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Richmond, who was noted for womanizing, was diagnosed with AIDS during 1987 and missed most of the season with illness which he explained to the public as pneumonia. Richmond returned to the track in the Miller High Life 500 at Pocono. Driving like a man on a mission, he overcame a shifter problem
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In 1979 Amelio Scott hired Hyde to be the crew chief for his family team in 1979 with his son Tighe Scott as the driver. Their first race together was the 1979 Daytona 500. Scott finished sixth in the race. At the following race at
Rockingham Speedway, Scott recorded his best NASCAR result when he
183:. The team continued to win some races, but in 1978 the relationship between Stacy and Hyde deteriorated and Hyde left the team in mid-June. Late in 1978 Hyde would sue Stacy, and eventually would win.
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Hyde had 48 career victories. His forte was setting up cars for specific tracks. His race shop is still part of the
Hendrick Motorsports facility, and a road within the complex is known as Hyde's Way.
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drove
Richmond's Folgers Chevrolet in the Oakwood Homes 500 at Charlotte, but the No. 25 was reversed to No. 52, which was Jimmy's normal car number. He crashed on lap 20, finishing 40th. Car owner
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to put the
Folgers No. 25 Chevrolet back into victory lane. The very next week he outclassed the field in the Budweiser 400 at Riverside, bringing home his final Winston Cup victory.
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became the driver for the No. 25 team in 1988, but
Hendrick had become a three car operation, and Hyde sometimes felt ignored. He left after the season to become crew chief for
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drove the
Folgers No. 25 in the Winston Western 500 at Riverside, not fairing much better. He left the race on lap 75 with transmission trouble, finishing 33rd.
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to be crew chief for a team he was partner in, All Star Racing. The partnership did not work out, and
Hendrick bought the team out forming
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where he worked through the first half of the 1991 season, before moving to Chad Little's No. 19 Bullseye BBQ/Tyson Foods Ford.
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to be the crew chief of the K&K Insurance team. By 1969 the team began to see considerable success with driver
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In 1980 Hyde opened his own racing engine shop and supplied engines to various teams. In 1984, he was hired by
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The K&K team was one of the leaders through most of the 1970s, but in 1977 Krauskopf sold the team to
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The team was very successful in 1986. Richmond won 7 races and finished third in points behind legends
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finished fourth. They competed in 15 more events that season and ten more in 1980 before parting ways.
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Hyde died in 1996 of a heart attack brought on by a blood clot, and was inducted into the
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Greg Sacks, Hut
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stock car racing in the 1960s through the 1980s, winning 56 races and 88
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114:(January 17, 1925 – May 13, 1996) was a leading crew chief in
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on
January 17, 1925, he learned to be a mechanic in the
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474:International Motorsports Hall of Fame inductees
122:. He was the 1970 championship crew chief for
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489:United States Army personnel of World War II
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425:crew chief statistics at Racing-Reference
393:"Harry Hyde, 71, an Auto Racing Engineer"
198:. The team won three races in 1984 with
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439:Hyde interview on racing with Richmond
265:International Motorsports Hall of Fame
205:Hyde was then paired with new driver
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219:. Hyde's character was portrayed by
16:For the pitcher and infielder, see
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484:People from Brownsville, Kentucky
280:(1965), Earl Balmer (1965–1966),
209:, a young open-wheel racer from
44:Hyde in 1986 as crew chief for
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449:IMDb biography for Harry Hyde
444:Hendrick Motorsports article
276:K&K Insurance, No. 71,
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349:Stavola Brothers, No. 8,
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316:All Star Racing, No. 5,
168:In 1965 he was hired by
271:Teams, numbers, drivers
254:Stavola Brothers Racing
142:Brownsville, Kentucky
72:Brownsville, Kentucky
20:. For the actor, see
18:Harry Hyde (baseball)
360:Chad Little, No. 19
324:Hendrick Motorsports
196:Hendrick Motorsports
53:Personal information
434:Speedway Media site
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479:NASCAR crew chiefs
398:The New York Times
309:Russ Togs No. 30,
22:Harry Hyde (actor)
429:Hall of Fame site
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102:Years active
27:NASCAR crew chief
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351:Bobby Hillin Jr.
330:(1985), No. 25,
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401:. May 15, 1996
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403:. Retrieved
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344:Ken Schrader
332:Tim Richmond
328:Geoff Bodine
318:Geoff Bodine
300:Neil Bonnett
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250:Ken Schrader
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207:Tim Richmond
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200:Geoff Bodine
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150:World War II
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85:(1996-05-13)
83:May 13, 1996
46:Tim Richmond
469:1996 deaths
464:1925 births
362:Chad Little
355:Rick Wilson
313:(1979–1980)
311:Tighe Scott
306:(1977–1978)
292:(1974–1976)
290:Dave Marcis
286:Buddy Baker
282:Bobby Isaac
240:Jimmy Means
181:J. D. Stacy
174:Bobby Isaac
124:Bobby Isaac
458:Categories
423:Harry Hyde
405:2009-02-20
372:References
136:Early life
112:Harry Hyde
96:Crew chief
92:Occupation
64:1925-01-17
32:Harry Hyde
302:, No. 6:
298:, No. 5:
296:Jim Stacy
267:in 2004.
202:driving.
105:1966–1993
342:(1987),
338:(1987),
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140:Born in
154:Indiana
148:during
364:(1991)
357:(1991)
346:(1988)
320:(1984)
156:, and
116:NASCAR
74:, U.S.
230:and
158:Ohio
146:Army
80:Died
58:Born
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