Incredible Facts About Racing Legend Richard Trickle
Richard Trickle was a racing legend who knew that his name had marketing value. When he retired, Keith Olbermann even credited Trickle with making NASCAR mainstream.
Trickle won more races than anyone in history and inspired a new generation of drivers to get behind the wheel. Although he may be gone, he is far from forgotten. This is everything you need to know about Richard Trickle.
He Was The Short Track Hero
Richard Trickle won over 1,200 short track races before he started racing for NASCAR, earning him the nickname "America's Winningest Driver."
Once he started short-track racing, he couldn't stop. For 15 years, Trickle raced in over 1,500 races. NASCAR owners took notice, and in 1989, he made his NASCAR debut.
Victory Lane Was Left Empty By Trickle
Richard Trickle never won a Winston Cup Series race. He retired with 36 top-ten finishes but never found his way to Victory Lane.
Still, his massive popularity with sports media turned him into one of racing's great cult heroes.
He Was The Oldest Driver To Win Rookie Of The Year
At 48 years old, Richard Trickle won the NASCAR Rookie of the Year award, making him the oldest rookie ever crowned.
During that sensational year, he drove the number 84 Miller High Life car. Over the next 12 years, he participated in 303 races in NASCAR's Winston Cup Series (now Monster Energy Cup Series).
He Built His Own Stock Cars
When he started working in a blacksmith shop, he saved junked parts and learned how to weld. Eventually, he had enough money to buy a 1950 Ford ($100) and made it race-ready.
Then he began drag racing. His car was slow, so he bought his competitor's car for $32.50, took the engine out, and put it in it.
He Used Someone Else's Water Pump During A Race
On one occasion during a race, Trickle blew a water pump on his car.
He got on his P.A. to ask the crowd if anyone had a Ford. An eager fan was then allowed to drive his car into the pits, where Trickle pulled his water pump off, put it on his car, won the race, and then gave it back to the fan.
He Once Used A Tow Truck's Engine
Trickle put on an impressive show during a race when he blew an engine.
He thought fast and, without hesitation, pulled one out of a tow truck that had been in the pits and put it in his own car. To no real surprise, he won that race as well.
His Nickname Was A Marketing Sensation
When ESPN sportscasters Dan Patrick and Keith Olbermann began referring to Richard Trickle by the shortened version of his name, he could have complained, but he saw a marketing opportunity.
Trickle knew his name was funny and that he was making Sportcenter nightly because of it. For Trickle, any exposure was good exposure.
He Was A One-Beer Man
Trickle had a trick to keep from drinking too much. When he was handed a beer, he would drink it.
When it was empty, he wouldn't toss the can out but would instead hold on to it, signaling to anyone around that he didn't need another.
Trickle Was A Chatterbox
Trickle Loved to talk, and he could carry on a conversation all night.
Trickle told people that for every 100 miles he would race, he only needed one hour of sleep. He also claimed he could drink 40 cups of coffee a day.
Trickle's Racing Mantra
In the movie Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, the title character lives by the mantra, "If you ain't first, you last."
Richard Trickle had his own mantra, which was, "To finish first, you need to finish the race."
He Was A Hard Worker From Early On
When he first started, although he was doing well racing, Trickle still had a day job. He worked 66 hours a week at a service station while racing four nights a week.
During his free time, he worked on his cars.
Days Of Thunder Was Not Based On Him
Despite sharing the same last name with Tom Cruise's character in Days of Thunder, Cole Trickle was not based on Richard Trickle. He was based on another famous driver, Tim Richmond.
Other than the last name, Cole and Richard Trickle had nothing in common.
He Didn't Care For Glitz And Glamor
Trickle liked to stick to his old-school roots. While drivers like Jeff Gordon were buying planes and buses, Trickle built himself a garage. The glitz and glamor weren't for him.
In one interview, he said, "I don't need none of that stuff."
NASCAR Was His Second Life
Entering NASCAR as a 48-year-old seemed impossible in 1989, but Trickle saw NASCAR as a new life.
Trickle never closed the door on returning to racing, either. He revealed to BGN Racing, "Maybe I'll be revived and get the support of the right sponsor and team and be out there every weekend. But if I don't, life isn't bad."
Jimmy Fennig Warned Him About The Cowboy Boots
Trickle was warned by Jimmy Fennig that racing in cowboy boots was a bad idea. He recalled telling the racer, "you ain't gonna make it in cowboy boots."
Fennig remembered that halfway through the race, Trickle called over the radio and asked, "where are them shoes?"
He Learned His Lesson About Racing In Cowboy Boots
In Richard Trickle's first race, he wore cowboy boots, but his foot kept swelling because of the heat his car's throttle was generating. During yellow flags, he kept checking into the pit lane.
He needed to remove his boots, and it took several pit stops. He still finished the first race of his career in 13th place. In the next race, without boots, he finished in third.
Trickle Loved His Fans
Trickle loved doing meet-and-greets with the fans. He would often stay long past the allotted two hours for meet and greets.
Actions like this made him a fan favorite, even though he never won a race.
His One Win
Technically, Trickle won one race in his career, but it was a race with no season points assigned to it.
The Winston Open was a 201-mile NASCAR race that allowed the winning driver to qualify for the all-star race. During the 1990 running of the race, Trickle won by eight inches.
Butch Fedewa Remembers Every Race
Richard Trickle was legendary not only with his fans but with other drivers as well. Butch Fedewa said, "You remembered every race you raced against Trickle."
He would know, having raced against Trickle in his prime.
He Estimated His Own Wins
According to the New York Times, Trickle estimated the number of short-track wins he had at 1,200.
He was the short-track driver every other driver dreamed of being. He also mentored some of NASCAR's greatest drivers.
Only His Wife Called Him Richard
Throughout his career, Trickle let everyone call him by the shortened version of his name.
Just about the only person who called him by his real name was his wife, Darlene. They marries in 1961 and lived at Trickle's grandmother's house until they could afford a trailer of their own.
A Humble Wedding And Start To Marriage
Trickle married his wife Darlene in 1961 and paid just $8 for a motel room the night of their wedding. The next day, he had two races at Wausau and Griffith Park.
At the beginning of his marriage, he worked for a telephone company but hated working on the poles so high off of the ground, so he created a plan to become a full-time racer.
He Didn't Care If People Liked Him Or Not
One time at an ASA race, Trickle was booed by people in the crowd when he was announced.
He addressed it by saying, "When you get introduced there may be 500 or a thousand people that cheer [...] But when I get introduced, 100 percent of the crowd reacts, one way or the other."
He Was An Excellent Mentor
Over the years, some of the main up-and-coming drivers that Richard mentored included Rusty and Kenny Wallace, Alan Kulwicki, and Mark Martin.
Kenny Wallace kept up his relationship with Trickle over the years. Wallace commented, “I want everybody to know what a great man he was. People only know about everybody making fun of his name on ESPN. But he was an incredibly awesome man.”
Trickle Retired Later Than Most
Richard Trickle was 61 years old when he raced his last race in 2002. On average, a NASCAR vehicle runs 300 feet per second. That kind of speed catches up to most drivers well before their 60s.
Trickle couldn't stay away from the track and continued to make appearances until 2007 when he finally called it quits.
He Didn't Hang Around After He Retired
After retiring, some people might go on to buy a company and stay in business, but not Trickle.
While he made appearances now and then to watch races and sometimes sign autographs, he spent most of his time with his family, doing things that he never got around to because of racing.
His Friends Wanted To Memorialize Him
Many of his Wisconsin friends and competitors, such as Tom Reffner and Marv Marzofka, started a memorial fund in hopes of creating a permanent memorial statue of him at Rudolph Community Park.
Today at some Midwestern short tracks, there are Trickle Memorial laps, 99 laps for his car number.
Kyle Petty Compared Him To His Dad
Speaking about his lost friend, Kyle Petty compared Trickle to his father, another NASCAR legend, "He was the Richard Petty, the A.J. Foyt, the Mario Andretti of the Midwest tracks. It's like saying Dale Earnhardt, and Richard Petty taught people here how to be Cup drivers. He taught people how to be short-track drivers."
The speech proved that even before Trickle joined the ranks of NASCAR, he was well respected in the community.
His Stolen Racecar Was Found
Trickle’s “Purple Knight” sat in storage for many years, but when the owner Kenneth Langreck went to get it out of storage to begin restoring it, it was gone.
Investigators found the car in the hands of someone that had purchased it from Landreck’s brother, who had apparently stolen it and sold it off.