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TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/09/11 01:55:25PM
4,073 posts

October 9 - King wins 1983 MIller 500


Stock Car Racing History


Originally published by me as part of my 200 Wins series here:

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2011/10/october-9-this-day-in-petty-history.html

1983 - Richard Petty starts 20th but passes championship contender Darrell Waltrip with 23 laps to go and drives away to win the Miller High Life 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway for career win #198. About 4 hours after the race ended, however, NASCAR announces the Petty team will be fined $35,000 and 104 Winston Cup points for having an over-sized engine and illegal tires. Whoops.

Finishing in second place was Darrell Waltrip in Junior Johnson's Chevrolet. Both were livid Petty's win was allowed to stand. What the two of them conveniently forget to remind the press and fans then - and now - is the #11 Pepsi Chevy was loaded on the hauler immediately after the race. As the post-inspection took place on the 43, Waltrip's car was high-tailing it back to Junior's shop in Ronda, NC. Consequently, NASCAR was unable to inspect Waltrip's car, and many to this day suspect the #11 maaaaay not have been within the rules that day either.

Once a NASCAR official spotted the wrong tires on the 43, Maurice Petty confessed to Dick Beaty, NASCAR's chief official, about the over-sized engine and how he got it through inspection.

Maurice said he placed wax in the engine, wedging open valves on the eight cylinders to foil an air-pump test of the cylinders' cubic inch displacement. When the race started, heat quickly melted the wax. The engine then produced increased speed and power from the over-sized cylinders. ~ Greg Fielden, Forty Years of Stock Car Racing - Volume IV , p. 400.


1983 198 Miller 500 stub bushmire.jpg
T icket courtesy of Jerry Bushmire
charlotte831009.jpg

A couple of victory lane photos ... several hours before NASCAR likely said to Richard "Umm, ya mind coming in here a sec?"

Photo courtesy of Ray Lamm Got about 45 minutes? If so, you can watch the highlights of the race at YouTube.

Article courtesy of Jerry Bushmire

Richard's tainted win was a 'no-turning-back' race. A week or so after the win, he announced his departure from the family Petty Enterprises team beginning with the 1984 season. He joined a new team financed by Mike Curb and won his final two career races in a non-Petty-owned car. Kyle Petty, who was still rough around the edges as a driver, remained with PE for 1984, but he did not have much success until he too left the team. Maurice Petty fielded an un-sponsored PE team in three races in 1985, but he too drifted out of the limelight shortly thereafter.
TMC


updated by @tmc-chase: 11/07/18 01:51:40PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
10/01/11 08:38:23PM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute - October 1, 1972


Stock Car Racing History

Originally published today as the Schaefer Hall of Fame and Ring of Honor are enjoying the sights and sounds of a weekend at the Monster Mile - Dover International Speedway. Follow me on Twitter for more in-the-moment observations about this weekend's race festivities.

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2011/10/october-1-this-day-in-petty-history_01.html

1972 - Richard Petty scores his 148th career Grand National win in the Wilkes 400 at North Wilkesboro Speedway. Much is made in today's historical reporting about the 'rivalry' between The King Richard Petty and the Silver Fox David Pearson. However, the true rivalry beginning in the late 1960s and continuing through the early 1970s was between the factory-supported Petty and the upstart, independent Bobby Allison.

Richard had established himself as The King by the late 60s. Bobby had established himself as an exceptionally talented 'car guy', a solid on-track racer, and a driver who routinely whined about conspiracies against him when he didn't win. Just as today's drivers such as Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski have said take THAT to the established drivers, Allison did the same in his era.

After a series of minor run-ins prior to 1972, Allison and Petty took it to a different level at Wilkesboro. They beat the absolute snot out of each other lap after lap. With two laps to go, one car carried the other into the turn 1 guard rail. Somehow, both cars took off again with Allison leading. On the last lap, Richard muscled by Allison again and took the win. Allison crossed the start-finish line with smoke billowing everywhere.

After Richard took the checkers and went to victory lane (the track's frontstretch I think), an Allison fan who disagreed with how things went down decided he'd settle up with Richard. One problem: the one thing Maurice Petty may have done better than build engines for the 43 was fight - especially to defend his brother. The guy got clocked upside the head with Richard's helmet and DING DING DING that was the end of that. (Had Maurice not been successful with his L.L. Cool J's Mama Said Knock You Out approach, I wonder if that Hank Williams Jr. look-alike could have had Richard's back.)

Headline, article and victory photo courtesy of Jerry Bushmire

TMC


updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/30/11 06:57:23PM
4,073 posts

September 30 - 1970 Home State 200 - Final GN dirt race


Current NASCAR

Originally posted by me as part of my Richard Petty's 200 Wins blogging series here:

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-30-this-day-in-petty-history_30.html

1970 - Richard Petty wins his 117th career Grand National race and the final NASCAR Grand National race run on dirt - the Home State 200 in Raleigh, NC. He drives a Plymouth owned by Don Robertson - not Petty Enterprises - to a two-lap victory over second place driver Neil Castles.

In October 2010, the governor of North Carolina presented an historical marker to recognize the fairgrounds track as the site of the final Grand National dirt race. (Despite what the sign says, I'm all but certain this race was not the final NASCAR dirt race.)

As the Petty team began to look towards 1971 and an all-asphalt series, a Plymouth was sold to Robertson who fielded cars sporadically - primarily for Jabe Thomas. Because Richard still needed to race on the dirt at Raleigh, the team rented back the car for this event though it was still officially entered under Robertson's name.

In May 2010, writer Rick Houston interviewed Petty as part of a NASCAR.com series on each of the inaugural NASCAR Hall of Fame inductees. At the end of the interview, he asked him about Don Robertson as a favor for me.
RP: They were boys out of somewhere in Virginia. What we did, we sold the car to Jabe Thomas and at that time, they was going to mostly asphalt tracks. Wasn't but two or three dirt tracks a year, so we didn't even have a dirt track car. So what we'd do ... we did it two or three different times ... we'd go borrow his car, bring it back to the shop.

RH: Are we talking about Jabe Thomas or Don Robertson here?

RP: This guy (Robertson) owned Jabe's car. So we'd borrow the car back. We'd put a new engine in the thing, put all new suspension and just refurbish it, just like we would our car. Then, we didn't pay him anything for borrowing the car, but when he got the car back, he had a brand-new motor with one race on it, had brand-new spindles, hubs, rear ends, axles. He had a brand-new car again ... we won a couple of races. We borrowed it a couple, three times and I know we won two races with it. But it was one of our cars.
In his book, Silent Speedways of the Carolinas , Perry Allen Wood laments:
Instead of hats and horns and some sort of fanfare worthy of a truly landmark event, NASCAR let the era of the dirt track slip away for good on Wednesday night, September 30, 1970. About 6,000 race fans witnessed that last battle on the dirt and what a shame it was...It is a real shame that everybody and his brother did not try to run that last scheduled dirt race...The Home State 200 itself was an anti-climax to 21 years of great dirt track history. Big John Sears took the pole and led early. Then Benny Parsons paced the pack over the next 89 laps until Petty got out front and it was all over...Then they loaded up the trucks and trailers and literally left NASCAR's heritage in the dust. (pp. 150-151)
For many years, Petty 'wrote' a column for the monthly Stock Car Racing magazine. In a September 2009 column, he wrote about the legacy of dirt racing in NASCAR's Grand National series. Here are some excerpts from the column about the final dirt race at Raleigh:
... John Sears, a drivers dirt track racer, won the pole and led the first 10 laps. Then Benny Parsons took the lead and led from lap 11 through lap 88. I took over on lap 89 and led the rest of the race, which was through lap 200. I think I averaged about 68 miles per hour. Neil Castles finished second, Bobby Isaac third, James Hylton fourth, and Cecil Gordon fifth. Bobby Allison finished sixth.

Now, I want to tell you something about how we won the race. At Petty Enterprises we didn't have a car built exclusively for dirt track racing. We were running the Plymouth SuperBird on the big speedways and the regular Plymouths on the paved short tracks. But we remembered selling driver Jabe Thomas and team owner Don Robertson a '69 Plymouth built for dirt track racing, or let's say it was better suited for dirt than anything we had to race at our shop. So what we did was borrow that car from Jabe and Don. We put one of our engines in the car and won the race. Then we returned it to Jabe and Don and left our engine in the car as a payment.

The other two dirt track races that year were at Columbia Speedway in Columbia, SC. That track was as hard as asphalt. We ran the first race at Columbia that year on April 30. We did the same car-borrowing then. That was the first time we borrowed our old car back from Jabe and Don. We were lucky enough to win that race too. Bobby Allison finished second and Bobby Isaac third. Neil Castles ran fourth and James Hylton fifth.

We did the same thing after the win too. We turned the car back over to Jabe and Don with one of our engines in it. What you must remember is that back in the early days of stock car racing, we ran a lot of state fairgrounds tracks, and they were all dirt. In fact, I don't remember Hillsborough, NC having guard railings for a long time. You ran off the track going into the third turn, and you drove off down into a pine thicket. Nope, racing wasn't always as prim and proper as it is now.

~ Full column is here . HT to Dave Fulton, fellow Racers Reunion member and former special events/media coordinator for Wrangler Jeans, 7-Eleven and Richmond International Raceway, about it.
Article courtesy of Jerry Bushmire

TMC

updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/30/11 06:53:57PM
4,073 posts

September 30 - 1962 Wilkes 320


Current NASCAR

Originally posted by me today as part of my 200 Wins series for Richard Petty here:

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-30-this-day-in-petty-history.html

Greetings from the camp area number 9 at Dover International Speedway. The Schaefer Hall of Fame and Ring of Honor are well represented. Details to follow soon.

1962 - Richard Petty wins his 13th career race by leading exactly half - 160 laps - of the Wilkes 320 at North Wilkesboro. Teammate Jim Paschal finishes 5th in a second Petty Enterprises #41 Plymouth.

According to Greg Fielden's Forty Years of Stock Car Racing - Volume 2 , Petty spun on lap 18 but recovered to lead half the race. Perhaps more embarrassing than Petty's spin was the performance of Fireball Roberts. Again according to Fielden, the track recognized Roberts and his career in pre-race activities, but ... he blew a head gasket, was one of the first cars out of the race, and finished 29th in a 31-car field. DOH!

Green flag! Green flag!

Photo and article courtesy of Jerry Bushmire

TMC
updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/30/11 04:05:21PM
4,073 posts

Memorable start to Dover weekend


Current NASCAR

We went to dinner at local seafood joint/tavern last night for 8:30 reservation. As we were leaving, we spotted of all people The King leaving. Robbie Loomis was with him, and we think Lynda Petty was already in the car.

It was an unbelievable stroke of good fortune and timing as we had our Schaefer Beer Hall of Fame 20th Anniversary homemade banner in the truck. We quickly fetched it & had RP autograph it for us.

We picked up our Cold Passes this morning. We have tickets for our seats in Richard Petty Grandstands. We have cold Schaefer. And we're walking on cloud 9 right now.


updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/28/11 02:10:09PM
4,073 posts

Sept 28, 1969 - RP wins the OD 500


Stock Car Racing History


Originally posted by me as part of my on-going series about each of Richard Petty's 200 wins here:

https://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-28-this-day-in-petty-history.html

1969 - Richard Petty wins his 101st career race in the Old Dominion 500 at Martinsville in his Ford.

The scanned image below is really small and tough to read. For an alternative version of the race recap [ read this article ] from the Sumter Daily Item.


In the summer of '69 ( someone should write a song with that title! ), many NASCAR drivers formed the Professional Drivers Association to address key issues with Bill France, Sr. and NASCAR. Petty was elected as its initial (and turns out, only ) president. Its interesting the PDA was mentioned in the tag line accompanying the victory lane photo.


Article and photo courtesy of RR's Jerry Bushmire


TMC


updated by @tmc-chase: 09/28/20 10:13:09AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/28/11 02:05:39PM
4,073 posts

Dover - good karma for RPM?


Current NASCAR

As a Petty lifer and much like a Chicago Cubs fan, I look for any glimmer of hope that may indicate the 43 team is ready to return to victory lane. I leave Thursday morning for my first trip to Dover for the AAA 400. I'm flying to Philadelphia and then riding down for a fun, 3-day weekend with a few friends, sunshine, racing, garage tours, Schaefer beer, and hopefully a 43 win by A.J. Allmendinger.

I checked into Southwest Airlines this morning to claim my boarding pass. Amazingly, this is what I got:

I'm loving the karma already.

TMC


updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/28/11 12:37:52AM
4,073 posts

Anyone attend any of these Petty wins?


Stock Car Racing History

I'm working my way through blog entries for races won by Richard Petty in the month of October. I'd really enjoy incorporating memories, stories, pics, etc. from Racers Reunion members who attended any of the following races. Please reply here, send me an RR message, or email me at toomuchcountry (at) gmail (dot) com.

Here is the series so far:

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/search/label/200wins

Thanks.

10/01/1967 North Wilkesboro
10/01/1972 North Wilkesboro
10/05/1963 Randleman
10/05/1975 Charlotte
10/09/1983 Charlotte
10/18/1970 Martinsville
10/20/1963 South Boston
10/24/1971 Rockingham
10/25/1964 Harris
10/27/1968 Rockingham

updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/26/11 09:39:08PM
4,073 posts

Will Charlotte's NO GREASE BARBERSHOP Co-Sponsor Talladega & Daytona Races?


General

With his ability to tell stories - and be at the center of most of the good ones - he's a driver I'd really love to see participate here at RR.
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/26/11 01:07:02PM
4,073 posts

Will Charlotte's NO GREASE BARBERSHOP Co-Sponsor Talladega & Daytona Races?


General

I agree its silly that NASCAR even had to make such a statement. I realize what they're trying to accomplish - or in this case prevent the teams from accomplishing. But they look like such rubes (the very stereotype they're so dreadfully fearful of) by releasing such a rule.

Besides, I was hoping Dale Jr would run this retro scheme on his modern day 88.

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