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NASCAR Sprint-Cup Series
CUP: The Woods Of VA. – Petty Theft
The Wood Brothers Racing Team has been one of the backbones of NASCAR since the sport was founded...
Rick Minter  | http://www.RacinToday.com  |  Posted December 11, 2009   Charlotte, NC
It was Kyle Petty who drove a Wood Brother Racing car to victory lane at Richmond International Raceway in 1986. (Photo: Wood Brother Racing)

The Woods, from Stuart, Va., have been racing continuously in the division now known as Sprint Cup since 1953 and have 96 wins to their credit.

In a RacinToday exclusive series, Eddie Wood, one of the second-generation members of the team, will discuss what he considers the top 10 wins in Wood Brothers history.

The wins aren’t ranked in any particular order, but Wood began with Kyle Petty’s win in the Miller High Life 400 at Richmond International Raceway on Feb. 23, 1986.

From Eddie Wood’s vantage point in the pits, as the laps wound down on a cold winter day at the Richmond Fairgrounds, it looked as if Petty was destined for a top-five finish. But with three laps to go, things changed for the better and in a hurry.

“Kyle went out of sight running fifth,” Wood said. What he couldn’t see was Dale Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip wrecking at the front of the field, taking out the top four cars as Petty steered through the melee to take the lead for good.

Earnhardt got the blame for the crash and was fined $5,000 and placed on probation. The fine later was reduced to $3,000 and the probation dropped.

But the Woods had another Cup victory, their first in three years, and Kyle Petty had his first.

The win also proved wrong the naysayers who said there was no way that the Pettys and Woods, who had battled each other for decades, could be successful together.

“People said we would never get along, but some of my best times in racing and in my life came when we raced with Kyle Petty,” Wood said. “We ran really well with Kyle, and we all got along fine.”

The win also was significant because it came in the first year that the Woods ran the full Cup schedule, and it was the first year they’d had major backing from non-automotive sponsors. It also was the first time the team’s cars had carried the No. 7, for sponsor 7-Eleven, the convenience store chain. The car also carried the colors of Citgo and Ford.

“It was really the first big sponsorship deal we’d had with corporate America,” Wood said.


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Rick Minter

RacinToday.com

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