RICKIE SMITH - MOUNTAIN MOTOR PRO STOCK LEGEND
On
Saturday, September 29, Rickie Smith stood at the starting line at Maryland
International Raceway and wiped away a tear as thousands of appreciate IHRA
fans acknowledged his selection as Torco’s CompetitionPlus.com’s No. 1 All Time
Mountain Motor Pro Stock Driver.
It was
the second of two major honors bestowed upon the King,
In July,
Smith was named to the inaugural Legends of Thunder Valley class at Bristol
Dragway in recognition of his being the driver with the most wins in the
history of the venerable facility. He was in impressive company that summer
day, joining “Big Daddy” Don Garlits, IHRA founder Larry Carrier, and NHRA
founder Wally Parks. It was high praise indeed.
“I’ve
had some really big honors laid out on my plate this year,” Smith said. “It’s
been over 35 years of hard work – I don’t know how to explain it – I’m just so
thrilled over it. The good thing is that I’m still racing and I’m still able to
enjoy it. Thank God Evan Knoll is helping me right now. He loves drag racing
and he’s helped a lot of people. I’m just glad he’s not a NASCAR freak.”
After years of sacrifice, Rickie Smith is honored as a legend
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It was
the second of two major honors bestowed upon the King,
In July,
Smith was named to the inaugural Legends of Thunder Valley class at Bristol
Dragway in recognition of his being the driver with the most wins in the
history of the venerable facility. He was in impressive company that summer
day, joining “Big Daddy” Don Garlits, IHRA founder Larry Carrier, and NHRA
founder Wally Parks. It was high praise indeed.
“I’ve
had some really big honors laid out on my plate this year,” Smith said. “It’s
been over 35 years of hard work – I don’t know how to explain it – I’m just so
thrilled over it. The good thing is that I’m still racing and I’m still able to
enjoy it. Thank God Evan Knoll is helping me right now. He loves drag racing
and he’s helped a lot of people. I’m just glad he’s not a NASCAR freak.”
When
asked about his inclusion in the legends of
Smith’s
story is tied inescapably to the history of International Hot Rod Association
mountain motor Pro Stock racing, and no discussion of the class would be
complete without taking an in-depth look at the storied career of the
seven-time IHRA Champion.
“I
started drag racing in 1975 with a ’68 Camaro Super Stock car,” Smith said. “I
didn’t like the breakout class, though, so I built a Ford Maverick and jumped
into an IHRA class called Super Modified in 1976. That was like a miniature Pro
Stock class – heads-up, no breakout, single four barrel. You had to run
divisional and national events for championship points in IHRA back then, and I
think we won 14 or 15 out of 18 races the first two seasons we ran. Eventually,
they cancelled the class because nobody could run with us. A few guys came
pretty close – I remember John Lingenfelter running a fairly competitive GM
car, and Herb McCandless had a good Mopar, but we dominated by as much as a
tenth over the field most of the time.
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Then, as
now, racers spent much of their spare time scrounging for sponsorship money,
but Smith had things a little easier than most when he first started out. It
wouldn’t always be that way, though, as we’ll find out.
“My
partner back then was a neighbor of mine by the name of Keith Fowler, who was a
big Country music promoter at the time – he had Loretta Lynn, Conway Twitty and
the Oak Ridge Boys under contract. He had originally put his business name
“Country Shindig” on our Super Modified car, and when we went to Pro Stock, he
put the Oak Ridge Boys on the new car. They were huge stars back then, and they
even came out to one of our races, which really helped us promote ourselves. We
ran Loretta Lynn’s name on the car for a while, too, which was a real popular
deal.
“In
1979, our first year, we finished tenth in Pro Stock points, and in ’80 and ’81
we finished second. I was learning a lot during that time, but the biggest
lesson the sport taught me was pretty hard to take. Before the 1981 season was
over, I had my first bad wreck in
At this
point Smith’s direction changed, as he explained.
“John
Kaase had been helping us out with motors when I was with Keith, and he and I
continued to worked together when I started my own team. A local guy who owned
a nightclub called SRO gave me $10,000 for the doors on the car, so with a
little old truck and trailer and $1,000 in the bank, we went IHRA Pro Stock
racing. Back then guys like Warren Johnson, Lee Shepherd and Ronnie Sox were
running with us, so that will tell you how tough the competition was. We were
up for it, I guess, because in 1982 the good Lord was with me, and we won the
IHRA championship.”
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“Before
long I got a phone call from Ford – they wanted me to come for a meeting,”
Smith said. “They flew me to
“Two or
three days later they called me and said they had something set up with Stroh
Brewing. Pat Patterson and I went up to meet the Stroh people – I took Pat
because I really had no experience in negotiating with these big companies.
Anyway – we took a proposal along with us and sat down to see what we could
come up with. We eventually worked things out to where we were all satisfied.
“It was
a big change, but we didn’t have a lot of time to think about it, so I went
back to the shop, told my guys what we were doing and we got to work. We sold
all our Ford stuff, replaced it with GM stuff, and within three months we were
ready to start the 1989 season, which we won to extend the streak to four in a
row.
“Everything
was going great until Stroh dropped a bomb on us a little later. Out of the
blue they cancelled all their motorsports sponsorship deals –and they were into
everything back then- and left us high and dry. Fortunately, John Erickson was
in charge at
“The
year my contract was up for renewal, 1993, was the same year that Richard Petty
got out of the driver’s seat in NASCAR, and once he did that he demanded an
extra million dollars from STP so that he could put another driver in the car.
Well, right after that they pulled my program and their Indy car program.
Eventually the Indy car program was put back, but mine never was, and I was
looking for a sponsor again.
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The NHRA and IHRA Pro Stock classes were undergoing major changes at this time, and for a while IHRA racers could be found at NHRA events, putting their big-inch mountain motor-powered cars up against the 500-cubic-inch equipped cars driven by their counterparts.
“When I won my IHRA championship in ’88 we ran our 800-inch cars against quite a few NHRA guys with their 500-inch cars,” Smith said. “Glidden ran against us, and so did guys like Reher – Morrison and WJ. Of course, they kept piling weight on us in 1988 to try to make it even, and that made it a lot tougher when we were running for championships. We managed to struggle through it and win in ‘87, but it got out of hand when they threw another 50 or 75 pounds on us in 1988, which made the cars weigh 2,650 pounds. I don’t think we qualified number one more than twice during those two years. We were fortunate enough to win the championships because I was able to get the car down the track on race day, and out-drive people when I had to.”
There has been a lot of speculation as to how you Smith earned his “Tricky” nickname, and Smith was keen to set the record straight.
“I’ve heard all the stories, and believe me most of them are BS. A guy who did some announcing at a local track back when I was just starting out started the ‘Tricky Rickie’ thing. I was just a young guy with a pretty fast car who didn’t know any better, and back in the early eighties when I first started running my Mustang against guys like WJ and Glidden, they used to mess with me a lot. The thought it was fun to burn me down at the line, you know, holding me there as long as they could and stuff like that. I was pretty scared back then, and didn’t have a lot of confidence, especially when I raced the big name guys, so they wore me out the first year I ran a full schedule in IHRA. By the second season I had gained some experience, though, and I didn’t let them pull that stuff any more. I decided that if it was good enough for them it was good enough for me, so I started playing the games myself. Warren and I had some real good staging battles back then, I can tell you.
“Anyway, I also did a lot of match racing back then, too, and the word got around back home about the staging stuff that was going on in IHRA. One night I was racing back in North Carolina, and this announcer was talking on the PA system about all that had been going on, and just started hollering TRICKYYY RICKIEEE, over and over again. He got the crowd so pumped up that by the time we went to the line they were going wild. Back then Pro Stock was a real hot ticket, just like Pro Mod is these days, and it just spread from there. After that, everywhere we went people started hollering for Tricky Rickie, and the name just stuck. I never knew how much it meant to the fans, especially to the kids, until quite a few years later. By the late 1980s the name had gotten a little old to me, and I wanted to change it. I decided that since I was just an old North Carolina hillbilly that I’d use that for my nickname.
“Winston
held a big deal every year for the NASCAR folks and so on, and they invited us
to put the Pro Stock car on display. I figured that it was a good time to bring
the new name out, so I took Tricky Rickie off the window and put on Hillbilly.
My wife told me not to do it, because she worked with kids, and she knew that
the name was pretty popular with them. Well, I just didn’t think that it was a
real big deal, but man did I find out real quick what a mistake I made. There
were so many comments about the name change, mainly from kids, that it really
bothered me. I just had no idea. As soon as I got the car back home I put the
old name back on and it’s been that way ever since.
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And stay
it has, through all the years, the wins, the championships, and the honors. And
the man himself has exhibited the same kind of staying power. When Smith
received his trophy at
“I just
wish we could have run better this year – we have been struggling,” Smith said.
“The good news is that (engine builder) Sonny Leonard has given us a new motor,
and from what I’ve seen it’s a pretty hateful piece. It’s so much better than
anything we ever had. He’s got Dennis Warner working with him now, and he
brought a lot of NASCAR technology to the deal. They have really picked this
program up, and hopefully next year we’ll be as bad as we thought we were going
to be this year. It was a bad year for me, at least on the track, but we
survived it, got a lot of press and a lot of honors. Next year we’re going to
shoot for the championship.”
Smith
feels good, and he believes that he can be competitive in 2008, but he also has
a firm grip on reality, and he knows his days as an active driver are numbered.
“I can still drive one of these cars backwards
as well as anybody can drive one forward,” Smith said. “I might be a little
slack on the tree once in a while now, but when I’ve had my rest I feel I’m as
good as anybody out there. I’m no duck I don’t think yet. But I don’t want to
be out here taking up space when some young person needs to be in there. I want
to give them their chance one day. If Evan has some young driver in mind then
maybe I can be a team owner on down the road.”
Smith’s
son Matt comes to mind when young drivers and Pro Stock are mentioned in the
same sentence, but he’s quick to squash that notion.
“Some
people have said that my son Matt would make a good Pro Stock driver, but to
tell the truth I’d kick his butt if he wanted to get in one of these cars,”
Smith said. “He’s doing awesome in Pro Stock Motorcycle and it wouldn’t make
any sense for him to change. He’s a good rider and he knows how to win races.
He needs to stay right where he is. I don’t see Pro Stock cars in his future at
all.
“I’m not
saying for sure, but in my heart I feel that in another year or two I’m going
to get out of the seat and give someone else a chance,” Smith said. “I don’t
want to stay too long. I’ve seen other guys do that and that’s not what Rickie
Smith is all about. I really want to be doing all right when I do decide to get
out, and I want to be remembered that way.”
It’s a safe bet that will never be the case where “Tricky” Rickie Smith is concerned.
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