Richard
Petty has long been hailed the King of stock car racing. He was the first driver
in NASCAR history to win seven Winston Cup championships, and he captured the
checkered flag 200 times before retiring in 1992. It is against his record that
all other drivers are gauged. And what a record it is. His accomplishments
include winning the Daytona 500 seven times, ten consecutive victories in a
single season, and 1,156 career starts.
Petty spent his formative years in the garage
with his father, legendary stock car racer, Lee Petty. He loved racing, but
didn't know if he had inherited his father's skill until his first race, in
1958. After an impressive 6th place finish, just five laps behind the winner, on
a half-mile dirt track in Columbia, S.C., Richard Petty knew that racing was for
him. He went on to run in nine Grand National races that year. The following
year, he entered 22 events, and was named Rookie of the Year.
Petty's first win came in his 36th Grand
National start in a 100-mile race on a half-mile dirt track in Charlotte, and by
three end of the 1963 season he had won 28 Grand National races.
His "big break" came in 1964, with
his first win at Daytona, and first NASCAR Championship. Richard Petty had come
to be known as "The King" of stock car racing by the end of the 1967
season, in which he won 27 races of 48 starts. And the victories kept rolling
in.
1971 brought a win in the Dixie 500, which made
Petty the first million dollar driver in the history of the sport. The next year
he signed on with STP and during the first year of that legendary partnership,
he won 21 Winston Cup races, and earned a fourth NASCAR Championship. He also
held the Championship title in 1974, 1975, and 1979. His 200th victory came in
the 1984 Firecracker (Pepsi) 400.
Petty ended his phenomenal driving career with
a 1992 Fan Appreciation Tour, but leaving the world of racing was the last thing
on his mind. "'I've never thought about doing something other than racing.
It's been my whole life and I'm sure I'll miss it. But you have to remember that
I am not leaving the sport all together, I am just moving to another office at
Petty Enterprises," he said.
Petty is now involved in the sport as the owner
of the No. 43 STP Pontiac, which is being driven by John Andretti.
Richard Petty, the fans' 1995 selection from
the "Inactive Category" for induction into the Talladega - Texaco Walk
of Fame.

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