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The
5.4L engine in Randy Haywood's 2002
Mustang GT originally was destined
for a Lincoln Navigator, but now features
FR500 Ford Motorsports heads and a
91 mm Precision turbo. |
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It also was a personal best effort for Haywood,
who backed it up with his career-first SSO win
after easily handling Spurgeon Adkins in the
opening round, then trailering Gary Rohe in
the second. In the quarter-finals, Haywood took
a leisurely 15-second trip down the strip when
Smith was unable to answer the call to stage,
then beat Mark VanMeter in the semis to set
up the final against number-three qualifier
Mike "Punk" Trimandilis.
Trimandilis was fast off the trailer with a
7.98 in qualifying, but admitted to battling
traction problems about 100 feet out all day
in eliminations. Haywood said he "caught a glimpse"
of his final-round opponent's tire smoke in
his mirror, but stayed on the gas to post a
winning 8.167-second time at 172.41 mph.
"It did great all weekend,"
Haywood said of the 5.4 liter engine built at
his True Blue Performance shop at Benson, NC.
"I'm kind of glad that seven-second pass is
out of the way, though, 'cause now I can concentrate
on going racing."
FOCUS ON PERFORMANCE
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Joe Morgan had his Bassani
Xhaust 2000 Ford Focus out at Reynolds,
making some exhibition and test passes
at his sponsor's race. Morgan said he
raced the car last season in the NHRA
import series, but this is the first year
for it with a new 2.3-liter, turbocharged
Esslinger engine, similar to those run
in quarter-midget sprint cars. The car's
best quarter-mile pass to date is an 8.98
at 149 mph. |
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