HE CHOSE THE WALL AT 145 MPH—JUST TO SAVE A FRIEND. Charlotte Motor Speedway. 1974. A split second changed everything. Richard Childress’s car was stalled sideways, a sitting duck in the middle of the track. Right behind him, at 145 miles per hour, was Marty Robbins. Marty had two choices in that heartbeat: T-bone Richard’s car and possibly kill them both—or swerve into the concrete wall. Marty didn’t hesitate. He chose the wall. The impact was brutal. The car was mangled. But somehow, the “El Paso” singer walked away. As he climbed out of the wreck, dazed and battered, he did something only Marty would do. He started quietly singing “El Paso” to himself, just to check if his brain still worked, just to see if he still remembered the lyrics. “I figured right then it was time to quit,” Marty said later. He left racing for 18 months… but the track is in a man’s blood. He came back, because a man who chooses the wall for a friend is a man who never stops believing some things are worth more than a trophy. Marty Robbins passed away in December 1982. At his funeral, Richard Childress was there, carrying a debt of gratitude that few in Nashville truly understood. Marty never asked to be thanked. He just did what an outlaw with a heart of gold does. True friendship isn’t about the words—it’s about who swerves for you when the world is coming at you at 145 mph. Who in your life “chose the wall” for you? 👇
Marty Robbins Chose the Wall There are moments in life that reveal a person faster than years of interviews ever could. For Marty Robbins, one of those moments came at…