Wednesday
“The Way It Was” With Frank Kimmel
By Marty Tyler
“I said this one time at a banquet a few years ago. We had won a championship, and my mom was still with us at that time. She has (since) passed away. It’s been 2 years now. I think one of the most touching stories, one of my earliest memories, was that we were driving to a race. Dad was driving and Bill and I were riding in the back of the pickup. I was around 6 to 8 years old, and Bill was 10 to 12, somewhere around there. We actually rode in the back of a stake bed pickup because it was crowded up front. Sometimes my sisters would go, so there may be my mom, dad and 2 sisters in the front of this standard pickup truck. There were no crew cabs back then. I remember it was late, dad had raced and we were trying to get back home so he could get ready the next day and go race at another race track. Mom was reaching in a little Styrofoam cooler, because there wasn’t plastic igloos back then, and she was reaching in there with a wash cloth and getting it cold and putting on his neck so he could stay awake. (Frank’s voice breaking ever so slightly)
“That goes back to the story I told earlier (previous article with Frank: Frank Kimmel “This Is Our Life, This Is What We Do”) that I think sometimes some of these kids (young drivers coming in to the upper racing series) don’t understand (what tough times really are). And another thing, riding in the back of a pickup truck. If you do that now it’s called child abuse. It was a cool time to live through. Our’s was a racing family and that’s what it took. Sometimes I think, nowadays, people might miss that a little bit.”
“My dad raced all through Indiana, through Kentucky and a lot of the dirt tracks back in the 60′s. He started in ’48 on an asphalt track right here in southern Indiana. That’s all he did, was race on short tracks for a living, if you can imagine. We would run on Fridays, Saturdays and twice on Sundays and sometimes on a Wednesday night show if there was one around. It was a busy time and there was one race car. He might have one crew member tag along sometimes in a passenger car, but normally, it was mom, dad, me, bill and maybe one or two crew members and my older brother Thom, before he had to go to Vietnam, was right there with him, too. It was a family oriented deal. He was racing his butt off and making a living.”
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So what did Frank’s father say when he said he wanted to race, as well? “It was never a question. He didn’t expect us to do it. It was not like that at all, but, when he saw that I was going to do it he thought it was a natural progression. He thought that is what Bill and I should do. He knew it was a drug, an addiction and he gave it to us, so, he was kind of stuck with it.”
“We have breakfast with him every morning. We go up and actually meet at Steak And Shake here in Clarksville about a quarter to eight every morning. He’s doing great. He’s 81 and he’s real happy right now. They just had a community yard sale around his house and he made something like $2000.”
“We invite him all the time to go to the races with us and he’ll go to Salem because it’s so close and Kentucky Speedway. We’re not racing there this year, but when we are there, he is always there. He’ll come to some of the close tracks. He didn’t go to Talladega this year, but, sometimes he does because I have 2 sisters near Atlanta, so he gets to see them. If it’s someplace he wants to go or someplace he wants to see he will go. If not, if it’s on television he just about stays home because he says he has a better view from home.”

It is evident that this guy…a father, a brother, a son and a racer is really a great example of what racing was, is and even more importantly, what it is suppose to be. The guy is a 9 time ARCA champ, after all! It is amazing for me to realize of all the many racing stories and accomplishments of Frank’s career he could choose from he chose to speak of his father’s racing efforts to support his family and of a particular kind thought of his mother, tending to her tired and weary husband on the road home from a race. Yet, that truly was “the way it was” for Frank and his family. Again, many thanks Frank and good luck.
If you are a facebook junkie, be sure to follow Frank under the name Frank Kimmel. And be sure to check out his sponsors at www.menards.com and www.ansellconstruction.com .
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Views expressed by the writers are not necessarily the views of Catchfence
Article Tags: 9-Time ARCA Champion, ARCA, ARCA Racing Series, ARCA Racing Series presented by RE/MAX and Menards, Bill Kimmel, Frank Kimmel, Frank Kimmel II, Frank Kimmel Sr, Racing Perspectives, www.ansellgloves.com, www.menards.com
