October 9 - King wins 1983 MIller 500

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
13 years ago
4,073 posts

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




--
Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.

updated by @tmc-chase: 11/07/18 01:51:40PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
13 years ago
9,137 posts
That was a long evening that I shall always remember.


--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Richard Guido
@richard-guido
13 years ago
238 posts

I seem to remember Richard being quoted that if he had known the car had a big engine he would have finished second. I wasn't there so what do I know ?

Dennis Andrews
@dennis-andrews
13 years ago
835 posts
I saw this race and it looked like DW parked it in turn two. Once Petty went by he had no trouble staying in front of Benny. I thought at the time that something just wasn't right and when Junior's hauler almost ran me over trying to get to the gate on the back stretch I said to my friend that there was no way they had been through tech. in such a short period of time. We heard about the tires and big motor on the radio while driving home. First thing I said was, Jaws was big too.
Richard Guido
@richard-guido
13 years ago
238 posts
Things sure did change after this race. I recall reading years ago that on many occasions that NASCAR would not check engines or weight after a race. This one did alot of damage to Petty Enterprises and pushed Maurice out the door.