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Super Bowl of Short Track Racing to be
called Adam Petty Memorial All-American 400
NASHVILLE, TN — The All-American
400, the Super Bowl of Short Track Races, will be even more meaningful
in this its 25thannual run. Music City Motorplex President
Joe Mattioli announced this week that the 25th edition of
the All-American 400, slated for Nov. 2-4 at Nashville’s Music City
Motorplex and sanctioned by the CRA Super Series, would be run in
memory of the late Adam Petty. The season-ending event at the
Nashville facility will be titled the Adam Petty Memorial All-American
400.
Adam Petty was lost in a racing accident
in May of 2000 at the age of 19, just over a month after competing in
a NASCAR Busch Series race in Nashville.

"The All-American 400 is always a huge
event for everyone at the Music City Motorplex, the city of Nashville,
competitors and fans from all over the nation," Mattioli said. "It is
quite an honor for us to name this event in memory of Adam Petty. The
Petty name is synonymous with stock car racing and good works. The
All-American 400 is the "Super Bowl of Short Track Racing. This is a
perfect, meaningful and worthwhile fit."
The Adam Petty Memorial All-American 400
will benefit the Victory Junction Gang Camp, which was opened in 2004
by Adam Petty’s parents, Kyle and Pattie, with their children,
Montgomery Lee and Austin. The Victory Junction Gang Camp, located in
Piedmont-Triad area of North Carolina, operates year-round serving
children, ages seven to 15, with a variety of health issues. Victory
Junction operates solely on the donations of corporations,
organizations and individuals. The children who attend Victory
Junction would likely not be able to attend other camps due to their
medical needs, and it is free to all who come.
"We are honored that the Motorplex is
doing this for Adam, commented Pattie Petty. "He loved to race at
Nashville and we loved to watch him race there. Kyle and I saw him
really get excited as he truly learned his skills and gained great
confidence on that track. He grew up there when he was very young
watching both his dad and his granddad race there. The Petty family
truly has a lot of history at the short track in Nashville and many
cherished memories," Petty concluded.
"While what the Petty’s have
accomplished and contributed to Motorsports on the track is
remarkable, it what they have been able to do at the Victory Junction
Camp takes my breath away," Mattioli continued. For all the Petty’s,
especially Adam’s siblings, Austin and Montgomery Lee, their
commitment to the camp and seeming endless desire to help others is an
inspiration for all of us," Mattioli concluded.
Adam Petty was primed to continue the
Petty name is stockcar racing. His great grandfather, Lee, his
grandfather, Richard, and his dad, Kyle, all preceded him in NASCAR
racing action. Lee, Richard and Kyle visited Victory Lane 263 times
with Richard collecting 200 triumphs and gaining the title as "The
King."
Adam Petty began racing go-karts at the
age of six. He made his NASCAR debut in the NASCAR Weekly Series in
1997 and competed in 25 events. Late in the 1998 season, Adam Petty
made his initial NASCAR Busch Grand National Series start at Gateway
International Raceway. In all, he started 43 Busch Series events and
recorded four top-10 finishes. His best run in the series was a
fourth-place showing in 1999 in the Auto Club 300 at California
Speedway. Adam Petty also started in two NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
events in 1999 and he made his first appearance on the NASCAR Winston
Cup Series in April of 2000. That first and only start in NASCAR’s top
division came just three days before the death of Lee Petty.
"Adam was carrying on a family
tradition," Mattioli said. "He seemed a sure thing to carry on the
great racing tradition established by the Petty family before he died.
"Race fans will always remember the
Petty name," Mattioli added. "And, by naming the All-American 400 in
Adam’s memory, we hope to ensure that short track race fans will
always remember his contributions as well as those of his family
members to the sport we all know and love."
The All-American 400 originated in 1981
when All-Pro President Bob Harmon and ASA President Rex Robbins
derived the notion in an attempt to develop a Super Bowl for the
nation’s top short track racers. What transpired was a battle of
supremacy from drivers from the north and south. Southern standout
Butch Lindley won the inaugural All-American 400, nipping the likes of
Mark Martin and Dick Trickle to score a huge victory. That win soon
earned the event the title of the Civil War on Wheels. Among the
victors in the longstanding history of the event are Rusty Wallace,
Darrell Waltrip, Gary St. Amant, Jeff Purvis, Mike Garvey, Freddie
Query and many other popular names. Jeff Purvis, who claimed victories
in 1991, 1992 and 1995, is the all-time wins leader in the event.
Entries for the Adam Petty Memorial
All-American 400 will be coming out in the next couple of weeks. Go to
craracing.net for more
information on the CRA Super Series.
More information available at
www.MusicCityMotorplex.com.
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