
| Press
Release... April 1, 2002 |
For Immediate Release
FLAMBOYANT
RICHMOND, QUIET WOOD TAKE DIFFERENT PATHS TO HALL OF FAME
TALLADEGA, AL
For every time that flamboyant Tim Richmond sought the limelight, soft-spoken Glen Wood
avoided it. Richmond was most comfortable in front of a microphone, Wood most at home
under the hood of a race car. Wood has been married to his beloved Bernice for half a
century, while Richmond enjoyed the single life.
Polar opposites? Not really.
There were also similarities. Both men were intense competitors,
both were among the best ever to drive a stock car, and both will be inducted into the
International Motorsports Hall of Fame on Thursday night, April 18th, 2002.
A native of Ashland, Ohio, Tim Richmond began his
career in open wheel cars, racing USAC sprints as well as the Silver Crown Series. He
moved up to Indy Cars in 1980, winning Rookie of the Year honors for the Indianapolis 500
that year. The image of Richmond hitching a ride back to the pits on the car of winner
Johnny Rutherford made every highlight film.
Richmond's greatest fame and stardom came in stock cars, however.
He drove five races in 1981 for D. K. Ulrich, then gained Rookie of the Year honors in
1981. His first two wins came in 1982 when he drove for J. D. Stacy. Richmond moved to the
Blue Max team of Raymond Beadle in 1983, winning twice in a three-year span.
It was in 1986 that Richmond, by now driving for Rick Hendrick
and under the wing of veteran crew chief Harry Hyde, emerged as one of the very best. His
relationship with Hyde got off to a rocky start before mutual respect set in, and the team
began to win. In the last 17 races of 1986, they won seven times.
However, by
1987 a virus had arisen that would claim Richmond's life two years later. He ran eight
races that year, winning at Pocono and Riverside, but raced for the last time at Michigan
in August.
Glen Wood, known in his early racing days as "Woodchopper" because he bought the
sawmill he had worked in as a teenager, started the famous Wood Brothers team in 1950 to
run Modifieds on dirt. Glen was chosen as the driver, and was so good at it that what had
started out simply as fun quickly became serious business.
With Glen behind the wheel, the team was gaining recognition all
over the southeast. In 1954, he won the North Carolina sportsman championship, and three
years later, he finished third in points in NASCAR's high-profile convertible division.
The likeable Wood was chosen as NASCAR's Most Popular Driver in 1959. Winston-Salem's
Bowman Gray Stadium was Wood's favorite track, and he won there three times in 1960. Wood
longed, however, to get from behind the wheel and under the hood, and he raced only two
times in 1961, winning once and finishing third in the other.
It was then he hung up his helmet for good, and assumed the
duties of crew chief for a list of drivers that reads like a "Who's Who" in
stock car racing. In all, 17 of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers have driven a Wood
Brothers-prepared car at one time or another. Wood, himself is also on that elite list.
Perhaps the thing that earned the Wood Brothers team their
greatest accolades was their lightning fast pit stops. They won many a race by beating
competitors out of the pits. And they proved they could work their magic in other venues
as well, crewing for Jim Clark when he won the 1965 Indianapolis 500.
Richmond and Wood will be joined in their induction by four other
classmates, designer and builder Ettore Bugatti, Formula One and Can-Am champion Denis
Hulme, six-time winner of the 24 Hours of LeMans Jacky Ickx and Winston Cup champion Alan
Kulwicki. Also honored on April 18th will be the 2001 Driver of the Year, Jeff Gordon.
Tickets for the formal gala remain on sale at the International
Motorsports Hall of Fame office thru Friday, April 12th. Individual tickets are $100 each,
and include a reception, a sit-down dinner, the induction ceremony and another reception
following the ceremony. For more information, please call (256) 362-5002.
FROM IMHOF PUBLIC RELATIONS (256/362-5002) 04/01/02/cml.
Contact IMHOF

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