|
|
||
|
|
||
We certainly have no complaint with the NHRA-sters rating the drivers any way they want. We did it a year ago, and our attitude then was, "hey, it's our football." Same goes for them. Still, because of the obvious handicap of being a house organ, National DRAGSTER can't tell you everything. We can. And will. View this as an addendum to ND's noble effort. Where we feel something important has been overlooked or unavoidably left out, we'll put it in. In some cases, we think they got it all, as with driver No. 50 Elmer Trett. However, such would not be the case with Richard Tharp and others. We'll take them in Dragster's order and at their pace, so tune in each week.
6. KENNY BERNSTEIN
In his Top Fuel career, roughly extending from 1966 to 1969, Bernstein drove the Ace Muffler dragster, the Carroll Bros. entry, the Anderson Bros., and Prentiss Cunningham's "Texas Weasel." With a career as all-encompassing as Bernstein's, one would naturally figure that he scored wins in the other hot rod associations. In 1981, Bernstein's "Budweiser King" Dodge Omni finished in the top 10 Funny Car standings of NHRA, IHRA, and AHRA. In AHRA competition that year, Bernstein actually received the first 250-mph Funny Car time slip, but most have problems with its veracity. In the final of the AHRA Nationals at San Antonio, Texas, Bernstein beat Don Prudhomme's "Pepsi Challenger" with a 250.60-mph time ticket. Unfortunately, Chrondek and all the clocks at that time could not produce a speed with those hundredths. In addition to his AHRA exploits, Bernstein also was the 1979 IHRA
Winston Funny Car world champ and is the third winningest Funny Car
driver in association history with 16 event titles and nine runner-ups.
(Jeff Burk photo) |
|||
Copyright 1999-2001, Drag Racing Online and Racing Net Source |