photo by Jeff Burk
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HALLOWEEN CANDY
After a show like what went down September 11 and the resultant hysteria,
it's hard to focus on drag racing, to find one topic and wail away.
However, there are a few things that are noteworthy, and below is some
dandruff from my Halloween head scratchings.
What can I say? It's October, the home stretch of the drag racing season.
NHRA has two pro titles all carved out in Funny Car with John Force
in Funny Car and Warren Johnson in Pro Stock slated to take the last
Winston drag racing year-end checks in history. Top Fuel has a decent
points race with Kenny Bernstein and Larry Dixon Jr. in Don Prudhomme's
Miller dragster neck-and-neck for the lead.
In IHRA, who knows? I mean what gives with those guys? SFX (now Clear
Channel) buys them out at the beginning of the year and I have to say
my expectations were high. I mean you'd think IHRA'd at least get their
qualifying and final-round national event results in the paper. Clear
Channel can certainly bring updated communications into the picture
given their track record, but noooooo ...
You'd have better luck getting LaCrosse results from Maine before you'd
find out what happened at an IHRA race. I know that Top Fuel racer Clay
Millican is ripping away in the Mike Kloeber-tuned Peter Lehman dragster,
something like six straight national event wins, but other than that,
who knows?
In my humble opinion, it is utterly minor league to not include your
results in the main market daily's sports sections. No excuses accepted.
Really, what's the deal? How hard is it for an association press guy
or gal to get on the computer and e- mail the results to A.P. or whoever
and get the story out on the wire. Same goes for the qualifying stats
on Saturday.
What is it? IHRA drag racing is not worthy of exposure given to such
back-of-the- bus activities like college soccer, municipal golf, judo,
high school water polo, and pro bowling? C'mon, wake up! Treat yourselves
like pros, for Chrissakes.
After what I've not seen, if I was Pro Mod Champ Mike Janis or the
Pro Stock or Alcohol Funny Car champ, I'd mount those tower stairs after
a national event, whip out the ole 38 snub-nose and say, "Nobody move.
You over there, rolling the joint, get over to that computer, and start
writing. Don't make me have to use this ..." You get the picture.
Are we a nationally important pro sport, or we are slapping Kojak?
The only reason I can think for not doing this is that the Clear Channel
front office intends to drive IHRA into the ground and use it as a tax
write-off, and that fear might not be that far off the mark given the
way the U.S. economy is spinning southward in the toilet bowl of life.
Hey, Clear Channel looked downright idiotic with its pop music hit list
a month back, but they're bright enough to know if they've plunked down
a roll on a last-place finish.
Get with it, IHRA. Publish those results.
Speaking of results, I was more than happy to see ex-NBA player
Tom Hammonds nearly nail his first NHRA Pro Stock title at the O'Reilly
Nationals in Ennis, Texas. He would've been NHRA's first winning black
driver in a Pro car class had he beaten V. (as in Victory) Gaines in
the finale.
It's a big deal to have a star from another pro sport come over and
make some noise. One of the biggest pushes NHRA drag racing got in the
last 15 years was the remarkable showing by ex-Houston Oiler quarterback
Dan Pastorini in the mid- 1980s. Pastorini debuted at the '85 Bakersfield
March Meet, but as early as the 1986 NHRA Southern Nationals he was
in the Top Fuel winner's circle.
Guys like Pastorini and Hammonds are well connected in the sports world
and help draw attention to drag racing. Let's face it, IHRA for sure,
and NHRA to a lesser degree, can all use help in the exposure department.
Gary Densham's Funny Car win at the NHRA O'Reilly rally really
makes you believe that good things eventually happen to good people.
Hot on the heels of his big win at Memphis, drag racing's "Mr. Kotter"
takes all the marbles, beating car owner John Force in a spectacular
all-4.8-second finale.
I will say that as good a guy as Force is, I still would have rather
seen Densham win in a car that he owned. I've watched him race Funny
Cars from the days of the Densham & Walker Pinto and the "Teacher's
Pet" Barracudas and Datsuns, and the win, as nice as it was, just reinforces
my notion that the whole game, more than ever before, spins on money.
The Creasy family of Illinois races as hard as anybody and recently
ran their first four-second run on a 300-mph pass, but realistically
they'll win the day Osama bin Laden runs on the Republican ticket in
two years. Without the big bucks, only a select few make the winners
circle.
I guess I'll eat a little crow at this point. I really had some
reservations about NHRA elapsed times or speeds stepping up with the
addition of the 90-percent rule's adoption. For a year, save for Tony
Schumacher's 330-mph lightning bolt in 2000, I was bored stiff with
the times out of NHRA national events. However, the results registered
at the race in Joliet and now the Texas Motorplex have changed my mind.
Kenny Bernstein runs a 4.47 in Chicago, Schumacher goes 333, Mike Dunn
runs a 330 at the Motorplex, Force and Bazemore trade 4.75s in Funny
Car ... okay, okay. That's a little better. Now if we could just find
a way for more teams to get cash flow injections to make the fuel classes
more competitive.
Chuck Etchells getting out of Funny Car and drag racing. I'm
genuinely sorry to see him go. He was one of the easiest people to interview
and he, wife Shelley, brother Gary, and his crew were first rate people.
It was my pleasure to see Chuck win his first NHRA national event at
the 1990 NHRA Summernationals in Englishtown, New Jersey, and I was
also present when he made permanent drag racing history when he ran
the sport's first Funny Car four with a 4.96 at the 1993 Heartland Park
Topeka event.
He took wins with the same class attitude as he did a loss, and radiated
class. And if there's anybody I owe a beer to, it's Chuck. You talk
about an open ice chest. Chuck, if you ever find your way to the San
Fernando Valley near L.A., look me up, I'll leap off the wagon, and
we'll bend one. Here's to you.
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