Ludington Suspended Indefinitely

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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Cankles @ Jul 24 2009, 10:15 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>He's refferencing NASCAR faking a positive drug test to get him kicked out after he got AIDS.

Richmond was a party monster and when he got AIDS, everyone in Nascar assumed he was gay,never mind the long list of women he was always with. Back then, the mindset was if you got aids, you were queer, and being queer back then was not socially acceptable, especially in Nascar. Nascar wanted nothing to do with a driver that was rumored to be gay, weather he was or wasnt,didnt matter.They wanted his ... out and he was out. They run a dictatorship to this day, a little more politically correct but make no mistake,they are the judge,jury and executioner.
 
Largely forgotten by most casual NASCAR fans, and not known at all by the new generation, Tim Richmond holds a special place in the hearts of the most die-hard racing fans. The man people called "Hollywood" and compared to James Dean, is now nothing more than a memory.

Tim Richmond wasn't cut from the same cloth as his NASCAR peers: He was from Ohio and not the South, he attended a military academy instead of dropping out of high school, his father was a wealthy manufacturer of drilling equipment instead of a race car driver, and he cut his racing teeth in open-wheel racing instead of dirt tracks.

It was after a nasty wreck in open-wheel racing, that Tim Richmond began to race stock cars. His tremendous talent and tremendous ego made fans either love him or hate him. He was flamboyant and a showboat off the track and a terror on the track. Tim could race any line, at any speed, on any track.

The one thing Tim could do the most, was win. He could win anywhere, from road courses to 2-mile ovals at a time when NASCAR was purely racing and not the watered down version it is today. He drove for Raymond Beadle, leaving the car Rusty Wallace drove to a championship; and Rick Hendrick, providing the foundation of the Hendrick dynasty.

Author Poll
If Tim Richmond was still alive...

Dale Earnhardt wouldn't have 7 titles He'd be a crew cheif He'd be a team owner He'd still be racing vote to see results Tim's career would begin its rapid decline after the 1986 Winston Cup season. Amid swirlling rumors about drug use, Tim was diagnosed with AIDS. At the time, AIDS was still a taboo subject and little was known about the disease. It has been surmised that Tim Richmond contracted AIDS sexually from one of the many females he encountered during his racing career.

Tim managed to keep his diagnosis private, explaining his absence by telling people he had double pneumonia. He would regain enough strength to drive midway through the 1987 season, and Tim won his first two races since coming back. This would be the last success Tim Richmond had in a race car.

He was told not to race by NASCAR after only six more races in 1987, and he resigned from Hendrick Motorsports in deteriorating health.

Despite securing a ride with Ken Ragan for the 1988 Busch Clash, Tim would never see the track again. Persistent rumors of drug use allowed NASCAR to test Tim for drugs under their policy that they called "reasonable suspicion."

It was a modern day witch hunt designed solely for NASCAR to wash its hands of him. The NASCAR rulebook was and always will be a joke. The first test showed that he had tested for "banned substances," which virtually destroyed Tim. A second test, insisted on by Richmond, came back clean. Those "banned substances" were nothing more than common cold medicine.

Desperately wanting to repair the damage and restore what was left, Tim decided to sue NASCAR for reinstatement and damages. It sounded like a rock-solid case, but the NASCAR-friendly judge ruled that Tim Richmond and his doctors would have to fully disclose his medical records, tax statement, and drug screens in a full invasion of privacy.

The AIDS diagnosis Tim carried around with him, was the proverbial scarlet letter that still haunts his legacy-even today.

Faced with relasing this information into the iron fist of the France family, Tim was the bigger man and withdrew his lawsuit. He retired to virtual seclusion and died in August of 1989.

Although Tim Richmond was voted as one of NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers, you never hear anyone associated with NASCAR speak of him. There is barely a blurb about him on their website. There was no No. 25 painted on tracks or doves released after his passing. There have been no moments of silence on Lap 25.

It's almost like he didn't even exist.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (povol @ Jul 24 2009, 10:42 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Although Tim Richmond was voted as one of NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers, you never hear anyone associated with NASCAR speak of him. There is barely a blurb about him on their website. There was no No. 25 painted on tracks or doves released after his passing. There have been no moments of silence on Lap 25.

It's almost like he didn't even exist.

I thought of Tim a few weeks ago, actually. I was watching a re broadcast of the 250 race from Assen, when speed interrupted regularly scheduled programming in order to air Michael Waltrip's retirement press conference. The Speed TV dolt with the microphone referred to the younger Waltrip as "one of the most fascinating personalities in the history of motorsports."
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Unless ESPN or other mainstream sports media bring Tim Richmond out from under the rug, I'm afraid Mayfield will be ostracized too.

I'm running out of hope for DMG to help AMA roadracing. Maybe it's just bitterness on my part, derived from Grand-Am's clearly unpopular concept being forced on my favorite form of 4-wheeled motorsport. I don't think I want these people running things anymore.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Mr. Shupe @ Jul 24 2009, 05:38 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Unless ESPN or other mainstream sports media bring Tim Richmond out from under the rug, I'm afraid Mayfield will be ostracized too.

After recently discussing the Mayfield saga with another racing fan, I feel bad about drawing such strong parallels between Mayfield and Richmond. Mayfield was hardly a major player when I used to watch NASCAR, never surpassing his form seen during his first year with Penske. It doesn't seem as though he has been all that memorable since I quit following the sport either; I never hear about him except for the current drug test controversy.

Unlike Richmond, NASCAR probably didn't have a reason to railroad Mayfield, at least not to begin with. A top driver with AIDS during the 80s Mayfield isn't.

However, I stand by my belief that the organization is crooked and detrimental to genuine expressions and personalities from racers.
 

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