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Adam Kyler Petty (July 10, 1980 - May 12, 2000) was the first fourth-generation
driver in NASCAR history.
Petty was born in High Point, North Carolina into stock car racing
"royalty." The son of Kyle Petty, he was widely expected to become the next
great Petty, following in the footsteps of his father, grandfather Richard,
and great-grandfather Lee.
Petty began his career in 1998, shortly after he turned 18. Like his father
Kyle, he won his first Automobile Racing Club of America Re/Max Series start,
in the #45 Sprint Spree Pontiac at Lowe's Motor Speedway in that same year.
Petty drove a #45 Sprint Chevrolet in the Busch Series full-time in 1999
after a successful season in the Midwestern short track American Speed
Association season in the #45 Sprint Spree Pontiac. He also finished sixth
in his first Busch Series race at Daytona and had a best finish of fourth
place that year. However, he failed to qualify for three races, and finished
20th overall in points.
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Petty Enterprises planned on giving Adam a Winston Cup ride in 2001 and
planned to give him seven starts in Cup in 2000, along with a full Busch
campaign in a car sponsored by Sprint. He struggled early in the Busch
season, but managed to qualify in his first attempt at Winston Cup during
the DirecTV 500 at Texas Motor Speedway. He was disappointed, however, when
his father failed to do the same. Further disappointments came when his
engine failed during the race, giving Adam a 40th overall finish. During the
race, however, Kyle was able to drive in the event, however, as a relief
driver for Elliott Sadler, after Sadler felt ill and had to exit his car
during the race. Lee Petty lived to see his debut, but died just three days
afterwards.
Tragically, on May 12, Petty was practicing his Busch car at New Hampshire
International Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire for the next day's 200-lap
event when the throttle of his car stuck and sent him head-on into a wall.
The impact killed Petty immediately. He was only 19 at the time.
Adam's death, along with 1998 Cup Raybestos Rookie of the Year Kenny Irwin's
at the same track, led NASCAR to mandate the use of a kill switch on the
steering wheel and the adoption of the Whelen Modified Tour restrictor plate
for the September Cup race; the plate was abandoned after a year. However,
it was not until the death of Dale Earnhardt (who died under similar
circumstnaces) that NASCAR adopted mandatory for mandatory head-and-neck
restraints in October 2001.
Kyle Petty, who drove the #44 car at the time of the crash, drove Adam's #45
car in the Busch Series for the remainder of 2000. He has used that number
since in Nextel Cup races in tribute and had Sprint sponsor the #45 for two
seasons. To this day, Kyle drives an all-black car in memoriam whenever he
races in New Hampshire.
In October 2000, five months after Adam's death, his family partnered with
Paul Newman and the Hole in the Wall Gang camp to begin, as a memorial to
the fallen son, the Victory Junction Gang camp in Randleman, NC. The camp
has received support from many NASCAR drivers, teams, and sponsors,
including Cup Series sponsor Sprint Nextel, which has a replica of the car
Adam won races in 1998 in the camp.
In 2004, the Victory Junction Gang camp opened its doors. |
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