Kyle
Eugene Petty (born June 2,
1960) is an American former stock car racing driver, and current racing commentator.
He is the son of racer Richard Petty, grandson of racer Lee Petty, and father of racer Adam Petty, who was killed in a crash during practice in May
2000. Petty last drove the No. 45 Dodge Charger for Petty Enterprises, where he formerly served as CEO; his last
race was in 2008. Petty was born in Randleman, North Carolina.[2] He made his major-league stock car debut at the
age of 18. He won the very first race he entered, the 1979 Daytona ARCA 200, in one
of his father's old 1978 Dodge Magnum race cars;[3] at the time, Petty became the youngest driver
to win a major-league stock car race. Later in the season, he made his Winston Cup Series debut;
again driving a passed down STP Dodge Magnum numbered
No. 42 (a number used by his grandfather Lee Petty) for his family's team. He ran five races and had a
ninth-place finish in his first series race, the 1979 Talladega 500. In
1980, he made a total of fifteen starts in the No. 42 (after crashing the last
of his father's Dodge Magnums in one of the Daytona 125 qualifying races) and
had six top-ten finishes, garnering a twenty-eighth-place points finish. He
began the 1981 season driving his father's No. 43 for one race, before running
a full schedule in his regular No. 42, finishing in the top-ten ten times and
finishing twelfth in points. He began the 1982 season with
two top-ten finishes, but later began splitting time between his No. 42 and the
No. 1 UNO/STP car owned by Hoss Ellington, and ended the season fifteenth in points. In 1983, he picked
up funding from 7-Eleven and accordingly switched his
number to 7. He had only two top-ten finishes but improved to thirteenth in the
standings. He followed that season up with six top-tens the following year, but
fell three spots in points.