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Kyle Petty, Driver #45 Wells Fargo Dodge
Birth Date: June
2, 1960
Height: 6’ 2”
Weight: 195 lbs.
Birthplace: Randleman, N.C.
Resides: Trinity,
N.C.
Wife: Pattie
Children: Adam, Austin, Montgomery Lee
Growing up
in racing is always an advantage if you want to win in NASCAR
Nextel Cup competition, but when you grow up in Level Cross,
North Carolina, and your father is casually referred to as “The King,” the
expectations for your career jump tremendously. Kyle Petty was
able to productively use his family business, and to take advantage
of his incredible driving talents and people skills, to build
a winning driving resume and rebuild a racing business that has
been the most successful in the history of motorsports.
Today, Petty remains a fixture at his family-owned business. A
proven winner, Petty stays focused and determined to keep Petty
Enterprises at the forefront of the motorsports' world. Doing so,
Petty will again sit behind the wheel of the No. 45 Dodge in 2007.
Petty will welcome back primary sponsors Wells Fargo, Marathon,
and Tire Kingdom to the hood and sides of his Petty Enterprises
Dodge.
Ever since he was a young boy, Petty has been around race tracks,
stock cars, and drivers of the NASCAR Nextel Cup circuit. His father,
Richard Petty, is the most successful driver in the history of
the sport, while his grandfather, Lee Petty, was one of the most
successful pioneers of NASCAR racing. It comes to no one's surprise
that Kyle Petty's first time in a major league stock car race he
crossed the finish line first, winning the 1979 Daytona ARCA 200.
Winning races is just what the Pettys do, and now Kyle Petty is
leading the charge to a newer, stronger, better Petty Enterprises
for years to come.
In 2001 for the first time since 1963, Petty Enterprises, under
the lead role of Petty, campaigned three cars in Cup competition.
Petty Enterprises also led the Dodge manufacturer in its return
to NASCAR racing in the same season. Being a car owner for three
teams, and one of the most accomplished drivers on the track, in
2001 Petty orchestrated one of the most challenging tasks in NASCAR
Nextel Cup history. Today, he continues to lead the organization
back to the top of the stock car world.
A man with
eight victories on the NASCAR Nextel Cup circuit, Petty knows
what it takes to be a winner. Having begun his career working
for Petty Enterprises, and later running motorsports' most successful
team, Petty has also driven for such successful car owners as
the Wood Brothers and Felix Sabates, learning the “do's and don'ts“ of
NASCAR Nextel Cup competition. In 1997 Petty opened pe2, and experienced
first hand what it was like to be a car owner. Collecting two top-fives
and nine top-10s in his first year as a car owner, Petty was moving
to a new level in the business at Petty Enterprises, while at the
same time staying a fierce competitor on the track. At the end
of the 1998 season, Petty packed his bags - and everybody else's
bag too - moving back home to Level Cross to become the CEO at
Petty Enterprises and continue his driving career where it started.
The 2006 season,
highlighted by three prominent hires, saw Petty Enterprises turn
the proverbial “corner“ to
rise back to the ranks of stock car racing's elite. Robbie Loomis
returned to Petty Enterprises as Director of Race Operations
and he assumed the day-to-day duties from Petty. 2000 NEXTEL
Cup Champion, Bobby Labonte, came on board to drive the famed
No. 43 as a teammate to Petty to give Petty Enterprises a solid
stable of drivers. NASCAR veteran Billy Wilburn was hired at
Petty's crew chief in September, a move that resulted in such
a great driver-crew chief cohesion that it led the No. 45 back
into the top-35 in owner points.
If 2006 was a season of change for Petty, then 2007 will be one
of progression. The resurgence of Petty and the legendary Petty
Enterprises race team was, no doubt, one of the bright spots from
the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup season. The surrounding cast that Wilburn
and Petty have assembled on the No. 45 crew has allowed the team
to set even loftier goals. The brass ring that is Victory Lane
is as close as it has been in quite sometime for Petty.
Petty is a man, who besides being known as one of the great car
owners and drivers, is also known for his charity work. The Chick-Fil-A
Kyle Petty Charity Ride Across America was founded by Petty in
1995 to benefit children's charities across America. Every year
hundreds of fans, drivers, and crew members jump on their motorcycles
to join Petty in visiting local children's hospitals and other
local charities. Today, the Petty charity ride is the most successful
event by any person in the NASCAR garage.
In October
of 2000 Petty once again confirmed that giving back to the community
is what proves most important to him and his family by making
plans to open the Victory Junction Gang Camp near his home in
Level Cross, N.C. The camp became a reality in 2004 when it opened
its doors to become the sixth camp in the “Hole
in the Wall Gang“ camps founded by actor Paul Newman. For
his efforts Petty was named NASCAR Winston Cup Illustrated “Person
of the Year“ in both 1999 and 2000, marking the first time
that any one person has won it in consecutive years. He has also
won the 2000 and 2004 Myers Brothers Award, the highest award presented
by the National Motorsports Press Association, and in 2002 Petty
was awarded the True Value Person of the Year Award for his humanitarian
efforts.
For sure Petty makes full use of his time, and this racing season
will be no different. The No. 45 Wells Fargo/Marathon/Tire Kingdom
Dodge team is ready for another banner year. On and off the track
Petty is looking forward to making a difference in 2007.
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