Founding of Miss Budweiser In 1962, while operating his aviation business in St. Petersburg, Little acquired his first hydroplane by trading a cabin cruiser for it. He kept the boat near his hangar, where it caught the attention of August Busch III of Anheuser-Busch. After taking Busch for a ride, Little suggested that Budweiser sponsor the boat — an offer Busch accepted. The partnership created
Miss Budweiser, beginning a sponsorship and ensuing sport-wide dominance that would last four decades and transform unlimited hydroplane racing.
Safety and Tragedy From the beginning, Little's teams were affected by the dangers of unlimited hydroplane racing. In June 1966, Little's
Miss Budweiser was part of the deadliest day in unlimited hydroplane racing history. At the President's Cup Regatta on the
Potomac River in Washington, D.C., three drivers were killed in two separate accidents. In the final heat,
Miss Budweiser, driven by Don Wilson, collided with Rex Manchester's
Notre Dame on the backstretch, killing both men instantly. Earlier the same afternoon, three-time national champion Ron Musson had died when
Miss Bardahl exploded at high speed. The triple fatality was the worst tragedy in the sport's history. For Little, who had entered the sport only a few years earlier, the accident was a devastating early setback.
Miss Budweiser was noted at the time as the lightest boat in the fleet and among the fastest under calm conditions, but Wilson had only recently begun driving the craft. Despite the disaster, Little remained committed to hydroplane racing, and in later years became a leading advocate for improved driver safety, including the adoption of enclosed cockpits. In 1979, driver
Dean Chenoweth survived a 220 mph crash while attempting to break the straightaway world speed record. Little credited “the
flak jacket and the Lord” with saving Chenoweth's life, noting that the protective vest had been crushed in the wreck. Chenoweth returned to racing but was killed in 1982 during qualifying at the Columbia Cup in Pasco, Washington, when
Miss Budweiser flipped after encountering a gust of wind. Following the accident, Little's team pioneered the enclosed cockpit for hydroplanes, which has since been credited with saving drivers’ lives.
Dominance and Innovations By the 1990s,
Miss Budweiser was often described as the “New York Yankees” of hydroplane racing, fielding budgets estimated at $3 million annually—several times larger than competing teams. Little's boats won consistently, with drivers including Chip Hanauer, Jim Kropfeld, Tom D’Eath, and later Dave Villwock. His dominance drew both admiration and criticism; Hanauer remarked that “sports is all about drama, and he added that … you need someone to love and someone to hate, and he was that guy.” Despite his fierce reputation, Villwock recalled Little as cautious with his drivers, often urging them to slow down rather than take excessive risks. Little was also known as an ambassador for the sport, hosting reporters and crews in his motorcoach and providing meals for teams at race sites. == Community involvement and personal life ==