Almirola to drive the No. 41 Ford this weekend in honor of Maurice Petty
October 22, 2013
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Sporting
the traditional "Petty Blue" paint scheme synonymous with Richard Petty
and the No. 43, the current incarnation of the No. 43 Richard Petty
Motorsports Ford will honor 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Maurice
Petty this weekend at Martinsville Speedway.
Only
there will be something different about this car, which will be driven
by current RPM driver Aric Almirola. Instead of the traditional No.
43, this weekend the No. 41 will be affixed to its doors and roof, as
was unveiled at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, N.C., on Tuesday
afternoon.
"You
might notice that there is a little something different to Aric
Almirola's car this weekend. It's the 41," said NASCAR Hall of Fame's
Executive
Director Winston Kelley upon the car's unveiling. "And Maurice, who we
affectionately call 'Chief,' drove the 41, and he drove the 42 as well.
But the 41 was Chief's primary number when he was a driver as well."
Maurice
drove in 26 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races over parts of five seasons
(1960-64), including nine in the 41 car. During his short driving
career, he compiled seven top fives and 16 top 10s.
"I
could've raced more, but it was costing more to run me and we were
going broke pretty fast so something had to be done. I said 'heck, I'll
just
build the engines for it,'" Petty said. "But what y'all don't know is
Aric, we built engines for him when he was running the Late Model Stock.
So, he's been around a little bit, too."
Maurice
is the fourth member of the Petty family to be inducted into the NASCAR
Hall of Fame, joining his brother Richard (Inaugural Class of 2010),
father Lee (Class of 2011) and cousin Dale Inman (Class of 2012).
"This
hall of fame has probably got to be the only hall of fame in the world
that's got the whole team in [it]," said Richard. "I mean you got daddy,
you got Dale, you got me, you got Chief. That is the team. That was the
team. So, that's something a little bit different, too."
Maurice
will be the first engine builder inducted in the NASCAR Hall of Fame
having won the Mechanic of the Year award seven times. The horsepower
he supplied to his Petty Enterprises' engines resulted in seven
championships and 212 wins.
Richard
wasn't the only driver to benefit from Maurice's engines. Drivers like
Pete Hamilton, Jim Paschal and Buddy Baker also celebrated victories
in race cars carrying Maurice's engines.
Although
Almirola's regular car number -- the No. 43 -- will not see action this
weekend, all points and prize money he collects in the No. 41 will
transfer to the No. 43. The Martinsville race will be the first time
since Oct. 27, 2003, when Jeff Green failed to qualify for the Atlanta
race, that the No. 43 will not be entered in a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
points-paying event.
Since
1994, the No. 43 has only missed 11 of 690 races. Overall, it has
competed in 1,876 of the 2,386 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races, the most
of any car number.
Martinsville
Speedway is the perfect venue at which to honor Maurice Petty. Petty
Enterprises drivers won 19 times at the .526-mile track with Maurice
a part of 18 of those victories.
"It's
really an honor. You know you look at the race teams today. I look at
these race teams, and with all these race teams, their big focus is
taking control of their own destiny. They build their own cars, they
build their own parts, they build their own engines," Almirola said.
"Well, it started right here with these guys. They were the first ones
to take control of their own destiny. They had
the best driver, the best crew chief, the best engine builder and they
won a lot of races because of it. So, it really is an honor to drive
this 41 and the tribute for Maurice. It's gonna be really special to do
it at Martinsville, a place they've won so many
times."
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