| Somewhere in South Carolina near a dirt track there’s a shrine
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| Erected to the memory of a little 'ole friend of mine
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| A natural born dirt dauber, car racing was his game
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| He rolled 'ole number 7 Fireball was his name
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| With the makings of a honker and a roll of bailing wire
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| He tied his hopes together and just set them tracks on fire
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| Three hundred fifty on the hood; |
| a big 7 on each door
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| In his heart a will to win and his right foot on the floor
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| His motto was a simple one «Stand on it and turn left.
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| If someone’s gonna beat you make him run»
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| All he knew was ??? |
| and always lead the rest
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| Fireball rolled a seven and he won.
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| He took the world 600, the old Atlanta 5
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| Bristol, Richmond, Nashville, Daytona for the ride
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| The hotdogs laid it on him. |
| They’d draft, chart, and sweat.
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| But Fireball rolled a seven, the kind that’s hard to get.
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| He had the pole at Darlington; |
| he won it off the rail.
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| And he run away at Charlotte, 600 miles of Hell.
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| A slingshot sewed up Petty; |
| he was out in front real fast.
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| A checkered flag was in the bag; |
| nobody would get past.
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| He was flat out in that back shoot; |
| only 3 laps from the start.
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| When he saw a yellow bumper cross up and come apart.
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| A rookie and a shaker, runnin' scared and lost it all.
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| A hush fell on that crowd; |
| number 7 took the wall.
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| His old skidlid hangs in the hall, the little chargers gone,
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| To save a friend he laid it on the line.
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| His old poncho is rust and bound, but his memory still lives on.
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| Fireball rolled a seven every time.
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| Fireball rolled a seven every time. |