NASCAR Legend Dick Trickle Dead at Age 71
He was not on the list.
NASCAR legend Dick Trickle passed away on Thursday afternoon
near his Lincoln Country residence. According to a news release from the local
county sheriff's department, Trickle died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound
in a North Carolina cemetery.
He was 71.
ESPN's Ryan McGee released a portion of the press release
from the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office. Here's an excerpt from that release:
Retired race car
driver Richard “Dick” Trickle, 71, died today from an apparent self inflicted
gun shot wound. The incident occurred at 12:02 p.m. at Forest Lawn Cemetery on
Highway 150 East in Boger City.
The Lincoln County
Communications Center received a call apparently from the victim that “there
would be a dead body and it would be his“. Communications Center workers tried
to place a return call to the number but did not get an answer.
Trickle was the 1989 Rookie of the Year on the NASCAR
Winston Cup Series (now the Sprint Cup), and before his full-time NASCAR stint,
he was one of the most decorated short-track race car drivers of all time.
The Wisconsin native retired from the sport after a long
career that spanned over four decades, but his legacy is one that includes all
of his accomplishments in different racing circuits and a long-standing
nickname—"The Purple Knight"—that captures his No. 99 purple mustang
perfectly.
Although his short-track success didn't transfer over into
high-level Winston Cup wins (Trickle finished third five different times), he
was one of the most notable drivers on the circuit. He made headlines during
his NASCAR stint for drilling a hole in his safety helmet through which he
could smoke cigarettes.
After the body was found at the cemetery and the family had
time to collect itself, Trickle's brother Chuck spoke to David Newton of
ESPN.com. According to Chuck Trickle, his brother was dealing with a severe
pain issue at the time of his death, and had reached out over the past few
weeks to voice his discomfort:
Last week he told
me, 'I don't know how much longer I can put up with this,' said Chuck Trickle
by phone from Las Vegas. They were going to put something in him to help with
the pain. It was a five-step process. I don't know how far along he was.
Trickle denied that his deceased brother was a candidate to
commit suicide for any reason other than the pain, noting that "He must
have just decided the pain was too high, because he would have never done it
for any other reason.''
He continued:
I'm at a loss for
words...I wish I knew the answer. This is not a thing he would do. I believe
the pain was the problem. He never cussed in his life, [and] the type of person
he is, he never was sad. There were some words that came out last week that
were not very good.
Trickle also told Newton he has not yet seen the note that
authorities discovered at the cemetery in Boger City, the same place where
Trickle's granddaughter is buried.
As McGee stated on Twitter after the news broke, Trickle
will and should be remembered by sports fans for his accomplishments on the
track alone—where his career record speaks for itself:
Ryan McGee
@ESPNMcGee
To non-race fans
Dick Trickle was a punchline. But racers knew him as a short track legend who
won 1000+ races. #NASCAR
With such a rich racing resume, his accomplishments on the
track are undeniable.
Our thoughts and prayers are with the Trickle family during
the aftermath of this tragedy.
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