GOING
OUT IN STYLE
Words and photos
by Ian Tocher
4/1/04
In his semi-final solo
pass, Terry Robbins went 4.751 at 153.79 mph,
which turned out to be good enough for lane
choice in the final round
fter
more than six years of faithful service -- and
probably in its final race outing -- Terry Robbins'
pristine '67 Nova gave him one last Outlaw 10.5
win Mar. 28, on the 1/8-mile at Atlanta Dragway.
In the second points race of the Outlaw Racing
Street Car Association's (ORSCA's) inaugural
season, Robbins made it through four preliminaries
before pairing up against Jack Barfield in the
$7,500-to-win final.
Marcus Birt's 1997
Camaro broke on the line before going up
against Terry Robbins in the Outlaw 10.5
semis. |
Robbins, from Mooresboro, NC, had a bye in
round one, used a big holeshot to get past Bryan
Goethe in round two, then overcame a holeshot
by Ronnie Davis to continue his advance. That
set up a semi- final match against Marcus Birt,
but after the burnout Birt's crew was forced
to push him off the starting line. "I knew it
was ignition right away," Birt said. "It was
as if someone just came up after my burnout
and hit my kill switch."
On the other side of the ladder, Barfield got lucky with a bye in his
first round as the transmission broke on his '68 Camaro. After a quick
tranny swap between rounds, "The Original Outlaw" raced past Wesley
Scott Chambers and Mike Hill to reach a semi-final pairing against
Brian Morris where Barfield left first with an excellent .412 light and
never looked back on his way to a winning 4.765-second pass at 153.81
mph.
We just threw a little
too much power to it a little too early," Hephzibah,
GA's Brian Morris said after losing in the semis
to close friend Jack Barfield. "But this is
just our first year with this car and just the
third race, so we're still pretty happy."
Barfield saved his best pass for last, running
4.738 at 151.80 mph in the final -- but it was
all for nothing, or at least $2,000 paid to
the runner up -- as he also lit the red bulb
with a .383 reaction. That let Robbins salvage
the event win with a 4.770 effort at 152.87
mph. "I messed up. When I first went in I let
the car roll in a little deeper than I normally
do. Normally I just barely turn that second
bulb on," Barfield explained. "The car did what
it was supposed to do; it was just the driver
that screwed up."
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