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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Kyle_PettyKyle Petty - Wikipedia

    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.

  2. Kyle Eugene Petty (nacido el 2 de junio de 1960 en Level Cross, Carolina del Norte) es un piloto de automovilismo estadounidense, especializado en stock cars o automóviles de serie. En 829 carreras disputadas por la Copa NASCAR, cosechó 8 victorias y 52 top 5.

  3. ABOUT KYLE PETTY. Kyle Petty is an auto racing icon, a champion of philanthropy and one of the most popular personalities in NASCAR. The son of NASCAR Champion Richard Petty and grandson of NASCAR pioneer Lee Petty – Kyle followed in their footsteps, starting his 30-year NASCAR career as a Cup Series driver in 1979 at age 19, before also ...

  4. Kyle Petty is a former NASCAR driver turned racing analyst who has become one of the most popular personalities in all of sports. As a member of one of NASCAR’s pioneer families, Kyle is as much a product of racing as he is of his famous father, Richard Petty – “The King,” and grandfather, Lee Petty. While his name will forever connect ...

  5. Kyle Petty joins Stacking Pennies host Corey LaJoie and the crew to discuss his autobiography, the Petty name, the changing nature of racing and more. Listen to a new episode of Stacking...

  6. RACER. Kyle Petty is a retired American stock car racing driver. As the son of 7-time NASCAR Cup Champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard "The King" Petty and grandson of NASCAR pioneer Lee Petty, Kyle grew up in the garage dreaming of following in their footsteps.

  7. Kyle Petty was born on June 2, 1960 in Randleman, NC, to Richard Petty and Lynda Petty. His father is a legendary stock car driver who has won the Daytona 500 a record 7 times, the points championship a record-tying 7 times, and had 200 career victories, the last coming on July 4, 1984 in front of then-president Ronald Reagan.