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RICHARD PETTY
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February 06, 2008

Richard Petty

HE RACED INTO THE 1990s AND STILL STANDS AS THE SPORT'S WINNINGEST DRIVER, BUT IT WAS IN THE '60s THAT KING RICHARD STAKED HIS CLAIM TO THE THRONE AND SEEMED TO PAINT ALL OF NASCAR IN PETTY BLUE

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From SPORTS ILLUSTRATED , October 19, 1992

DOWN THE FINAL STRETCH, IN THE WANING WEEKS OF HIS CAREER, Richard Petty can hardly hear the crowds roaring their farewells. He is 55 years old and partly deaf. The engines have sung to him for too long—through 35 years and 200 major stock car racing wins and passage into blue-collar legend. � Only three races remain in this, Petty's final season of driving. Three more races, and there will be rest for the lanky frame that has been battered literally from head to foot—from concussions to broken toes, with all kinds of damage in between. In 1980 Petty drove with a broken neck, knowing that even a bump from another car could kill him. But the most telling setback occurred in 1978, when 40% of his ulcer-ravaged stomach was surgically removed, likely the price of being too nice to too many people for too long.

"Sometimes," he says, "it's a blessing to be hard of hearing."

Petty has given every bit of himself to the sport he personally brought out of the backwoods and off the bootlegger trails. He is NASCAR 's Arnold Palmer . When motor racing fans speak of the King, they don't mean Elvis .

"There are no more Richard Pettys here," says his son, Kyle, 32, himself a 14-year NASCAR driver. "Forget winning 200 races, seven championships, seven Daytona 500s [all records]. I'm talking about the Richard Petty who sits on a pit wall and signs autographs for four hours."

Petty has named his final rounds as a driver his Fan Appreciation Tour. Few figures in American sports have appreciated their fans as much as Petty has; few, if any, have reciprocated as thoroughly by mingling with the crowd. Petty does not tower over his followers so much as minister to them. He is of them and among them. One by one, hour by hour, day by day since 1958, he has not only shaken their hands and signed their picture postcards, but he has also talked to them—"talked to me just like I was somebody," as so many have said so often.

"What helps with people," says Petty, "is when, even though you've won a lot of money and been to see several presidents—you know, done the things they would like to do—they can still talk to you on their terms. I talk football with them, religion with them, or I can talk about the kids back there in the swimming hole. It don't make any difference."

The final deluge of emotion for the King will come in Atlanta on the weekend of Nov. 14. The night before the last race of the season Petty will appear before 75,000 of his closest followers in the new Georgia Dome , with the country-music group Alabama singing goodbye.

But Petty's biggest parting has already taken place. He has raced his last at Daytona International Speedway . The man and the track made each other famous. His seven victories in the Daytona 500 are as many as the second- and third-best achievers have managed together. The man and the event are synonymous.

He hasn't won on the NASCAR circuit since 1984, admitting that "the legend part is what has kept Richard Petty going." But that final victory provided the sort of material that seals lasting fame: It was Petty's 200th, and it came at his beloved Daytona, not in the 500 but in the Firecracker 400, on the Fourth of July, with President Ronald Reagan looking on.

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