“Racing and being at a race track and being around race people is who Richard Petty is,” said his son, Kyle Petty, also a retired driver. Like the number 43 on the front of the Level Cross Fire Department (Station 43) near the Petty shop, honoring the race car number Petty drove through most of his glory years. He remains part owner of a race team (Petty GMS Motorsports), but his role at tracks generally is that of ambassador and friend, a devoted racer who stepped inside a race track as a young child and never left.Įighty-five, to Richard Petty, is just another number. He hasn’t driven a race car in anger since the 1992 season, but a typical NASCAR weekend will find him in the garage area, signing autographs, meeting old friends, sharing the same stories with others who were there in stock car racing’s growing years. Petty clearly stands among – and above most – of them. Yet, not only are many octogenarian former racers still moving above ground, but some also remain key pieces in the ever-changing, personality-driven, high-wire world of auto racing. All cheated death on many occasions, and their hard-charging, fuel-soaked, inches-from-disaster lifestyles weren’t the kind that typically lead to long residencies on Earth. To imagine decades ago that all of them would reach their 80s would be to defy good sense. Racing’s Old Guard now is an Even Older Guard. They were near the start of auto racing careers that would make them wealthy, internationally famous and iconic in the eyes of millions of fans and their peers.Īndretti now is 82. ![]() ![]() “I thought, ‘That was a really good catch.’ ” ![]() “I remember one time him being very loose in front of me and catching the car,” Andretti said. Mario Andretti remembers racing behind Richard Petty in the 1967 Daytona 500, which Andretti won.
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