There are times in the sport
of NASCAR Sprint Cup racing, when looking at things on the surface, they seem
simple. An example is a car number. A car number, in its simplest definition,
allows race fans to connect a car with a team and a driver. But, as in many
cases, when digging under the surface, you can find layers of history. And,
for Richard Petty, and the Petty family, these layers of car numbers are
built on wins and championships that have transcended through time to build a
stock car dynasty across the world.
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Brian Scott's 2016 Sprint Cup entry |
Beginning in 2016, this tradition is returning to the Petty
family and Richard Petty Motorsports, when RPM once again fields the number 44,
replacing the number 9 used since RPM was created following a merger in 2009.
Richard
Petty spoke today about the family history and its' car numbers, saying, “To speak about us
changing our car number, you first have to go back to the beginning with my
Dad (Lee). He started Petty Engineering and later Petty Enterprises, and he
was there right when NASCAR all started. He put together a car, and the first
race he entered he actually raced a car numbered 38. But, that was it. He
then went and got his own car. He had to put a number on it and saw the
number 42 on a license plate, and that's how it all started. It just went
forward from there.
Lee Petty
raced the number 42 from 1949-1961, before using the number 41 in select
races through 1964, before retiring. He retired with three championships and
54 wins with the number 42.
"Daddy won three championships and had a bunch of wins with that number,”
said Richard Petty. “It was the most of anyone at that time. He built Petty
Enterprises off that number. At that time, maybe it didn't mean too much, but
that's what got everything started. After my brother (Maurice) and I got
older, we wanted to race, too. We put a car together with Dale (Inman), and
when it was time to go to the track, we needed a number. The car we had was
one of Daddy's old cars, so it was easy to just take the 4 off, and we raced
under the number 2 for a few races.
“I think one race, we just switched the numbers and raced with
the number 24,” he recalled. “When we got going into the 1959 season, it just
made sense for me to go to the track with the 43 number, with Daddy still
racing the 42. That allowed me to have my own identity, and fate took it from
there.
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Rick Wilson in the post-retirement No, 44 |
Richard
Petty raced the number 43 from 1959-1992, winning a record 200 races and
seven championships. He was crowned "The King" and cemented himself
as the most successful NASCAR driver of all time.
"Back then, it wasn't just Daddy and I racing,” he said. “Maurice
was building the engines, but he did some racing, too. When it was time, we
were using the 42 and 43, so he was one of the first to use the number 44 in
the family. Later, he started using the 41, and then, that really became his
family number that he used. We raced the number 41 again at Martinsville the
year he was elected into the NASCAR Hall of Fame, and that was pretty
special.
Maurice
"Chief" Petty raced the No. 41, 42, 43 and 44 in select races from
1960-1964. He is most remembered for driving the No. 41.
"We've had a lot of other drivers race for Petty
Enterprises and Richard Petty Motorsports,” said Richard Petty. “But when
Maurice wanted to be the crew chief for the Superbird in 1970, we hired Pete
Hamilton, who was a big star racing up in New England. We really felt that
car was a big part of the Petty stable, so we used the number 40. Pete and
Chief won the 500 and swept the races at Talladega that year. That built the
legacy of the number 40 with the family.
Hamilton
raced the No. 40 for Petty Enterprises during the 1970 season, winning three
races, including the 1970 Daytona 500. He finished in the Top-10 11 times in
the No. 40 for the Petty family.
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Kyle Petty's Hot Wheels Pontiac |
"Kyle had his first ever stock car start (ARCA) in a number
44 at Daytona,” recalled Richard Petty. “He won that one. He started with the
number 42 in Cup racing because that's what his grandfather raced. He did
that for a few years before getting the 7-Eleven sponsorship, and that
changed the number. He then raced for Felix Sabates, but when he came back
and formed pe2, he started using the 44 number, and that's really where it
became his number. He had the Hot Wheels car and was racing for the family.
People know Kyle for different numbers, but for the Petty family, we consider
his number to be the 44.
Kyle Petty
raced the No. 42 for Petty Enterprises from 1979-1982, before running the No.
44 for pe2/Petty Enterprises from 1997-2000. He won his first ARCA race in
1979 at Daytona in the No. 44 for Petty Enterprises. He recalled how the
family history progressed to a fourth generation, saying, “When Adam came along,
he saw that his great grandfather raced the 42, I raced the 43 and so on. He
saw the order, and he just started right out with the 45. That worked for him
and Petty Enterprises too. He won in the No. 45 at Charlotte in his first ARCA
start. He then carried that number with him. That's the number that everyone
thinks of when they think of Adam.
Adam Petty
raced the No. 45 from 1998 to 2000 and made his Sprint Cup debut in the No.
45. He won the ARCA race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1998 racing a number
45.
The No. 43 and other 'Petty numbers' have kept winning too, with
drivers like Jim Paschal, Bobby Hamilton, John Andretti and now Aric
Almirola, keeping the 41, 42 and 43 numbers in Victory Lane. Jim Paschal (9
wins in the 41, 42 and 43), Bobby Hamilton (2 wins in the 43), John Andretti
and Aric Almirola (one win each in the 43) have all carried on the winning
tradition.
"After the 2015 season, we had an opportunity to make some
changes and get the No. 44 back,” said Richard Petty. “We felt that it was
good timing. We really wanted to get that number back in the Petty family,
where it really belongs. Brian (Scott) is coming on board, and he really
hasn't had a number in the Sprint Cup Series. Everything has just come together
to really bring back a Petty tradition.
"For us, the numbers are more than just a number. They
really represent our family history, our legacy and everyone who has worked
for us or raced for us. We take a lot of pride in that and are glad to have
the 44 back home."
Kyle Petty also
expressed happiness with the change, saying, “It's good to see the number 44 back where it
belongs. I grew up knowing that my uncle Maurice raced the 41, my grandfather
raced the 42 and my father raced the 43. I would go on to race the 44, and
Adam eventually drove the 45. With Pete Hamilton driving the 40 at one
time for PE, to me, those numbers were always 'Petty' numbers. I'm looking
forward to seeing Brian Scott carrying on our tradition."
Scott also
commented on racing the iconic Petty Family number 44, saying, “I think it's special
to be with an organization with such history and then to be able to put your
name in their history. Richard Petty's history and recognition around NASCAR
is his number. To go back to what everyone considers to be Petty
history with the 44, I think it's really special to be the driver that gets
to do that."
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Do you know who has requested the number 9? I know Chase is in the 24, but it would be great to see him in the 9.
ReplyDeleteNo one has requested the #9. And if someone does, it will NOT be Hendrick Motorsports. They have decades of equity in the #24.
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