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EDITORIAL
Editor & Publisher, CEO Jeff Burk
Managing Editor, COO Kay Burk
Editor at Large, Bret Kepner
Editor at Large, Emeritus Chris Martin
Bracket Racing Editor, Jok Nicholson
Motorcycle Editor, Tom McCarthy
Nostalgia Editor, Brian Losness
Contributing Writers, Jim Baker, Steven Bunker, Aaron Polburn, Matt Strong
Australian Correspondent, Jon Van Daal
European Correspondent, Ivan Sansom
Poet Laureate, Bob Fisher
Cartoonists, Jeff DeGrandis, Kenny Youngblood
PHOTOGRAPHY
Senior Photographer - Ron Lewis
Contributing Photographers - Donna Bistran, Steven Bunker, Adam Cranmer, James Drew, Don Eckert, Steve Embling, Mike Garland, Joel Gelfand, Steve Gruenwald, Chris Haverly, Rose Hughes, Bob Johnson, Bret Kepner, "Bad" Brad Klaassen, Jon LeMoine, Eddie Maloney, Tim Marshall, Matt Mothershed, Richard Muir, Joe McHugh, Dennis Mothershed, Ivan Sansom, Paul Schmitz, Jon Van Daal
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
Director: Casey Araiza
480-213-6384
ADVERTISING
Director: Dave Ferrato
504-237-5072
PRODUCTION
Webmonkey: Axel G.
Production Monkey: Axel G.
(Bonobo)
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Phone: 636.272.6301
Editor & Publisher
CEO Jeff Burk
636.272.6301
Managing Editor
COO Kay Burk
636.272.6301
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
Director: Casey Araiza
480.213.6384
ADVERTISING
Director: Dave Ferrato
504.237.5072
NEW PRODUCTS
Contact: Casey Araiza
480.213.6384
Time for ‘Fun in the Sun’ at ...
Steve Dweck, last year’s Friday winner. Last year’s other winners were Trey ...
[11/07/17]
Larry Dixon suspended by NHRA
The NHRA imposed an indefinite suspension of competition privileges ...
[11/06/17]
It’s not all work at SEMA Show
Lest you think the SEMA Show attendees spend all day walking the huge convention floor ...
[11/03/17]
NHRA promotes Cromwell to ...
The National Hot Rod Association today announced that Glen Cromwell, who...
[10/31/17]
McMillen gets first career win
Top Fuel veteran Terry McMillen piloted his dragster to his first career ...
[10/30/17]
This was really a drag!
It’s Friday, so we often bring you some “softer” news items. And now, for a ...
[10/27/17]
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AGENT 1320
BURK'S BLAST w/editor Jeff Burk
Pro Stock and So Many Other Things to Wonder About…
When the NHRA recently announced they would reduce the number of Pro Stock qualifying slots from 16 to eight at nine selected NHRA events next season you might have thought from the Pro Stock community’s knee-jerk reaction that the NHRA had announced a “death sentence” for the class. [ED NOTE: The disastrous legal/PR experience NHRA suffered after dropping the Pro Stock Truck class causes many people to believe the NHRA will never officially “kill” another class with the word “professional” attached to its title.]
In 2018 the P/S class be raced at all 24 national events just as they have for decades, but at nine of the events, there will only be eight Pro Stocks in eliminations. That is probably welcome news to the field-fillers in the class who can now plan a 15-race season instead of 24. I submit that the Pro Stock class racers and owners have a much better program extant with an NHRA-paid guaranteed purse, prime coverage on the FS1 broadcasts and that plan is much better than any other of the other NHRA professional doorslammer classes currently have or are offered.
Not having a fully qualified field in a professional class is what they refer to in politics as “bad optics”. It just looks bad to potential investors, advertisers, and fans on TV and in the stands.
Short fields in any professional class makes the class appear weak. I suspect many fans would prefer to see a full eight-car qualified field rather than any short field where racers advance to the next round unopposed.
If the NHRA wanted to they could easily marginalize any pro class just by lessening TV coverage of the class, reducing the number of qualifying sessions, making teams pay an entry fee in advance for the entire season. In other words, NHRA could tell the Pro Stock class they will have the same deal the Pro Mod class has, as the Pro Mod racers themselves financially support the class by paying their own purses and only the winner and runner-up at a National Event get paid.
There could be benefits for fans of and teams in the Pro Stock class from the NHRA’s decision especially considering that in recent years a real qualifying battle between Pro Stock teams has been as rare as a $6.00 beer at a national event.
Quite a few of the NHRA events where the Pro Stock field has been reduced to eight cars are part of the NHRA’s Countdown to the Championship that could prove very interesting. Consider that 10 cars qualify for the Championship and at those nine races there will be only eight qualifying spots and one less round win to gain those valuable countdown points.
Qualifying for the eight-car field races prior to the U.S. Nationals should be both dramatic and entertaining -- something long missing in the class for the average non-Pro Stock geek drag racing fan.
There is another benefit for the “budget” racers in Pro Stock. They could plan for a 15-race season knowing that they would still be able to race and most likely qualify at Gainesville, Indy, and the two Pomona races for their sponsors.
I started covering NHRA national events in 1975. I was eat-up with Pro Stock and the very real battle to break the six-second or 200mph barrier in Pro Stock. The rivalries between the Johnsons and Gliddens were hugely entertaining. The Big Three automakers in Detroit all had sponsored teams or had a backdoor program in Pro Stock for selected teams. But despite all of that real race fan friendly drama, Pro Stock couldn’t hold the fans attention.
In those days the NHRA often ran the nitro classes first and ended the session with Pro Stock. What I noticed was that as soon as the last nitro cars went down the track the stands started emptying like a flushed toilet. Fans just didn’t hang around to watch the doorslammers. There is no way the Pro Stock racers or crew could have witnessed this because they were all either at the top end or towing back to the pits, blissfully ignorant of the fan exodus.
Whenever I or my peers like Jon Asher, Bret Kepner or Dave Wallace brought this up to Pro Stock teams they just chose to totally disbelieve what we all were witnessing. Sadly, they still are it appears.
Right now NHRA Pro Stock is a hobby for some very wealthy team owners who instead of golf or tennis chose drag racing as their recreation outlet. Those team owners are having a lot of fun and spending a lot of money on their hobby to try and beat one of the other wealthy owners on Sunday at an NHRA national event.
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Just Wondering … In 2017 through the St. Louis race the average number of entries in Top Fuel is 16.2! The fewest entries were at E-town where there were just 14, the most entries were at St. Louis with 20, and six events had short fields. Why doesn’t the NHRA save the smaller teams some money and reduce the number of qualifying sessions for the pro classes? How about one on Friday and two Saturday? Right now qualifying sessions are usually just practice for the well-funded mega teams and a financial drain for the smaller teams.
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Just Wondering … Arguably two of the most important races for outlaw doorslammers each year are held at South Georgia Motorsports Park and promoted by the flamboyant Donald Long. So why are there absolutely no pre- or post-race news releases from those races aside from Facebook? As long as that is the case the Donald Long races, racers and sponsors aren’t going to get the attention they deserve.
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Just Wondering … Who would have ever thought that in a span of around four decades the AHRA and IHRA drag racing sanctioning bodies would be history and the NHRA would be the last sanctioning body with nitro-burning Top Fuel and Funny Cars in North America?
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Just Wondering … NHRA Top Fuel, Funny Car and Pro Stock teams of any quality know that if they just show up at a national event they are 95% and often 100% certain of making the field and getting a check. Doesn’t that scenario suspiciously resemble a government entitlement program?
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Just Wondering … With the IHRA becoming a bracket racing-only program for 2018 I wonder if some of the former IHRA Super Stock/Stock racers will move over to the NHRA to race?
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Just Wondering …
EDITORIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
Senior Photographer - Ron Lewis
Contributing Photographers - Donna Bistran, Steven Bunker, Adam Cranmer, James Drew, Don Eckert, Steve Embling, Mike Garland, Joel Gelfand, Steve Gruenwald, Chris Haverly, Rose Hughes, Bob Johnson, Bret Kepner, "Bad" Brad Klaassen, Jon LeMoine, Eddie Maloney, Tim Marshall, Matt Mothershed, Richard Muir, Joe McHugh, Dennis Mothershed, Ivan Sansom, Paul Schmitz, Jon Van Daal
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
Director: Casey Araiza
480-213-6384
ADVERTISING
Director: Dave Ferrato
504-237-5072
PRODUCTION
Webmonkey: Axel G.
Production Monkey: Axel G.
(Bonobo)
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