Showing posts with label Richard Petty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Petty. Show all posts

Saturday, September 07, 2019

there are some pretty interesting stories on how some drivers won races


Richard Petty and Cale Yarborough ruled the '84 Firecracker 400 at Daytona, leading a combined 132 of the 160 laps. When Petty took the lead with 32 laps remaining, Yarborough settled into 2nd, apparently content to simply draft along. His strategy was obvious: follow Petty until they reached the backstretch on lap 160, use the low-side slingshot to pass, then hold on back to the checkered flag.

Petty thought he knew how to counter that proven strategy. "We'd been running wide open all day," he said. "His car was quicker than mine, and he could have passed whenever he wanted. I had to hoodwinkle him because I had no idea he'd even think about that before the last lap. So, with seven or eight left, I began backing off just a little, maybe a hundred fewer RPMs one lap and another hundred fewer the next lap and another hundred fewer after that."

The strategy was brilliant in it's simplicity. "He must not have realized how much the pace had slowed, " Petty said. "I wanted a little something left for the last lap, something he didn't know I had. If we'd both been wideopen when he passed on the last lap, there's no way I could have caught back up. He would have been long gone."

If Yarborough realized what was happening, he didn't show it. " I was riding along and had Richard right where I wanted him," the three-time champion and 83 time winner said that Wednesday afternoon. "I had him set up for the last-lap slingshot. I knew I was going to win the race, no doubt in my mind. If I had to do it again, I'd be harder to pass"

There was a wreck on the 158th lap, and both knew that whoever made it to the finish line would win because of the caution lap, and get to meet President Reagan.

Yarborough did the draft and slingshot move as best he could - all for naught. "I went wide open the minute I saw the wreck, " Petty said. "I don't know if I got ni the gas quicker than Cale, but I got away from him. It took him til the end of the back stretch to catch me.

Petty took the lower line, and made it to the yellow flag by 2 feet, winning the race. After being so close to winning, Yarborough made a huge mistake, and went to pit road, and came in 3rd instead of 2nd.

jrhmobile said 2 months ago "nobody reported that Petty's car was found to have an illegal 390 cu. in. engine, but Bill France initiated his "no race winner gets disqualified – the race winner is the one the spectators see in victory lane" dictum."

https://autoweek.com/article/monster-energy-nascar-cup/memorable-finishes-nascars-july-4-daytona-race-were-many
Autoweek  July 15th 2019 issue

Friday, January 04, 2019

I'll be darned, I accidentally ran across a Superbird I recognize on a blog, that I posted about years ago, Jay's! Only Jay has Richard Petty signed lawnmowers!



If you weren't reading along back in 2012, then this will be news to you, https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2012/08/there-is-no-end-to-unusual-in-vehicle.html for the full story on Lowes Riding Lawnmowers, and the one guy that collected a couple, restored them, and then got to talk to Richard Petty for a bit, and thrilled him with the lawn mowers!




at a car show held where someone has collected a roadside diner, and a cool little old gas station! Little Egg Harbor NJ


Sunday, November 25, 2018

the rake on this... damn!


just to make sure this wasn't a distortion of photography, I looked around for another copy


it's not as pronounced, and looks flatter

Compare it to a Charger:


http://www.floridastockcars.com/gallery3/v/Daytona/Al+Unser+and+Richard+Petty+before+practice+for+the+1968+Daytona+500___.jpg.html


but I don't recall seeing a white topped Petty Road Runner before

http://artpictures.club/shans-november-26-8.html
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/richard-petty-nascar-photo-postcard-814651165

Sunday, April 08, 2018

I thought I'd posted about it, but it seems I haven't yet, so, here's the Petty Superbird tribute by Smithfield Foods give away car from 2017 SEMA that Mike came across. I never did see it. It's that easy to miss a car at SEMA




To pay tribute to Richard Petty’s accomplishments, and celebrate the long line of Mopars that helped carry him to greatness, Smithfield Foods commissioned Petty’s Garage to build a retro-themed, Hemi-powered Pro Touring Superbird from a donor project that had been dissassembled and forgotten for 15 years. There was so much rust, and so much work, there's no mystery why they gave up on blowing a fortune to make it right.



you can check out the entire build at http://www.hotrod.com/articles/smithfield-giving-away-superbird-clone-build-part-1/



The guy who won, Verl McCown, only entered once. His nephew was there for the event though.



 The nationwide sweepstakes was advertised in Hot Rod and other magazines


He received it in March 2018 and lives in Portland, so the 1st car show he brought it to was the Portland Roadster Show. https://www.facebook.com/IWonTheKingsCar/photos/a.1999344673668884/2115235518746465/?type=3   It won Best In Class.

https://www.facebook.com/IWonTheKingsCar/  for more photos and info
https://www.facebook.com/KitsSuperbird/
www.iwonthekingscar.com  also

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

if you're richer than other Richard Petty fans, and want to be the first fan to own some cool stuff of his, a lot of it's coming to auction in Vegas, and online, May 12th


the one and only dayglo red and Petty Blue 1974 Dodge Charger that Petty rode to victory in 31 races including his fifth Daytona 500 win;

 a 1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo driven in 1979 when Petty won his seventh Championship title

a 1992 Pontiac Grand Prix that Petty drove during his Fan Appreciation Farewell Tour;

 his 1981 Daytona Win Trophy the last of his seven Daytona 500 wins;

 a 1967 Darlington Win Trophy for winning his first Southern 500,
 a victory that was part of Petty’s astonishing 10 in a row winning streak that year

 Petty worn STP signed leather racing jacket

and a vintage Lee and Richard Petty oil tank and pump used during the late 60s

are just a few of the more interesting items

http://www.juliensauctions.com/auctions/2018/richard-petty/index.html
http://www.thedrive.com/news/18800/nascar-legend-richard-petty-to-auction-cars-and-trophies

Friday, January 12, 2018

Sit down, and hold onto your socks. Nascar claims no one won the Myers Brothers Memorial 250, Aug. 6, 1971, race at Bowman Gray, and they sure as hell ain't going to recognize it was Bobby Allison



To date, there have been 2,373 NASCAR Sprint Cup races contested since the series began competition on June 19, 1949 at Charlotte Speedway. However, NASCAR official records only recognize winners for 2,372 of those events. The lone Sprint Cup race without a NASCAR acknowledged winner is the 1971 Myers Brothers Memorial 250

Nascar has never acknowledged Bobby Allison’s untainted Cup Series victory at Winston-Salem, North Carolina Aug. 6, 1971, it's known as the Bowman Gray race.

Bowman Gray Stadium, the oldest NASCAR-sanctioned weekly short track in the sport. Bill France Sr. himself began promoting races here in 1949 with Alvin Hawkins, whose grandson, Gray Garrison, still runs the place.

Built as a football stadium in 1937 during the later years of the Depression, midget race cars took to the dirt quarter-mile oval ringing the playing field a decade later.

When a fly-by-night promoter skipped out on his promise to pay for the paving of the track, city fathers were in a fix, and that is when Bill France and Hawkins offered up a solution. They would pay for the paving in exchange for the rights to promote races on the grounds. The Hawkins family moved to Winston-Salem, the Frances to nearby Greensboro.

The football history of the stadium is also quite storied. Players such as Brian Piccolo, the 1964 ACC Player of the Year who led the nation in rushing and scoring, played his home games in Bowman Gray. Piccolo would later become famous as the teammate of Gale Sayers with the Chicago Bears, and the subject of the 1971 film Brian's Song.

Twenty-nine Grand National/Winston Cup events were run at Bowman Gray between 1958 and '71. Richard Petty became the first driver in NASCAR history to win 100 races when he went to Victory Lane at The Stadium on Aug. 22, 1969.

The last Cup race here is debated to this day due to Nascar management throwing the paperwork away, but Bobby Allison won on Aug. 6, 1971. In fact, a few days after the race, NASCAR issued its official news bulletin race report which documented Allison as the winner of the event.

Allison, who won three Daytona 500s, had seven starts at Bowman Gray, winning twice. His last race there was on Aug. 6, 1971, when he won the Grand National Race.
http://www.journalnow.com/sports/auto_racing/bowman_gray/bowman-gray-s-rich-history-was-on-full-display/article_063f5d7d-764f-5f43-b2ac-443fef05aaa0.html

Between 1968 and 1971, NASCAR promoted Grand American races for what were known as pony cars. These Mustangs, Camaros, Cougars, Firebirds and Javelins generally ran standalone events but often were invited to help fill Grand National (now, Cup) grids.


 The first combined race was at Bowman Gray Stadium, and Allison’s Mustang won ahead of Richard Petty’s Plymouth, Jim Paschal’s Javelin, Buck Baker’s Firebird and Dave Marcis’ Camaro. Ten of the 29 entries were GA cars. Less than half the starting field remained after the demolition derby style racing where GN (big heavy cars) drivers took out their frustrations against the faster, lighter, more nimble and more likely to win odds on favorites the GA cars (Mustangs, Camaros) which didn't have to pit for fuel and tires as often

Richard Petty is pretty darn honorable about it, though, he isn't putting up a fight to see that Allison get the recognition he earned, and deserves

Understandably, Petty was unhappy with the grid and the results. “I figured something like this would happen,” he said at the time. “They’ll probably win all these (combination) races. (Cup) racing isn’t supposed to be filled with Mustangs and Camaros.” Forty-six years later, he felt no different. “Bobby won, but shouldn’t have gotten credit for it,” he insisted at Daytona Beach in July. “The cars weren’t the same; those cars were too different. I shouldn’t have gotten credit, but Bobby shouldn’t have, either. That was a Cup race, and he wasn’t in a Cup car.”


NASCAR credits Allison with 84 victories. His Bowman Gray start and resulting top-five/top-10 finish are among his career stats—but not the victory. Inexplicably, Tiny Lund won two combination races later that season and both are on his career résumé. Another oddity: NASCAR shows Allison with 10 Cup victories in 1971, while another section of the same record book shows 11. Marcis feels Allison deserves credit for winning in a Mustang since Lund is credited for winning twice in a Camaro.

Darrell Waltrip and Allison are tied for fourth all-time, but getting Bowman Gray on Allison’s résumé would move him past Waltrip, 85-84. That alone would give the 80-year-old Hall of Famer immeasurable joy for the rest of his days.
NASCAR historian Buz McKim is also at a loss to explain what happened, calling it “one tough situation.” He said that a since-deceased NASCAR executive once told him Allison’s car had been disqualified several days after the race. “But that’s as much as he’d say,” McKim said. (FYI: There’s no evidence supporting the late executive’s claim. Also, cars back then were inspected on the spot; if the Mustang was legal that Saturday night, it wouldn’t have been disqualified later.)

“This may be one that will never be settled. ... It’s still the only NASCAR race without an official winner,” McKim said.

The NASCAR HOF doesn't count the win and pole he got in the Mustang toward his official statistics; however, they do count those races toward his official number of Cup races. Those races count as starts but there are no starting or finishing positions attributed to them.

http://autoweek.com/article/monster-energy-nascar-cup/no-win-deal-nascar-refuses-recognize-bobby-allisons-1971-win
https://www.nascar.com/en_us/news-media/articles/2011/06/15/inside-nascar-bowman-gray.html
http://racersreunion.com/community/forum/stock-car-racing-history/38703/myers-brothers-250-august-6-1971
http://jeffdroke.com/bobbyALLISON85.htm
http://www.racing-reference.info/showblog?id=2939

Nascar.com also does not list the Aug 6, 1971 race as a win for Petty

https://www.nascar.com/news-media/2017/07/02/cataloging-all-200-of-richard-pettys-nascar-wins-one-by-one/

So why, does Nascar have no trouble giving wins to the cheats in the recent season?

Joey Logano was busted after winning at Richmond in May, Denny Hamlin after winning the Cup and Xfinity races at Darlington in September,
Chase Elliott after finishing second in the Playoff opener near Chicago in September
and Clint Bowyer after finishing third in the Playoff race at Martinsville in October.

 Despite the rules violations, those finishes remain official because NASCAR simply doesn’t vacate checkered-flag results.

That’s why Richard Petty’s 1983 victory at Charlotte — the 198th of his untouchable 200 — remains official despite his car’s oversized engine and illegal tires.

Thursday, September 07, 2017

Richard Petty can do whatever the hell he wants to on the track... and went for a 2nd lap in his 1967 Southern 500 winning Belvedere while leading the race as the honorary pace car


Sunday, Petty was driving the Plymouth Belvedere he won the 1967 Southern 500 in, and that served as an honorary pace car.

Normally honorary pace cars are supposed to head to the pits one lap prior to the field getting the green flag. However, Petty is the King, so instead of returning to the pits, Petty stayed out.

The field had to take an extra lap as the flag man waved the black flag at the 80-year old, who was grinning ear to ear.



 http://autoweek.com/article/nascar/video-nascar-black-flags-richard-petty-darlington

Friday, February 03, 2017

he bought it and kept it for 32 years, then the Volare factory kit car was auctioned for $11,000


This Volare features the Street Kit Car Package and is one of 247 built by Plymouth.

Highly optioned, it is equipped with a 360ci 4V engine with automatic transmission. It features a two-tone paint package, power disc brakes, air conditioning and power steering.

 It's had the same owner - a Mopar Club Member and enthusiast - since 1985. It sold new in Wisconsin but has been a meticulously maintained, garage-kept and rust-free Arizona car since 1985. He did get his picture taken with it and Richard Petty.

https://www.barrett-jackson.com/Events/Event/Details/1978-PLYMOUTH-VOLARE--198533


the four “hood pins” screwed to the Kit Car’s hood are totally bogus, the one-piece “hood pin” unit, was made to look complete with a vinyl-coated lanyard.

http://www.hotrod.com/articles/21-cool-mopars-barrett-jacksons-las-vegas-auction/#olympus-digital-camera-860

Saturday, October 08, 2016

on October 20, 2016 on NBCSN, 14 1st place winners will get an all-expenses-paid trip to Miami for the Homestead race, where they each will try powering up the a 67 Hemi Belevedere in a key-turning ceremony.


It's a replica of the No. 43 Plymouth Belvedere in which Petty scored 10 back-to-back wins during the 1967 NASCAR stock racing season and captured 27 of the 48 races held that year is the grand prize.

In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Petty’s historic season, someone is going to turn a key, and win a 1967 Plymouth Belvedere that mirrors the No. 43 car, right down to the 43 that was hand-painted onto the replica by the artist who painted the original.


http://www.jacksonmg.com/blog/a-throne-fit-for-akings-car/