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Benny Parsons dies after battle with lung cancer

Old 01-16-2007, 10:50 AM
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Wicked Weasel
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Default Benny Parsons dies after battle with lung cancer



http://www.nascar.com/2007/news/head...ary/index.html

Originally Posted by NASCAR.com
Benny Parsons, who charmed television audiences with his folksy demeanor as much as he impressed fans with his ability as a driver, died Tuesday at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte following complications from lung disease. 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, 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.

"The first thing everyone asks me is, 'Are you a smoker?'," Parsons said at the time. "The answer is that I smoked my last cigarette way back in 1978 and since then I've hated being around smoking. I don't even allow anyone in my foursome to smoke on the golf course."

After treatment, the 65-year-old announced in October that his cancer was in full remission.

"Three months ago my family doctor called me into his office and told me I had lung cancer," Parsons said at the time. "So Rick Hendrick told me if I was going to fight cancer, you have to get [oncologist Steven A.] Limentani. He helped Rick through his leukemia 10 years ago. So we did.

"The last three months we have been battling the disease. Then Wednesday, I had a scan and [Limentani] called me Wednesday afternoon with the best news: 'The cancer is gone ... see ya.' "

However, Parsons was unable to attend the Nextel Cup Awards Ceremony in New York as the cancer treatment reportedly left his left lung too damaged to function properly, according to a report in the Charlotte Observer.

He was admitted to the hospital for the final time on Dec. 26 as his condition progressively worsened.

Parsons was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1994 and named one of NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers in 1998.
Old 01-16-2007, 11:07 AM
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Old 01-16-2007, 11:16 AM
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horrible You rarely last long with lung cancer I know first hand.
Old 01-16-2007, 12:00 PM
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BP was a class act.....
Old 01-16-2007, 12:01 PM
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I remembering watching him race out at the old Riverside Raceway (I grew up watching Nascar boys on road courses) in the 70's. I liked his style of race commentary, easy going (not a know it all) yet insightful.
Old 01-16-2007, 12:14 PM
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"The last three months we have been battling the disease. Then Wednesday, I had a scan and [Limentani] called me Wednesday afternoon with the best news: 'The cancer is gone ... see ya.' "


What does that mean? I may be reading it wrong.
Old 01-16-2007, 12:14 PM
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He was one of the best. Now he is with Dale and Neil.

Bob
Old 01-16-2007, 12:21 PM
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Man, that's tough to hear.

Mike
Old 01-16-2007, 12:39 PM
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Originally Posted by John Shiels
"The last three months we have been battling the disease. Then Wednesday, I had a scan and [Limentani] called me Wednesday afternoon with the best news: 'The cancer is gone ... see ya.' "


What does that mean? I may be reading it wrong.
From what I know from Reading Lance Armstrong's story - Cancer can be gone from your body after therapy, but then it takes 12 months to be past the point of it coming back. If it comes back before 12 months then the therapy didn't work.

So when they state that the cancer is gone then you have 12 months of hoping that it doesn't come back otherwise you will probably not make it.

BTW - Lance's beating cancer date is the 12 month anniversary date not the week after the chemo when the slides show no cancer in his body. He said the 12 months were the worse of his life considering each time he went for a blood test there was a chance that the cancer would be back.
Old 01-16-2007, 12:54 PM
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And we lost Bobby Hamilton early last week, also.

Rest In Peace, BP. We'll miss you in the booth.

Mike
Old 01-16-2007, 07:09 PM
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Very sad
Old 01-16-2007, 07:33 PM
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Old 01-16-2007, 07:37 PM
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I miss him already.
Old 01-16-2007, 11:06 PM
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When Nascar starts racing again, it wont be the same !!!!
Buffet Benny...You will be missed!!!!
Old 01-18-2007, 09:48 AM
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Originally Posted by John Shiels
"The last three months we have been battling the disease. Then Wednesday, I had a scan and [Limentani] called me Wednesday afternoon with the best news: 'The cancer is gone ... see ya.' "


What does that mean? I may be reading it wrong.
Great question John, It sounds as like even though the cancer was in remmission his lung had severe damge from the radiation. I'm not understanding what happened here as well.

Old 01-18-2007, 10:02 AM
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Originally Posted by z060ntrack
Great question John, It sounds as like even though the cancer was in remmission his lung had severe damge from the radiation. I'm not understanding what happened here as well.

here was my response based on my limited knowledge although it makes sense

Originally Posted by Wicked Weasel
From what I know from Reading Lance Armstrong's story - Cancer can be gone from your body after therapy, but then it takes 12 months to be past the point of it coming back. If it comes back before 12 months then the therapy didn't work.

So when they state that the cancer is gone then you have 12 months of hoping that it doesn't come back otherwise you will probably not make it.

BTW - Lance's beating cancer date is the 12 month anniversary date not the week after the chemo when the slides show no cancer in his body. He said the 12 months were the worse of his life considering each time he went for a blood test there was a chance that the cancer would be back.
Old 01-18-2007, 10:35 AM
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I think I read something yesterday about blood clot in his lung. I think 5 years recovery rate on lung cancer is 5-10% survive
Old 01-18-2007, 11:02 AM
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Originally Posted by John Shiels
I think I read something yesterday about blood clot in his lung. I think 5 years recovery rate on lung cancer is 5-10% survive
wow that is not good odds. My mother-in-law had lung cancer. Never smoked and never worked with bad chemicals. Who knows why she got it. The doctors said 1 year if the chemo did not work. they were right on the button unfortunately

On a good note I was just reading that survival rates for cancer is up.

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