and the #42 Pontiac team competed in nineteen races that season, his best finish being a 4th at Atlanta. Peak became the team's full-time sponsor in 1990, and Petty finished eleventh in points after winning the spring race at North Carolina Speedway with a 26-second margin of victory. Mello Yello would replace Peak as sponsor of the #42 in 1991, and Petty was running eleventh in points when he suffered a broken leg at a crash at Talladega, causing him to miss the next eleven races. His abbreviated schedule combined with only one top-ten in the second half of the season caused him to finish the season 30th in points.

In 1992, Petty rebounded to a career-best fifth-place finish in points, as well winning two separate races that season, the only time he was to have accomplished this feat in his career. Kyle came very close to winning the championship in 1992, he had a flat tire at Phoenix (2nd to last race) and broke an engine in the last race otherwise he would have been neck and neck with Elliott and Kulwicki for the title. He duplicated his points finish in 1993 as well as picking up a win at Pocono Raceway. He dropped ten spots in points in 1994 after he failed to finish higher than fourth, and lost the Mello Yello sponsorship at the end of the season. Coors Light became his new sponsor beginning in 1995, and he won his most recent race at Dover. He fell further down to 30th in points after only finishing in the top-ten five times and failing to qualify for the fall race at Bristol Motor Speedway. He improved to a 27th-place points finish the next season despite missing two races due to injury and failing to qualify for the season-ending race at Atlanta. He parted way with SABCO at the end of the season. In 1996, the popular rock group Soundgarden recorded a tune called "Kyle Petty, Son of Richard."[2]

1997–2006

Petty made his 500th Cup start at Phoenix International Raceway in 1997
The 44 car in 1997

For the 1997 season, Petty formed his own team, PE2 Motorsports, and fielded the #44 Hot Wheels Pontiac Grand Prix for himself. He had two top-five finishes and finished 15th in points, the highest points placement of all the new teams to run during the 1997 season. He only had two top-tens in 1998, and fell back to 30th in points, causing him to return to Petty Enterprises and run his team from their shop, and became Petty Enterprises' new CEO. He began the 1999 season with two early DNQs, and finished 26th in points despite finishing in the top-ten nine times. He was also commentating for ESPN as a guest to commentate as a NASCAR Driver for NASCAR Busch Series races He had one top-ten early in 2000, the same year in which his son Adam died while practicing for a Busch Series race at New Hampshire International Speedway. He missed the next two races and returned to drive the #44 for the rest of the summer, before moving to the Busch Series full-time to finish out the season in Adam's #45 Sprint Chevrolet. He had four top-tens in the car over a span of fourteen races, and attempted two Cup races with the #45 Sprint PCS Chevrolet in 2000, finishing 31st at Martinsville. He also filled in at the Brickyard 400 for Penske Racing after their regular driver, Jeremy Mayfield had to miss the race due to a concussion; Petty finished 32nd. Steve Grissom drove the #44 Hot Wheels Pontiac for the rest of the 2000 Winston Cup season and qualified 5 races in 2000. Kyle Petty had to drive the 45 Sprint PCS Chevrolet and the #44 Hot Wheels Pontiac and qualified in 19 races in 2000; causing him to finish 41st in the points standings in the 2000 Winston Cup Series.

Petty's 2004 24 Hours of Daytona Porsche, co-driven with Paul Newman

In 2001, Petty brought the #45 to Cup full-time and switched to Dodge. He failed to qualify for twelve races that season and failed to finish higher than sixteenth, causing him to finish 43rd in points. He qualified for every race in 2002 and had a top-ten at Talladega, raising him to 22nd in the points. After 2002, Sprint left the team and Brawny/Georgia Pacific became his new sponsor. He missed three races in 2003 (including one due to injury) and fell back to 37th in the standings.

In 2003 during the Food City 500, Petty crashed his #45 car in a hard driver's side impact. Though TV cameras make it not look hard, NASCAR officials said it was the hardest crash in NASCAR history with 90 G-forces. Just 5 weeks later Petty's crash was bumped from the record as the top crash when Jerry Nadeau suffered his career-ending wreck at Richmond.

He moved up four spots in 2004 and had a best finish of 12th. In 2005, he competed in every race for the first time in three years and had two top-tens and finished 27th in points. When Georgia Pacific left after 2005, Wells Fargo, Schwan's, and Marathon Oil became the team's new primary sponsors and Petty duplicated his top-ten total in 2006, but fell five spots further in points.

2007–2008

Petty's car prior to the start of the 2008 Daytona 500
Petty's 2007 Dodge Avenger

At the 2007 Coca-Cola 600, Petty had his first top-five finish in ten years, finishing 3rd in the Coke Zero Dodge. He then raced the Toyota Save Mart 350 at Sonoma in a Petty Enterprises car while broadcasting for TNT. On lap 1 as the cars began lap 2, Petty crashed with Matt Kenseth, causing him to accidentally swear during the broadcasting.

He later took several races off to work as a color commentator for TNT's Nextel Cup coverage, replacing Benny Parsons after Parsons lost his battle with cancer. He returned to the 45 after a five race break but surrendered the car for two additional races later in the season. Early in the 2008 season, Petty Enterprises was purchased by Boston Ventures, causing Petty to step aside as the team's CEO. When the #45 car fell out of the top-35 in owner's points, he took a large portion of the season off, including races that did not conflict with his broadcasting duties. After fourteen races, his best finish was a 24th at Richmond. He finished 39th in his final 2008 start in the fall race at Phoenix International Raceway after getting swept up into a multi-car crash. According to the Yahoo! sports blog "From The Marbles", he was being slowly pushed out the door at Petty Enterprises. "I don't work for Petty Enterprises" Petty told NASCAR.com on December 8, 2008. "When they did their deal and sold to Boston Ventures....they pretty much let me know there wasn't a place for me there going into '09." Any time he appears on television on Speed he wears a hat with a number 45 with a black line across the number in memory of his son Adam. He formerly appeared on NASCAR Trackside, NASCAR Victory Lane and NASCAR RaceDay as a television personality. He now works for NBCSN, appearing on all of their NASCAR related shows and broadcasts.

Charity

Petty is active in many charitable causes, such as the Victory Junction Gang Camp for terminally-ill children, which he established to honor his late son, as well as an annual charity motorcycle ride across the country called the Kyle Petty Charity Ride Across America.[3]

Music career

Petty is also known for his brief attempts as a professional country musician. He was signed to a record contract by RCA Records in 1986 and began work on an album with Don Light. His lone single from this period was The Other Guy, which led to appearances on Hee Haw and opening for acts such as Randy Travis and The Oak Ridge Boys. Due to disagreements with his record company and management, Petty later abandoned the album project.[4]

Later, Petty recorded a track entitled Oh King Richard, a tribute to his father Richard written by Rodney Crowell that was released in 1995 as part of a NASCAR-themed country music compilation album. A music video for the song was produced, featuring Petty playing an acoustic guitar in front of his father's #43 racecar, as Richard watched highlights of his career on a screen.[5]

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.)

Sprint Cup Series

Daytona 500
Year Team Manufacturer Start Finish
1980 Petty Enterprises Dodge DNQ
1981 Buick 11 32
1982 Pontiac 12 23
1983 7 33
1984 Ford 15 40
1985 Wood Brothers Racing 6 37
1986 7 16
1987 20 35
1988 21 18
1989 SABCO Racing Pontiac DNQ
1990 22 24
1991 6 16
1992 33 6
1993 1 31
1994 26 39
1995 Team SABCO 13 12
1996 29 18
1997 PE2 Motorsports Pontiac 30 14
1998 39 11
1999 Petty Enterprises Pontiac 24 7
2000 42 25
2001 Dodge 28 16
2002 34 41
2003 30 13
2004 33 21
2005 33 17
2006 12 39
2007 29 42
2008 39 34

Busch Series

Craftsman Truck Series

International Race of Champions

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

References

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