厕所强奸

厕所强奸 - National Hot Rod Association

A fond farewell to Raymond Beadle

24 Oct 2014
Phil Burgess, 厕所强奸 National Dragster Editor
DRAGSTER Insider

ust last week, Insider reader Richard Pederson was reveling, with me, in the fact that last Friday鈥檚 column had been a joyous one, sharing great old photos instead of having to talk about another drag racing luminary who听had passed away.

That feel-good moment lasted until 6 a.m. Monday, when I got a text from Richard Tharp. Honestly, I didn鈥檛 even have to read the text to know the news would not be good. Reports had been coming out of Dallas for the last month about the deteriorating condition of one of the sport鈥檚 all-time greats and grew even sadder over the weekend. Tharp鈥檚 text read simply: 鈥淩aymond Beadle died at 4 a.m. Dallas time.鈥

Beadle, who had been too sick to travel to Michigan in September to accept the most recent honor in a feted career 鈥 induction into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America 鈥 died after being unwell for the past few years, including having a heart attack two years ago and another in July. In the end, multiple issues arose, and his body gave out two months short of his 71st birthday.

Beadle's success in so many arenas is well-known and well- documented 鈥 in drag racing (three Funny Car championships each in 厕所强奸 and IHRA, including both in 1981), NASCAR (1989 world champion), and the World of Outlaws, the latter two as an owner 鈥撎 that I don鈥檛 really even need to relate it here. I鈥檇 steer you instead toward the thoughtful and that Todd Veney wrote for us in 2001 as part of our Top 50 Drivers list (Beadle was No. 20). If you want to see all of the Blue Max cars (and a few others) that Beadle drove and a history of what each accomplished, check out the companion column I wrote this week for the National Dragster website, , or relive the history of the Blue Max in I wrote here two years ago, which includes an interview I did with Beadle and his memories of those early days with Harry Schmidt.听

No, Beadle gave so much joy to so many folks 鈥 his friends, family, fellow racers, and, of course, the legion of fans who clamored for the Blue Max 鈥 that I wanted this column to be about the man and those who knew and loved him. Naturally, I had spent time interviewing Beadle throughout the years, but this list needed to be more personal. Tharp. Don Prudhomme. Kenny Bernstein. Billy Meyer. Dave Settles. Dave Densmore. Steve Earwood. 鈥淲aterbed Fred鈥 Miller. Dale Emery.

In just two days, I tracked them all down, and each was eager and honored to speak of his memories of a great racer and generous friend who was a whole lot of fun to be around. They shared some great stories; unfortunately, many of them began with, 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 print this, but 鈥︹ What I can print is presented below, with deep respect and appreciation.

From left, Don Prudhomme, Richard Tharp, and Raymond Beadle in 2011 at Prudhomme's birthday party

harp and Beadle were inseparable buddies since the 1970s, two larger-than-life Texans who raced and partied together and still enjoyed one another鈥檚 company long after the party ended. They lived less than five minutes apart in the Dallas area, talked pretty much every day, ate supper together sometimes five nights a week, and just plain ol' hung out with Beadle鈥檚 other close friend, Tommy 鈥淪mitty鈥 Smith. For Tharp, losing Beadle was like losing a brother.

That he had to watch his friend鈥檚 long and painful descent to his passing has worn heavily on him, as he was there every step of the way, encouraging and consoling 鈥 and even chastising -- his pal. When the end neared and Beadle鈥檚 body began to shut down, Tharp could barely stand it, and his passing, though seemingly inevitable, hit him like a ton of bricks.

鈥淚t鈥檚 tough, tougher than I thought it would be,鈥 he admitted, the sadness clear in his voice. 鈥淭his got my attention harder than anything I鈥檝e ever experienced in my life. I still really can鈥檛 believe he鈥檚 gone.鈥

True to his nature, through his last tough months, Beadle put on a brave face for his friends, insisting he would be all right, but when he allowed his daughter, Michelle, to admit him to the hospital last week, Tharp knew the end was near. 鈥淚t just killed me; he was trying so hard not to have anyone go out of their way or feel sorry for him.鈥

The long friendship that ended Monday began in the late 1960s, when both were racing in Top Fuel. When Beadle moved to Dallas in the early 1970s to drive for Mike Burkhart, Tharp was already there driving the Blue Max car, whose lineage they would later share when they reunited in the late 1980s and Tharp took over for Beadle in the cockpit in a last hurrah.

As Beadle progressed in the 1970s from Burkhart鈥檚 ride to Don Schumacher鈥檚 well-funded team, Tharp went through a series of rides, and they faced off occasionally until Tharp went back to Top Fuel with the Carroll Brothers and later Candies & Hughes.

鈥淓ven though we were racing in different classes, we went everywhere together,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檇 fly to the races together and hang out before and after. We had a good time. He was just a good, good guy. I don鈥檛 remember anyone being mad at him, and if they were, they didn鈥檛 stay mad for more than 10 minutes. You might want to break his neck one minute, but 10 minutes later, you鈥檇 want to hug his neck.

鈥淥ne thing about Raymond: When you were his friend, you were his friend forever, and, believe me, I tested him pretty good. He bailed me out of a lot of trouble over the years. He helped so many people over the years, and you never had to ask him to help you. He鈥檇 just show up with whatever you needed to get back on your feet.

鈥淚鈥檒l guarantee you one thing," he added. "When they made Raymond Beadle, they threw the mold away. There鈥檒l never, ever, be another guy like him.鈥

Old pals reunited: from left, Beadle, Bill Doner, Billy Bones, and Prudhomme, at Prudhomme's party in 2011 (Gary Nastase photo)

ven though he was the guy who ended Prudhomme鈥檚 four-year reign as Funny Car king, 鈥渢he Snake鈥 always liked Beadle, from the heat of Funny Car battle in the 1970s right until the very end. After a family visit to Louisiana, Prudhomme stopped in Dallas and got together with Tharp to see their old friend the week before he died.

鈥淗e couldn鈥檛 leave the house, and I think he went back into the hospital that night, but when I left there, I pretty much knew it was going to be the last time I saw him; that hurt a lot,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e sat and talked for a long time; it was cool to have that time with him.

鈥淩aymond was always a guy that I really, really liked. We used to battle each other on the track, but we used to have fun when we hung out. He was always a pleasure to be around. We used to pal around with a bunch of guys 鈥 鈥榃aterbed Fred鈥 and Billy Bones, Bill Doner, Richard Tharp 鈥 to hang out in Dallas, go to Campisi鈥檚; we were tight. Outside of 鈥楳ongoose,鈥 I don鈥檛 know there was anyone inside of racing that I was tighter with than Raymond.鈥

That Beadle felt the same was obvious when he and Tharp flew to Los Angeles in April 2011 for Prudhomme鈥檚 surprise 70th birthday party at the 厕所强奸 Museum. It was a long and mutual admiration and friendship.

I asked Prudhomme how he 鈥 a notoriously all-business guy when he was racing 鈥 was friendly with one of the few guys who could hold his own against the Army cars.


Despite waging war throughout the 1970s, including in the exciting 1975 U.S. Nationals final (above), Prudhomme and Beadle remained great friends.

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 friendly with anyone who could beat me; let鈥檚 make that perfectly clear,鈥 he said with a laugh, mostly at the memory of himself. 鈥淚 always wanted to not like him, but I couldn鈥檛 help but like him. He鈥檇 beat you, and at the other end of the track, he鈥檇 almost always sound like he was sorry he beat you. It鈥檚 funny to think of it now, but we were all best friends. Hell, I was the best man at 鈥榃aterbed Fred鈥檚鈥 wedding. We were a lot tighter than anyone ever knew or could imagine.

鈥淭hat whole Blue Max thing was pretty impressive, with Raymond and 鈥榃aterbed鈥 and Dale Emery and their 10-gallon hats, cowboy boots, and long hair,鈥 he marveled. 鈥淎nd, I鈥檒l tell you, you never had a bad time hanging out with Raymond, before or after the race.

鈥淲hat I remember about that team was I think Raymond was one of the first guys who only drove. Most of us back then were drivers and tuners, but he actually had a crew chief [first with Schmidt and then Emery]. I was working my ass of on my car, and I鈥檇 see him kicking back and relaxing. He took that to the next level that you see today and taught us all something.

鈥淗e was always thinking; when he had his NASCAR team, he was the first guy to have a condo 鈥 hell, he bought two 鈥 [on the first turn] at the Charlotte track, and now they鈥檙e worth 10 times what he paid for them. We鈥檇 go there and hang out with him, and he鈥檇 treat us like gold. He treated everyone that way. Even if he didn鈥檛 have the money, he鈥檇 buy everyone dinner. He wouldn鈥檛 let you buy. I remember the first time I bought him a meal, he was almost insulted.

鈥淲e had a lot of good times; Fred Wagenhals [of Action Performance] had a cabin, and we鈥檇 all go up there: 鈥榃aterbed鈥 and his gal, me and my wife, Lynn, Raymond and [wife] Roz, and Ed Pink and his wife would go to the cabin, and Raymond would be up early every morning cooking for us, bacon and sausage and gravy stacked up --听he could fix a meal. He loved cooking and loved to eat.鈥

He ended our conversation by saying, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 say enough good things about him,鈥 and apparently he couldn鈥檛. A day after we talked, I got a late-night text from Prudhomme that read, in part, 鈥淛ust thinking about Raymond 鈥 He was probably the coolest guy I ran into in drag racing. Going to miss him.鈥

Wow. If 鈥渢he Snake,鈥 the epitome of cool (as even ), calls someone else cool, you know he was. Awesome.

(Above) Beadle and Billy Meyer,听friends since the early 1970s,听shared a laugh during a Legends Q&A at the 2011 national event at Meyer's Texas Motorplex, where Beadle was a regular visitor. (Below)听Beadle also took part in that year's Track Walk.

illy Meyer was feeling pretty melancholy when we talked about Beadle鈥檚 passing. This was the first year since he opened Texas Motorplex in 1986 that Beadle hadn鈥檛 been there, first as a racer and in the 25 or so most recent years as an honored guest in Meyer鈥檚 private tower suite. Beadle was too ill to come to the race.

Meyer鈥檚 admiration of the legend stems from his earliest days in the sport, in the early 1970s, when Beadle became a mentor to him, not so much with driving tips but how the teenage Funny Car phenom with a sometimes short fuse should handle himself otherwise in the world.

鈥淗e was a really good friend,鈥 said Meyer. 鈥淗e was about 10 years older than me and showed me the ropes about sponsorships and how to handle stuff, when not to blow up at people. I was a 鈥榙amn the torpedoes鈥 kind of guy back then, and he helped me calm down.鈥

Meyer, who was still in high school during his first two years in Funny Car, would often ride to the races with Beadle (who then was driving for Burkhart) while both raced on the Coca-Cola Cavalcade of Stars circuit, and Beadle鈥檚 wife at the time, Holly, would tutor him in English. 鈥淚 was not a good student in school,鈥 he admits.

Meyer has fond memories of being with Beadle and Paul Candies, with whom Meyer was especially close and whom we also lost last summer, for huge post-victory dinners that either would stage if their teams won. 鈥淲e鈥檇 go to dinner, and I know they spent more than we won. It was the best food you could get, Bananas Foster and bottles of champagne. Somehow I was in on that clique. It鈥檚 amazing the fun we had. Now they鈥檙e both gone. It鈥檚 a big loss.鈥

Beadle could also thank Meyer for 鈥淲aterbed Fred鈥 Miller, a key member of the Blue Max crew. Miller had worked on Meyer鈥檚 car until it had to be parked as part of his land-speed effort in 1975 and joined Beadle鈥檚 team during that time.

Meyer also acknowledged Beadle鈥檚 business acumen, especially when it came to apparel. Beadle is widely accepted as the guy who moved the needle on fan engagement with wearables. Racers had been printing and selling T-shirts for decades, but Beadle took it to a whole other level. I can鈥檛 tell you the number of foxy chicks I saw running around the pits with Blue Max halter tops in the 1970s.

鈥淗e really took it to a whole new level, and I think that鈥檚 because he was selling the Blue Max brand and not his own name,鈥 agreed Meyer. 鈥淭he name 鈥楻aymond Beadle鈥 on a T-shirt is not going to sell like the Blue Max. He got so successful at it that 厕所强奸 had to begin to regulate how those sales went on, which led to MainGate [厕所强奸鈥檚 souvenir vendor, then known as Sport Service] and the racer T-shirt trailers you see today.鈥

It wasn鈥檛 the first time that Beadle got 厕所强奸's attention. Along with Meyer and Candies, the trio, leaders of an owners association, orchestrated the legendary Funny Car boycott of the 1981 Cajun Nationals, demanding higher purses and, secondarily, better safety.

Densmore, who with Earwood was doing 厕所强奸鈥檚 PR at time, noted, 鈥淭he drivers specifically targeted the Cajun Nationals because it wasn鈥檛 one of the major [events], and Raymond told us they didn鈥檛 want to hurt the 厕所强奸, they just wanted to get someone鈥檚 attention. It worked.鈥

"Waterbed Fred"听Miller was a key member of the Blue Max crew from beginning to end. (Below) Miller, right, shared the winner's circle at the 1975 U.S. Nationals with car owner Harry Schmidt, left, and Beadle.

s mentioned earlier, Miller was one of the trio of key Blue Max crewmembers during the championship years, along with Dale Emery and Dee Gantt. He actually preceded the other two, joining forces with Schmidt and Beadle after Meyer parked his team after a late-season match race at Orange County Int鈥檒 Raceway. It was a chance encounter with Schmidt at Pink鈥檚 Southern California shop just days after becoming unemployed that got him hired to wrench on the Max, which Schmidt and Beadle had recently decided to resurrect.

Miller, not a Texan like the rest of the gang but a native of Mansfield, Ohio, was working in the motorcycle shop owned by Bob Riggle (of Hemi Under Glass fame) in the early 1970s when he met Emery and Gantt, who at the time were working (and, in Emery鈥檚 case, driving) for Jeg Coughlin鈥檚 Funny Car operation. They offered Miller a chance to crew for them for the weekend, and he never looked back. When Coughlin parked the car after the 1973 season, Miller went to work for Meyer, then a year later as the lone crewmember on the new Blue Max. Beadle, Schmidt, and Miller barnstormed the country, running 厕所强奸, IHRA, and match races until Schmidt burned out.

When Emery and Gantt joined the team a few years later, it was a strong mix of experience. Emery had become famous driving the Pure Hell fuel altered and raced in Funny Car until breaking his arm in a scary crash in Burkhart鈥檚 Camaro at the 1977 U.S. Nationals. (It was also Emery who bestowed upon Miller his indelible "Waterbed" nickname, not for any '70s-style debauchery听Miller had committed but for his听repeated failed听attempts to repair a leak in his water mattress;听"It started听out as a pinhole and by听the time I was done 'fixing' it, there a hole big enough to stick听my head in," recalls Miller. "Emery would see me and say, 'There goes 'Waterbed Fred'听and it just stuck.")听Gantt also had a long history in the sport, wrenching for guys like "Wild Willie" Borsch and Fred Goeske, and was on Larry Fullerton鈥檚 1972 厕所强奸 championship-winning Trojan Horse team. It was a powerhouse team, and Beadle treated his people well. Miller also thought there was none better than Beadle as a driver and a boss.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 ever remember him raising his voice,鈥 he remembered. 鈥淓ven if someone made a mistake, he鈥檇 never be up your ass about it. He always had the same demeanor, whether he was racing at Indy or walking around the shop. He never got rattled in the car, never paced before getting into the car. He had ice water in his veins. He had a good eye for hiring people, and he hired the best guys around to work in our shop, and he treated everyone well.

鈥淧at Galvin was telling me the other day how he and Donnie Couch were just 鈥榯wo grunts鈥 working on race cars 鈥 not even on the Blue Max -- and how Beadle would grab them up to go to dinner or to a Bruce Springsteen concert with everyone else. Everyone went; that was how Beadle was. He didn鈥檛 choose who was cool or not; he treated everyone the same. It wasn鈥檛 like he ate at the steakhouse and you ate at McDonald鈥檚.鈥

Miller, Beadle, and "friends." Beadle saw to it that there was always a good time to be had in the Blue Max camp.

Miller was there 鈥渇or every win and every loss鈥 of Beadle鈥檚 great Funny Car run with the Max and later took a position in Charlotte with Beadle鈥檚 NASCAR team, where he saw firsthand Beadle鈥檚 impact on that sport, thanks to his drag racing roots.

鈥淲e had been using titanium on the Funny Car for a long time, and when we brought it to NASCAR with titanium driveshafts and spindles, they freaked out,鈥 he remembered with a laugh. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 have a clue what it was. It was like it was moon metal and scared the crap out of them. We had been coating our pistons and camshafts 鈥 anything that moved and had friction -- for years, but we were one of the first guys to do it in NASCAR. I thought they were going to have a cow. And the people that Raymond hired, they all went on to greater careers in NASCAR because of him.鈥

Beadle seemed to know everyone, especially in the music industry, from Willie Nelson and Bob Seger and the guys in their bands, and he was good friends with E Street Band saxophonist Clarence Clemons and the guys in Springsteen鈥檚 band, including 鈥渢he Boss鈥 himself. When the Springsteen show pulled into Dallas, there was a special Blue Max room backstage, and everyone had all-access passes for the whole Born in the U.S.A. tour.

(Side note: As a huge Springsteen fan, I went to a lot of his concerts during that time and remember seeing Springsteen at the L.A. Coliseum in 1984 return to the stage for encores wearing a Blue Max hat and singing 鈥淪tand On It,鈥 a racing-themed tune. I may have been the only person in the place who was wowed by that, but I remember it as if it were yesterday.)

Miller, who went on to work with Action听Performance in the collectibles world,听stayed in touch with his longtime boss and friend. 鈥淲e still talked a lot on the phone, and I would see him at various functions. When I鈥檇 come to Dallas, I鈥檇 stay with him. I'll miss that."听

(Above) Beadle, left, and Dale Emery won four Funny Car championships together from 1979-81, including both 厕所强奸 and IHRA crowns in 1981. (Below) Before they joined forces in late 1977, they raced against one another, including earlier that year, with Emery driving for Mike Burkhart, for whom Beadle had driven earlier in his career. (Steve Reyes photo)
The recent Blue Max reunion: front row, Beadle and Richard Tharp; back row, from left, Dale Emery, former Blue Max driver Ronny Young; Fred Miller; crewman Scott Nelson, and Tommy "Smitty"听Smith.

hile Beadle was the marketing and driving force behind the Blue Max, crew chief Emery was certainly his mechanical enabler. Emery, an Oklahoma native afforded full-on Texan status by his affiliation with the Blue Max and his current residence in Denton, Texas, went to work for Beadle in late 1977, after breaking his arm in an accident at the U.S. Nationals. After a problem-plagued 1978 鈥 highlighted only by a win at the season-ending World Finals 鈥 they won the 厕所强奸 championship in 1979, 1980, and 1981 and joined the last one with a simultaneous IHRA championship. (Beadle won his two previous IHRA championships before Emery joined the team.)

The duo first met at Chaparral Trailers, where Emery worked while not racing; Beadle stopped by looking for a trailer for the new Blue Max effort. After his crash in Indy, the plaster was barely dry on Emery鈥檚 cast before Beadle offered him a job. Emery hadn鈥檛 intended to retire from driving but was intrigued by Beadle鈥檚 offer to tune the Blue Max. The fact that he already knew Gantt and Miller certainly didn鈥檛 hurt. Beadle headed off to England for a series of match races, and both guys mulled it over for two weeks before Emery accepted.

鈥淚 told Raymond I鈥檇 never tuned for anything I didn鈥檛 drive but that I would try it; it seemed to work out OK,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e did pretty good.

鈥淗e always treated us right; if we needed something, he鈥檇 help us out. He really gave me an open hand of what I could do with the car, and I liked experimenting, which is why I came up with the dual-mag deal and some other things. I was always trying to make it run better.鈥

When it came to rating his driver, Emery didn鈥檛 hesitate. 鈥淗e was a money driver; he never got rattled,鈥 said Emery, with the admiration clear in his voice. 鈥淚f we made it to a final, we knew we never had to worry about him being late.鈥

Emery stayed with the Blue Max to the bitter end in 1990, when the car was essentially underfunded and not equipped with the best parts. It was at least in part Emery鈥檚 urging that got Beadle to finally sell the team.

鈥淗e was pouring all of his money into the NASCAR team because that was his deal at the time,鈥 he remembered. 鈥淚 talked to him and told him we couldn鈥檛 keep on doing what we were doing. We didn鈥檛 really even have parts good enough to run match races. I told him he needed to sell the deal while it still had a good name, and he did.

鈥淲e all got together 鈥- Beadle, me, Fred, and a few other guys -鈥 for a Blue Max reunion a couple of weeks ago in Dallas,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a great big deal, but it was great to get everyone together one last time. I still talked to him every week. I would just check up on him and see how he was doing. We鈥檝e always been good friends; we raced together and had a lot of fun. I really liked the guy.鈥澨

Kenny Bernstein, left, and Beadle watched the "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" unfold.

hen most drag racing fans think of a tie between Beadle and Bernstein, they inevitably think about the 1981 Winternationals and the 鈥淭exas Chainsaw Massacre,鈥 in which Bernstein offered up one of his spare bodies to Beadle, who had blown the roof off of his car in winning his semifinal race. The roof from Bernstein鈥檚 Budweiser King Arrow was cut off and crafted to Beadle鈥檚 Plymouth Horizon in time to make the final (which Beadle lost).

But the two go way, way back further than that: They were junior-high and high-school classmates in Lubbock, Texas, in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Although they knew each other, they didn鈥檛 hang out, and it wasn鈥檛 until Bernstein returned to Lubbock after attending college in Dallas that he realized that Beadle was interested in racing.

Bernstein drove Top Fuel for Vance Hunt, the Anderson brothers, and Prentiss Cunningham early in his career, and Beadle also later drove for Cunningham before both transitioned to Funny Car in the early 1970s.

鈥淚 spent a lot of time with Raymond after that, at a place we called Gasoline Alley in Dallas, where we鈥檇 all hang out or had shops. I was with the Engine Masters [Ray Alley], and he was driving for Burkhart. We raced against each other a lot in the 1970s and 鈥80s when we were in our heydays of racing.鈥

Bernstein, long acknowledged as drag racing鈥檚 master marketer, thought highly of Beadle, who, unknown to many, had taken marketing classes himself.

鈥淗e was a great promoter; he was always hustling and putting things together and trying to take it to the next level,鈥 said Bernstein. 鈥淗e was a real go-getter, in everything from sponsorships to merchandising.鈥

Despite their tough battles for Funny Car supremacy in those days, the two former school chums remained friendly. 鈥淲e stayed pretty close throughout the time until he got out of racing, then we kind of lost touch as we both did our own things, but the times we had together were very special and memorable,鈥 said Bernstein.

(Above) Dave Settles drove the short-lived Blue Max Top Fueler for Beadle and two partners in 1979. (Below) Settles, left, and Blue Max crew chief Dale Emery

ave Settles was another fellow Texan with a long relationship with Beadle. Settles saw Beadle socially throughout the later years, always in Meyer鈥檚 suite at the Dallas event and regularly at the yearly winter get-together of former Texas racers in Denton. The former driver and crew chief, who remains active in the sport building fuel pumps, met Beadle in the early 1970s while driving for the Carroll Brothers team. Although Beadle also raced Top Fuel at that time, he soon went to Funny Car and Settles stayed in Top Fuel, and they never did race one another, though they did race together.

In 1979, Settles was the driver of the short-lived Blue Max Top Fueler, which was owned by Beadle and financed by well-heeled Dallas-area developers Foster Yancey and Brad Camp, who also were minority owners of the Dallas Cowboys and handpicked Settles as the driver and crew chief. The car debuted midseason and ran only eight races 鈥 winning the IHRA Springnationals and scoring a runner-up at the 厕所强奸 Summernationals 鈥 before being parked.

I asked Settles why Beadle, who was en route to winning his Funny Car championship, would also put his foot into the Top Fuel waters.

鈥淩aymond was big on getting exposure for his sponsors and his team, so it made sense for him, I guess,鈥 said Settles. 鈥淗e thought he could never get enough exposure, and when it came to that, he was always on his game. Me, I just wanted to hit the pedal.

鈥淭he car鈥檚 first race was the big IHRA Springnationals event in Bristol; I鈥檒l never forget it,鈥 he recalled wistfully. 鈥淚 pulled up there for my first run Friday, and people started cheering and going on and on. I couldn鈥檛 figure out what they were cheering about 鈥 it鈥檚 just a couple of Top Fuel dragsters. It didn鈥檛 dawn on me until later that it was because of the Blue Max name.

鈥淚 think Foster and Brad realized the value, too. The Blue Max was the 鈥榠n鈥 deal in Dallas; everyone knew about it 鈥 no matter what sport you were in -- and everyone knew Raymond. Being around Raymond was a fun place to be; there weren鈥檛 too many dull moments.鈥澨

s mentioned earlier, Earwood was running 厕所强奸鈥檚 Publicity Department with Densmore in Beadle鈥檚 heyday, and as a fellow lover of good times, they enjoyed one another鈥檚 company.

"He believed in taking care of his sponsors and press and publicity before a lot of the rest of them did,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淗e was great to me and Densy.

鈥淗e really changed our industry, no doubt. He was a great businessman racer 鈥 in a different mode than a Rick Hendrick or a Roger Penske -- but also just had a lot of common sense. He was first-class all the way. When he started racing NASCAR, back in those days, if the guys had a wreck, they鈥檇 just beat the fender out for the next race, but ol鈥 Beadle wanted his cars perfect every time.

鈥淩aymond got along with everyone --Bernstein, Meyer, 鈥楽nake鈥; sometimes you couldn鈥檛 even put those guys in the same room at one time, but Raymond got along with all of them. He got along with everyone. And generous? When he鈥檇 take people to dinner after a race, it would be 40 or 50 people. He鈥檇 just call the hotel and rent out the restaurant. We had a lot of fun back then. He was a helluva personality; we鈥檒l never see another one like him. He was really something. He lived a very full life and did it right.鈥澨

eadle was a superstar of the 1970s and 1980s, so it was only fitting that we鈥檇 hear from today鈥檚 Funny Car star, John Force, who inducted Beadle into the International Drag Racing Hall of Fame, as you can see in the clip at right (thanks to reader Dave Wesolowski for the link!).

Wrote Force, "In my long career, there have been five people that I have looked up to: 鈥楤ig Daddy鈥 [Don Garlits], Shirley [Muldowney], [Don] Prudhomme, [Tom] McEwen, and Raymond Beadle. I have taken his passing very hard, and it hurts me personally. I saw what kind of team owner and driver he was as well as what kind of creative promoter and teammate. He had the most loyal team with guys like Fred Miller, Dale Emery, and Dee Gantt. They were together through good times and bad. Our legends are getting older, and we have to appreciate them every day.

"I saw Beadle roll the Blue Max over in a terrifying crash. He has ice water in his veins because he just got out and put his hands over his head in triumph. I have never heard the roar of the crowd like that.

"Raymond surrounded himself with the best people, and they fought together every day. That is how I have run John Force Racing every day. Loyalty is the key, and so are principles. Raymond taught me that, and that is why I will miss him so much. In my early days, he helped me so much, and I thanked him every chance I got. He was a legend and one of the best who will be missed every single day."

will close with this great essay written by Densmore, who, like Tharp, felt the loss of Beadle on a very deep level. He sent it to me the day that Beadle died, and I want to share it here.

I know they say life goes on, but for me, at least, it will go on with far less enthusiasm, less fun, less intrigue and less real joy in the absence of Raymond Beadle, the face of Blue Max Racing Inc. who on Monday lost his battle with heart disease and a variety of other physical demons in the ICU ward at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.

The irony is that it is the same ICU ward in which I spent so much time with John Force after his 2007 crash at the Texas Motorplex.听 Force finally walked out of the hospital. After suffering an apparent stroke, Raymond did not.听

I鈥檝e had to deal with the passing of so many of my heroes the past few years 鈥 Wally Parks, 鈥淒iamond Jim鈥 Annin, my dad, Dr. Al Densmore, Dale Ham, Eric Medlen, Lee Shepherd, Paul Candies. All of them enriched my life and, through their very presence, made even my worst days somehow palatable.听

But this death has been particularly difficult for me to accept. I don鈥檛 know why, but I do know that I have a hole in my heart as big as Texas. We were friends for almost 40 years, linked by our West Texas roots, our love for drag racing and our mutual disdain for the status quo. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the way we鈥檝e always done it鈥 was a mutually irritating phrase.听

Of course, that outlaw attitude is what made Raymond larger than life.听He was Force鈥檚 idol long before the 16-time champ won his first race. In fact, Force still likes to tell how Raymond provided his team鈥檚 first uniforms. They were only Blue Max T-shirts, but when Raymond gave them to Force at Spokane one year, they became the first matched outfits in Brute Force history.

At a time when 90 percent of the sponsorship in drag racing was automotive, Beadle went after the mainstream market and landed deals with English Leather and Old Milwaukee beer. The English Leather era is itself worthy of a tell-all book, but he also had deals with NAPA and Valvoline and, at the end, Kodiak tobacco.

Raymond approached the sponsorship equation not with hat in hand, as was typical of the era, but from a position of strength. He put together deals with Ford and later with Pontiac, although I鈥檓 not sure GM ever got back all its cars. Having studied marketing in college, he applied those lessons to the sport. The result was the creation of what today is a massive collectibles market.

He sold so many T-shirts and hats and hat pins and halter tops, especially those that came with the 鈥渃ustom fit option,鈥 that it compelled the 厕所强奸 to rewrite the rules governing sales. In essence, he made it possible for MainGate to enjoy the success it does today because 厕所强奸 determined that if they were providing the arena for such entrepreneurship, they should get some of the profits.

He was, in my estimation, the perfect driver because, like Lee Shepherd, he was totally unflappable.听

Dennis Rothacker

When his first wife, Holly, grew temporarily hysterical after his 1982 crash at the Gatornationals in Gainesville, an unruffled Raymond told her that if she was going to react like that, he wasn鈥檛 going to let her come back because it was very distracting.

That crash also demonstrated his flair for the dramatic.听After barrel rolling the Blue Max and with the crowd holding its collective breath, he climbed out through the escape hatch, hands over his head in mock triumph.听

Although he won just 13 times, he won three successive 厕所强奸 Funny Car championships (1979, 1980, 1981), the first ending Don 鈥渢he Snake鈥 Prudhomme鈥檚 four-year reign in the U.S. Army car.听

His calm demeanor was aptly demonstrated in 1975, the year he convinced Harry Schmidt to partner with him in the resurrection of the Blue Max. That first year, he was in the final round of the biggest event in the sport, the U.S. Nationals, and he was racing one of the biggest names on the planet, 鈥渢he Snake.鈥澨

After the burnout, the car sprung a small oil leak. Fellow Texan Richard Tharp, who was at the starting line as a spectator, raced back to the crew cab for a wrench, but before he could return, "Waterbed Fred" reached in and hand-tightened a loose fitting. Raymond then calmly pulled to the starting line and, ignoring all the drama, won the race.

How big was Raymond Beadle? Well, when Bill Center, the erstwhile motorsports writer for the San Diego paper got a new dog in the 鈥80s, he named him 鈥淩aymond Beagle.鈥

Having conquered drag racing, Raymond moved on to NASCAR, where he won races with Tim Richmond and a championship with Rusty Wallace. He also went racing with the World of Outlaws, where he almost won a title with Sammy Swindell.听

Those were unbelievable times. It was, as I am fond of telling each new audience, a time when sex was safe and drugs were legal. That鈥檚 only a marginal exaggeration. We flew to NASCAR races, flew to sprint-car races. It was the best of times, and Raymond always went first class, with or without the wherewithal to do so.

There was a time when money was really tight, and every day included phone calls from irate creditors.听 Raymond knew every dodge in the business, any scam that might win him a little more time to 鈥減ut something together.鈥

鈥淔orgetting鈥 to sign the checks, envelopes without postage, items sent to erroneous addresses, but my favorite was one day when he signed a batch of checks and gave them to the office staff. The girls dutifully put them in the proper envelopes for postal pickup.

Unbeknownst to them, Raymond had snuck back into the office and liberated the envelopes so, when the calls began anew, the staff was none the wiser, informing callers with proper indignation that 鈥淚 know we sent them out because I put them in the envelopes and in the box myself.鈥

Raymond always was making deals, and irate creditors were part of doing business. He used to tell everyone in the office not to get so mad. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nothing personal. They only want their money.鈥澨

It was amazing to me that he could leave even some of his closest friends hung out on this deal or that deal and, still, when it came to crisis time, they鈥檇 be there for him. It was that way up until Monday.听

He moved comfortably in any circle. He was pals with princes and paupers. Those in his circle regularly were treated to Willie Nelson and Bruce Springsteen concerts, and the late Clarence Clemons and other band members were regulars at the races 鈥 and at the victory parties that often followed.听

Raymond got Willie to perform at SEMA, a function at which he and Holly got involved in a marital spat that resulted in her storming out and flying back to Texas. When Raymond returned, she asked him about her mink. She鈥檇 left it on the back of the chair. Raymond left it there, too.

Part of Raymond鈥檚 ultimate undoing was the fact that he developed a love for cooking. Actually, he developed a love for eating what he cooked, and, as a result, let鈥檚 just say that he was a little above his fighting weight at the end, which recalls one final story.

Former National DRAGSTER staffer John Jodauga is an accomplished artist who Raymond commissioned to do a caricature for a press kit cover in the 鈥80s. It was typically well done, but J.J., the consummate professional, sent it to Raymond for final approval and asked if there was anything else he could do.听

Raymond asked him to take about 10 pounds out of his cheeks. And he meant it, too. Rest in peace, R.B.

Amen. He'll be missed, but the legend of the Blue Max will fly on forever.

I invite fans and friends of Beadle to share their thoughts and memories of the man for a future column; send them to me at pburgess@nhra.com.