Tim Richmond ~ A Beautiful Memory
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Tuesday July 31 2012, 12:04 PM

Now, with all the talk and buzz about drugs once again the topic du jour with my brethren, just as it was 25 years ago, we approach a race at Pocono, and what better place than his favorite track to remind you, or perhaps introduce you to that young racer? What follows here is not all new, but then, history, if accurate, knows no change.   It is the story of the rise and fall, and oh, what a fall it proved to be, of one of and perhaps the best racer NASCAR has ever seen. That point will be forever moot, as this racer died far too young to prove or disprove its validity. Racers and race fans, I give you, Tim Richmond...

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Tim Richmond was a NOVA: a star that burns for a short time with an intense light. When extinguished it leaves the world a darker place for it having been there.

Unlike most Winston Cup drivers, who get rich by driving a car and winning races, Tim was born into the lap of luxury, never wanting for anything and pretty much having everything his own way.  Prep school, fast cars, fast bikes and fast women were his lifestyle. Movie stars and musicians were his friends.

This astonishingly good-looking young man never saw the seat of an actual racecar until he was 21 years old, and then it was not a stock car, but an open wheel Sprint car, belonging to a friend.  It was love at first drive, as it were, and Tim had found his avocation.

[caption id="attachment_2148" align="aligncenter" width="300"]Johnny Rutherford Winner Johnny Rutherford gives Tim a ride - IMS Photo[/caption]

He spent a few years racing Sprints and in 1980 raced the Indianapolis 500 where he finished ninth and was voted rookie of the race. After that year, feeling there were still worlds to conquer and dragons to be slain, he moved on to the stock cars of Winston Cup.  Later, in explaining the difference between the two, he would state that one "drove" an Indy car, but "raced" a stock car, and race them he did, almost as if his life depended upon speed.

To say that Tim was different from those good ol' southern drivers would be akin to saying that a cat is not quite a dog.  Surrounded by gruff, tough characters like Dale Earnhardt, Richard Petty and Cale Yarborough, Tim stood out like a peacock in a flock of crows.  His expensive tastes in clothing, food and drink, not to mention ladies, set him quite apart from the norm, but the lad could drive!

[caption id="attachment_2149" align="aligncenter" width="286"]Tim Richmond A Dapper Tim Richmond - From the Craig Bontrager Collection[/caption]

He was not, however, an overnight success, driving one race at Pocono in 1980, for D.K. Ulrich, and spending 1981 driving a series of catch rides for several different car owners, only to face the 1982 season with no ride at all.  That was cured when J.D. Stacy had a falling out with his driver, Joe Ruttman, and came looking for Tim's services. Tim would win two races in that year, both at the old Riverside road course in California, and managed to finish 26th in points, with 7 top five and 12 top ten finishes, although he only ran 26 races.

In 1983, he accepted what would become a three- year stint with the new "Blue Max" team, owned by drag racing great, Raymond Beadle, with Barry Dodson as crew chief.  Tim and Barry became the best of friends during that time, and together they shared 2 wins, 18 top five and 34 top ten finishes, along with placing 10th in the points in 1983, 12th in 1984 and 11th in 1985.

About this time, enter Rick Hendrick, who saw a world of potential in the flamboyant young driver with that proverbial fire in his belly to win races.  Rick created a brand new team; ostensibly belonging to his father, "Papa Joe" (It was some silly rule about multi-car teams, which has obviously gone by the wayside.)

He built the #25 team around Tim, and especially for him, with Folgers Coffee as the sponsor, and the irascible Harry Hyde  as crew chief.  If you've ever watched "Days of Thunder", the Harry Hogg character was patterned...loosely... after Hyde.  There was a lot of Timmy in that Cole Trickle character, but one could also see a lot of Dale Earnhardt, and when it came to racing the two were not so very different.

[caption id="attachment_2150" align="aligncenter" width="300"]Harry and Tim Harry and Tim - Charlotte 1986 - Ray Lamm Collection[/caption]

What a shame that the new team got off to such a slow start in 1986, because before it was over, Tim would win 7 races, including both races at his beloved Pocono Raceway, and sit on 8 poles.  No other driver fared as well, but a couple of mechanical failures late in the year dropped him to third in the points, behind a winning Dale Earnhardt and 6 points behind Darrell Waltrip.  True to his style, Timmy had anticipated winning that trophy so much that he'd had a special tuxedo custom tailored for the occasion, along with a black and white checkered silk shirt.  Although Tim never got to wear that tux as the champion, his dear friend Barry would wear it in 1989, as crew chief for then Champion Rusty Wallace.

It seemed to the casual observer that 1986 was a banner year for Tim Richmond, with all the wins, the near championship and his announcement about mid-year that he had proposed to a young lady, and was awaiting her decision. (You could almost hear the collective sigh of a million or more brokenhearted gals at the thought of this handsome young devil being taken off the market)  The casual observer was wrong!  The engagement, much like the Championship, never materialized, and immediately after the end of the season, Tim presented himself, under a false name, at the Cleveland Clinic, to be diagnosed with auto-immune deficiency syndrome, better known as AIDS.

Over the fall of 1986 he had been noticeably ill, to the point of greatly concerning Harry Hyde, but Tim brushed it off as flu and indeed, seemed to recover for a while, only to be quite ill again by the last two races, and reportedly looked far from healthy at the awards banquet. He spent much of that winter in a hospital, and then recuperated at a Florida beach house, while we were being told he was suffering from double pneumonia and exhaustion.

One has to remember that at this time in our history the HIV virus and the ensuing terminal disease known as AIDS were barely beginning to be understood. It fell to Tim's mother, Evelyn Richmond, to call Rick Hendrick and explain to him what the disease was, and what it would mean in the end.  Hendrick was crushed and heartbroken as the full import was brought home to him and he knew he would lose his protégé and friend.  Tim, on the other hand, was not easily done in, and continued to recover as he worked out to regain his strength for a comeback.

After an ill-fated outing at Rockingham in early spring of 1987, he retired once more to work harder on himself.  When he finally returned to race a full 500 miles, it was at Pocono.  Of course!  In true Tim Richmond style, he won the race, and I'm very sure that Victory Lane still bears the stain of all the tears he shed that day. The next race was at Riverside, and Tim won that one too, with a sad but cheering Barry Dodson sitting on a hillside, watching his friend win his last race ever.

Tim

By the time Michigan rolled around in August, Tim had to be driven from his truck to the car.  Sorry, I don't recall the results of that race, but shortly thereafter Tim checked himself back into the Cleveland Clinic. Les Richter, then director of competition for NASCAR phoned Rick Hendrick to inform him that his driver appeared to be in no shape to take to the track. It would be in September, after an announced comeback at the Southern 500 that never materialized, that Tim resigned from Hendrick Motorsports, to free the team to hire a new driver.

Now, while all this was going on, things in the garage area did not remain quiet.  Anyone who follows this sport knows about the "rumor mill", which can help or harm, cure or kill, with equal abandon, and it was in full swing!  The mention of AIDS, or the possibility thereof had gotten out, and spread like a grassfire in a drought.  Along with it, speculation generated more rumors, dealing with how the disease had been contracted.  Some laid it to promiscuity, which it probably was, while others hinted at other causes, but by far the most damning were the rumors of drug involvement. To my knowledge, no one, to this day, has ever claimed to have seen Tim doing drugs or even talking about it, but that is the one that persisted, perhaps because its fire was fueled and fanned by no less a personage than Richard Petty.  I was never sure what his problem with Tim might have been, but on more than one occasion he launched into some quite vitriolic speech for the benefit of the press and thereby, the fans.

When the Busch Clash, the first race of 1988 rolled around, Tim was eligible and wanted to drive it. It was then that NASCAR came up with one of those "on the spot" rules, supposedly instituting a drug testing policy, but somehow it only applied to Tim.  Having anticipated this, Tim had stopped taking his medication some 6 weeks before. Just prior to going to Daytona, he had his own doctor run a drug screen (which was entirely clean) and seal away the results.  When he arrived at the track, he requested that the test be run immediately, which was done.  It was announced a couple of days later that Richmond was suspended from racing indefinitely for testing positive for banned substances.

He immediately requested and got a meeting with Richter, where he vehemently pointed out that a mistake had been made, and demanded another test, which was done.  The second test was negative, but of course, the results of the first test had been given to the world.  NASCAR would later admit that the only substances found in the first test were common cold remedies that most of us have taken, Sudafed and Advil! There never had been drugs or banned substances.

It was all a mistake. Eyewash!  It was a carefully conceived plan on the part of NASCAR officials from Bill France Jr. on down, to discredit this man, who dared to come down with an unpopular disease on their watch. Even back then, it was all about the corporate image.  Eventually, they had to lift his suspension, but still refused to let him drive without surrendering his medical records from the Cleveland Clinic, which would have proved he had AIDS.  So feared was this disease then, he refused, preferring to take the secret to his grave rather than own up to it. One thing he did do, being Tim Richmond, was hire a small plane to fly over Daytona on race day, trailing a banner that read "Fans, I Miss You-Tim Richmond" We missed him too!

Later that year, Tim filed suit against NASCAR for defamation of character relating to the drug test and the false information released. NASCAR countered by demanding reams of information: Richmond's tax returns from 1980-87; the results of every test of his urine, blood or other bodily fluids since 1980; records of every visit to a doctor, psychologist or counselor since 1980; and his medical records from the Cleveland Clinic and his personal doctor in Florida. These boys know how to fight!  By fall, the lawsuit was withdrawn, once more to avoid disclosing his medical records.  Rick Hendrick probably summed up all that happened in the best way. "That's horrible to damage someone like that - to character assassinate without the facts."

Tim retired to seclusion in West Palm Beach, Florida, where he remained, with his mother, until his death on August 13, 1989.  In all those months, there were very few visitors from the "family" of NASCAR.  Rick Hendrick remained close to Tim, as did Barry Dodson, but the vast majority of drivers were conspicuous in their absence, probably due to a combination of fear of the disease and fear of retribution from NASCAR.  Kyle Petty offered this statement as a summation:

"It all boils down to AIDS. I don’t care what anybody tells you. Nobody knows how to handle AIDS, especially in a sport as backward-thinking on so many things as this sport is."

For my part, I was heartbroken.  This bright star went out far too early, and the hierarchy of the sport I love reacted in a manner unacceptable in the mangiest of hounds.  As I write this, I am looking at a small blue frame, decorated with a bow in one corner, containing the words of a poem someone sent to Grand National Scene after Tim's death.  It reads:

God saw you getting tired

and the cure was not to be,

So he put His arms around you

and whispered, "Come to Me."

It broke our hearts to lose you

but you did not go alone,

For part of us went with you

the day God called you home.

We love you Tim

 

In front of the poem there is a 1/64 diecast of the #25 Folgers car.  That's all that remains in my life of Timmy now, except for the fact that I find it still makes the tears flow to remember all of this.  In closing, let me share just one more thought, gentle reader.  There is a very old country song whose lyrics I've always thought could have been written just for Tim Richmond.

"I want to live fast, love hard, die young, and leave a beautiful memory."

Please click here to view the RacersReunion collection of 191 photos of the late Tim Richmond

**Author's insertion: What was not known at the time, but came to light later, was that the first drug test performed on Tim was at the hands of Dr. Forrest Tennant, not a regular NASCAR doctor, but one in the employ of the NFL, brought in by Les Richter,  member of the NFL Hall of Fame. The following tiny notation appeared on page 2 of the Los Angeles Times, February 23, 1990, six months after the death of Tim Richmond.

"Tennant No Longer NASCAR's Drug Adviser"

"Dr. Forest Tennant is no longer working for NASCAR as its drug adviser, a spokesman for the premier stock car sanctioning body said Thursday in Daytona Beach, Fla.

Tennant is the executive director of Community Health Projects, Inc., a group of drug-treatment clinics headquartered in West Covina.

He has come under fire for his work as a consultant to the NFL, and it was reported this week by The Times and WJLA-TV in Washington that the result of a drug test he administered to Tim Richmond was falsified. Richmond, a former Winston Cup driver, died of AIDS last August."

Anyone wanting a deeper read into Tim Richmond's life and death might enjoy the book "Tim Richmond: The Fast Life and Remarkable Times of NASCAR's Top Gun" by the late David Poole. It can be found at Amazon.com by clicking here.

Tim Richmond

 

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