Former NASCAR driver Dick Trickle dead at 71 of apparent suicide
May 16, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Former
short-track ace Dick Trickle died Thursday at age 71 from an apparent
self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to the Lincoln
County (N.C.) Sheriff's Department.
Trickle
was active in NASCAR racing for more than 30 years. He was winless in
303 Sprint Cup Series starts but collected two victories
in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, the first coming on Easter weekend in
1997 at Hickory Motor Speedway, where the Wisconsin native took the lead
from Randy LaJoie with 22 laps left and held on for the win.
When
Trickle won his second and final race on September 5, 1998, at
Darlington Raceway, he was 56 years, 10 months and eight days old,
the oldest race winner in NASCAR's three national series.
Trickle's
body was found near his pickup truck in Forest Lawn Cemetery in Boger
City, N.C. The Lincoln County Communications Center
received a call at around noon Wednesday, from a man -- apparently
Trickle -- who said there would be a dead body, and it would be his.
Communications
center workers tried to return the call, but no one answered, according
to the sheriff's department. The body was found
by the first emergency units dispatched to the scene.
Reigning
Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski heard about Trickle's death en
route to the unveiling of his "Fan Mosaic" paint scheme
for Saturday night's NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.
"Dick
Trickle's one of those guys who was a part of the sport in a number of
ways and meant a lot to the local short-track racers,"
Keselowski said. "Kind of like the Midwest style of racing, which was
track by track when NASCAR was more of a regional Southern sport, before
it had developed to the national platform it is now.
"He
was the superstar of that style, of that genre and era. It's very sad
to see him go, and obviously difficult with the way it went."
Trickle,
who won well over 1,000 short-track features in his career, ran his
last NASCAR race in 2002. He had lived in Lincoln County
since the early 1990s.
NASCAR's Chairman and CEO, Brian France, issued the following statement regarding Trickle's passing.
"Our
thoughts and prayers go out to the family and friends of Dick Trickle
on his passing today. Dick was a legend in the short-track
racing community, particularly in his home state of Wisconsin, and he
was a true fan favorite. Personalities like Dick Trickle helped shape
our sport. He will be missed."
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