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The Professor
BENNY PARSONS REMEMBERED


Benny Parsons, who charmed television audiences with his
folksy demeanor as much as he impressed fans with his
ability as a driver, died Tuesday January 16, 2007 at
Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte following
complications from lung cancer. He was 65.
The former self-proclaimed Detroit taxi
driver-turned-NASCAR racer never forgot his humble rural
North Carolina roots, and it came through in every
aspect of his life.
Even though he gained fame as the 1973 Winston Cup
champion and winner of the 1975 Daytona 500, Parsons
understood that as a broadcast analyst, it was his job
to aim the spotlight away from himself.
"I heard someone say this one time and I thought it was
fabulous," Parsons said. "Everyone can't be stars.
Someone has to sit on the sidewalk and clap as they go
by.
"We announcers on TV that talk about sports are simply
the people sitting on the sidewalk clapping as the
parade goes by. We are no longer the stars. The guys on
the racetracks and in football and basketball games --
those are the stars."
Still Parsons was a star in his own right. He was born
in 1941 in Wilkes County, N.C., but resided for much of
his life in Ellerbe, just a few miles up the road from
Rockingham, home of North Carolina Motor Speedway. It
was there that perhaps Parsons' greatest accomplishment
as a driver took place in the 1973 season finale.
Holding a slim lead over Richard Petty, Parsons' car was
heavily damaged in a Lap 13 accident. However, with help
from a number of different teams in the garage area,
Parsons was able to get back on the track, completing
enough laps to finish 28th and win the title.
Parsons' racing career came somewhat by accident. When
his parents moved north to Detroit following World War
II, Parsons helped work at his father's service station.
One evening in 1963, a truck towing a racecar stopped at
the station for fuel. Parsons was invited to join them
and hopped into the bed of the pickup on the way to
nearby Mount Clemens Speedway. According to the story,
when the regular driver failed to show up, Parsons
volunteered to drive.
Parsons made his first visit to Daytona that same year.
"I had become a huge race fan and had been going to the
races with some guys that were running the ARCA series
up in the Midwest. I didn't know a soul in Daytona, and
couldn't get in the garage area," he said.
"But I would buy my infield ticket for three or four
dollars -- whatever it was to come in -- and just hang
on the fence and watch those cars being pushed by. I
would've paid anything I had in my pocket just to push
-- you know, Fred Lorenzen's car and Ned Jarrett's car
and Fireball Robert's car."
The highlight of the trip, Parsons recalled, was when he
met H. B. Bailey's wife in the lobby of the hotel where
they were staying.
"She slipped me a pit pass, so I got in for about two
hours one day," Parsons said. "It was the highlight of
my life, getting inside the garage area and getting
close to those racecars."
Parsons quickly made a name for himself in the Midwest
racing ranks, winning ARCA rookie of the year honors in
1965, then capturing the ARCA championship in 1968 and
1969.
He made his NASCAR debut in 1964, earning $250 for a
21st-place finish after his Holman-Moody Ford began
overheating.
Parsons qualified for the first of 20 Daytona 500 starts
in 1969, finishing eighth in the No. 88 Ford. He would
go on to run the entire 1970 season in L. G. DeWitt's
No. 72, posting the first of 21 career victories at
Virginia's South Boston Speedway in 1971.
When David Pearson spun out while leading with two laps
remaining in the 1975 Daytona 500, Parsons was there to
take the checkered flag, giving Chevrolet its first win
in that race since 1960.
Parsons also became the first driver to qualify a stock
car at over 200 mph when he won the pole at Talladega
for the 1982 Winston 500 at a speed of 200.176 mph.
After retiring as an active driver following the 1988
season, Parsons joined ESPN as a race analyst, winning
an Ace Award in 1989 and an Emmy in 1996. He moved over
to NBC and TNT when those networks began NASCAR coverage
in 2001.
In July 2006, Parsons revealed that he had been
diagnosed with lung cancer. Parsons admitted he had been
a smoker but had kicked the habit nearly 30 years
before.
Parsons was inducted into the International Motorsports
Hall of Fame in 1994 and named one of NASCAR's 50
greatest drivers in 1998.
info from: www.nascar.com |