Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/22/12 04:43:28PM
9,138 posts

Hall of Fame Case for Tim Richmond


Stock Car Racing History

Let's see.....

Brian France has been Chairman & CEO of NASCAR since September 2003. If he were to be run over by a Goodyear Tire truck this weekend at CMS before his 10th anniversary in the position, I guess that could be considered a special circumstance so he could join the other family members in the Hall!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/22/12 10:41:25AM
9,138 posts

Hall of Fame Case for Tim Richmond


Stock Car Racing History

Today's Charlotte Observer carries a story by sports columnist Tom Sorensen proposing that the induction of the late Tim Richmond would add flair to the NASCAR Hall of Fame. I certainly agree he would add flair, but there are way too many other deserving candidates to fill the five available slots.

While I don't propose a current enshrinement for Tim, I really did enjoy Tom's story. Whether you liked Tim or not, there's some really interesting detail in the piece. I for one must say that I liked Tim and admired his driving abilities. I often had his mother Evelyn ( a character in her own right) in my old Wrangler Hospitality Suites.

Tim did several very nice favors for me, including in 1984 racing a second Winston West Derrike Cope 7-Eleven car for me at NO CHARGE in Phoenix at a Winston West race 7-Eleven was sponsoring. I have had two automobile rides in my life I never want to repeat. The first came with Dale Earnhardt behind the wheel of a new Corvette on i-85 outside of Greensboro, NC. The second was riding around Phoenix in a rental car with Tim driving.

Anyhow... like him, hate him or none of the above, here's Sorensen's opinion piece:

Want Hall of Fame flair? Think Tim Richmond

1980 Associated Press Photo

Tim Richmond talks with Bobby Allison after qualifying for the Pocono 500 in Long Pond, Pa. on July 25, 1980. Richmond started 185 races and won 13. His numbers do not suggest the Hall of Fame. But his career does.

1980 AP File Photo

Tim Richmond won his first race in 1982 and his last in 1987. Only four drivers won more during that period.

1980 AP File Photo

Tim Richmond shrugs after driving the fastest qualifying lap, 193.507 mph, for the Indianapolis 500 as a rookie on May 9, 1980.

OPINION
By Tom Sorensen

The Charlotte Observer
Monday, May. 21, 2012

I went to the National 500 in October 1981. It was my second big NASCAR race. Some of the writers in the Charlotte Motor Speedway press box had talked about moonshine, and the way they talked, moonshine was to alcohol what Darlington (S.C.) Raceway is to race tracks.

Its just booze, I finally said.

One of them had a party that night, and they summoned me to the kitchen. Everybody in it was on their knees in praise of the mighty moonshine.

Dorks, I thought.

Then they lit the alcohol on fire.

Darn. Whos a dork now?

Because I had failed to properly respect the hooch, I had to drink it in front of everybody. I knew I couldnt gag. So I quickly drank the shot that was handed to me and could feel it in my toes.

In the kitchen was a new driver who had finished 18th that afternoon in a Rogers Auto Leasing Buick. Over time, Tim Richmond would prove to be much more potent than the alcohol.

At 6p.m. Wednesday, NASCAR will announce five inductees into its 2013 Hall of Fame class. Richmond, who died of AIDS in 1989 at the age of 34, will not be one of them.

He started only 185 races. He won 13. His numbers do not suggest the Hall of Fame.

But his career does. The Hall has to be about more than numbers. During the 1980s, the sport was full of characters, and Richmond was a bigger character than any of them.

He was more than entertainment. He changed the sport. He came from Ashland, Ohio, and at the time almost nobody came from outside the South. You were practically a Yankee if you came from Virginia.

Richmond came from open-wheel racing. He wasnt the first. But most of the others were guests. Richmond stayed.

He came from money. Almost nobody in racing came from money. If there was ever dirt beneath his fingernails, he probably paid somebody to remove it.

Perhaps because of his background, he saw possibilities few others did. He talked to me one afternoon in the garage about how stock car racing was too big to be tethered to the South.

Take it national, he said excitedly. Show it to fans in Cleveland, Chicago and anywhere else, he insisted, and theyll go crazy, too.

This was years before NASCAR went national, and Richmond was considered uppity, as if he didnt know his role.

A good-looking and flamboyant guy, Richmond might have attracted as many women to NASCAR as Danica Patrick has. He grew his hair long, dressed like a biker one day and a banker the next, drank champagne and loved beautiful women. They loved him more.

Also, he could drive. He was fearless. Richmond won his first race in 1982 and his last in 1987. Again, he won 13 races during that period. Only four drivers won more: Darrell Waltrip had 26 victories, Dale Earnhardt 19, Bill Elliott 18 and Bobby Allison 14.

Richmonds best season was 1986, when he won seven races. Earnhardt was second in victories; he won five.

Richmond finished third that season, six points behind Waltrip and 296 behind the champion, Earnhardt.

I dont know when Richmond knew he had been diagnosed with AIDS. Nobody knew what to make of the disease then, especially NASCAR.

AIDS was a faraway plague that was alien to everything for which the sport purported to stand. The disease was even more outside than he was. Magic Johnson did not announce he had been diagnosed with HIV until 1991, two years after Richmond died.

Richmond dropped out. NASCAR ran him off.

He agreed to meet with me and I talked him into doing the interview not at his Lake Norman home other writers would find out but in Ohio, where his family still lived and where he occasionally spent time.

I flew to Cleveland and drove to Ashland to meet with him. He pushed the interview back a day. Later he explained he flew to New York to get his hair cut.

John Edwards has been criticized for a $500 haircut. With airfare, Richmond spent at least that. He was Edwards first.

Late that first afternoon, Richmond suggested we grab a drink. We grabbed several. When I switched to coffee, he told me that unless I returned to tequila, the interview was finished. So I did. In another hour, I was finished, too. I stayed another day.

I was so used up when I returned to Charlotte that I flew first class knowing the company might not pay.

Does the Hall want character or characters?

What are the standards? Who gets in?

Brief as his career was, Richmond had Hall of Fame talent and a Hall of Fame impact. If youre good enough, you can come from anywhere. He proved it.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/21/12 08:38:23PM
9,138 posts

May 21: Petty wins 2 of 200 ... but they still count!


Stock Car Racing History

A slight correction above on the Asheville 1971 win - it was at the 1/3-mile NEW ASHEVILLE track (which is what you correctly have on the actual blog).

As pointed out in your blog post, Richard was right on the money regarding the schedule reduction.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/20/12 08:43:03PM
9,138 posts

2012 (2nd Annual) Middle Georgia RacersReunion


Historic Speedways and Ghost Tracks

What a wonderful story.

Lots of good folks converging with a dream and others with the ability to assist the dream.

One day the gang will be celebrating the 12th Renewal at the rate of this wonderful progress!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/20/12 03:10:54PM
9,138 posts

Jeff Gordon's "Rainbow" All-Star Race Introduction


Current NASCAR

I somehow doubt anyone wants to see many of our RR folk peeking out from behind a shower curtain, lol!!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/20/12 03:04:41PM
9,138 posts

Jeff Gordon's "Rainbow" All-Star Race Introduction


Current NASCAR

I guess they got the fans involved.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/20/12 02:47:43PM
9,138 posts

Jeff Gordon's "Rainbow" All-Star Race Introduction


Current NASCAR

For all you died in the wool Jeff Gordon fans who may have missed the driver introductions for the 2012 Sprint All-Star Race, I direct you to the time mark 9:59 in the accompanying video.

I've seen many interesting driver intros over the years. I guess this one was selected because of its Rainbow hue. Not as in Rainbow Warriors or Rainbow Coalition, just plain Rainbow.

Interesting.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/21/12 08:28:07PM
9,138 posts

The History of Bruton Smith & Charlotte Motor Speedway "According" to Bank of America


Stock Car Racing History

I have no idea of the origin of that photo.. simply used it to illustrate the Stagger Stick tire measuring device.

I'd never seen anything but a tape used to measure tires until I went to my first Winston West race in 1984. All of those guys were using a stagger stick named the "Stagger Master," which of course makes me thing of the Reverend Stagger!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/20/12 09:17:09PM
9,138 posts

The History of Bruton Smith & Charlotte Motor Speedway "According" to Bank of America


Stock Car Racing History

And.... inquiring minds want to know...

Does the Right Reverend normally carry a "Stagger Stick" to those "dens of iniquity" sometimes called stock car tracks?

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
05/20/12 08:56:00PM
9,138 posts

The History of Bruton Smith & Charlotte Motor Speedway "According" to Bank of America


Stock Car Racing History

I'm sure ole Brian Moynihan, current embattled CEO of the Great Bank, who resides in BOSTON, Massachusetts, could care less about the facts of the origins of CMS or Bruton Smith.

Mr. Moynihan and Mr. Obama's top treasury guy, Timothy "I Forgot to Pay My Taxes" Geithner make quite a sniveling duo.

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