Drag Illustrated Issue 110, June 2016 | Page 32

Dirt Stock Eliminator’s Randi Lyn Shipp talks about traveling the NHRA circuit alongside Pro Stock Fiance Bo Butner By Sadie Floyd A s one of the most marketable un-marketed faces in NHRA sportsman racing, Randi Lyn Shipp is having the time of her life racing her 1967 Pontiac Firebird in Stock Eliminator while she helps her fiancé Bo Butner in Pro Stock. Like any racer, Shipp was introduced to racing through her family. Shipp began racing at the age of eight but it wasn’t without convincing. Shipp remembers dueling her dad when she was six behind the wheel of a go-kart and her dad on his lawn mower. In the heat of the battle, Shipp hit a tree and that was that. Understandably, when her dad brought home a Jr. Dragster a year later, she wanted nothing to do with it. “My dad used to go racing with Bob Glidden when I was a kid so when Jr. Dragsters came out and Billy [Bob’s son] had one, he wanted one for me so badly,” laughs Shipp. “When he first bought me one, I really had nothing to do with it because I had just crashed my go-kart into a tree at the house.” Shipp eventually gave in and decided to race her Jr. Dragster with her dad at Indy once she turned eight. “I went to Indianapolis for their first race and I think there was 13 or 14 Jr. Dragsters there for the race,” Shipp says. “Jr. Dragsters were just getting started back then. I got down to three cars and got beat by Greg Dillman, a racer who still races out there. When I got down to three cars, my dad thought I might be a decent racer so we kept doing it. I won my third race ever there and I ended up beating Greg Dillman and after that, we were hooked. From then on, racing was what we did on weekends and all our family vacations were surrounded by drag racing.” Not only did Shipp experience success on track, she found love in her personal life at the racetrack, too. Pro Stock driver Bo Butner and Shipp have been together for over 12 years. The couple lives in their home in Floyds Knobbs, Indiana. Their relationship has seen many stages, but none could prepare Randi Lyn for the exciting and fast-paced world of professional drag racing when Bo was offered to join the Ken Black Racing team back in 2015. “When Bo was first talking about joining Pro Stock, my initial thought was ‘no way’,” she says. “Professional classes can be craziness, but on the other hand, it was exciting he was getting the chance to race Pro Stock. I’ve watched the class for years with my dad and we’re good friends with Bob Glidden so it was always in our lives. What I like most is if you ask any sportsman racer what class they’d race professionally, it’d be Pro Stock. It separates the men from the boys.” For the last two seasons, the Jim Butner Auto Sales Pro Stock team has thrived within the class while Randi Lyn and Bo continue to race in the sportsman ranks. The day starts out at 6:00 a.m. in order to get to the track, get the car warmed up and in the lanes by 8:00 a.m. After Shipp and Butner make their runs in Stock, it’s time to rush back to the Pro Stock pits and get ready for pro qualifying. “When I’m running Stock Eliminator, I make my pass and its time to get right back to the Pro Stock pits,” she says. “I make sure lunch for the KB team is ready and finish my other tasks for the day because it’ll be time for Pro Stock before I know it. We leave so early and on the nights the pros don’t qualify till 7:30 at night, we’re here really late. It’s exhausting, but cool.” Many memories have been created while Shipp has been traveling the NHRA divisional and national circuit. She has taken home the win at four national events in her career but her second win in Norwalk in 2013 holds the most value to her. “My favorite win was when I won in Norwalk,” she says, beaming. “It’s my home division [Division 3] and I believe it’s the hardest division out there. We bring in a ton of cars at the divisional and national events. I won my first divisional there in Super Street and I’ve always liked that track. You can be a super street racer and the Bader family think you’re just as awesome as a pro driver at that track. “The year I won at Norwalk was the first year they were doing the ice cream scoopers so of course, I needed get one of those!” she continues, grinning ear-to-ear. “That was the first Wally I won with my whole family there. Norwalk is by far is my favorite win ever.” Traveling to each event on the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series tour can be time-consuming and tiresome but Shipp couldn’t imagine herself anywhere else. “In five years, if I’m right in Stock Eliminator and I’m still winning a few national events, I’d be happy as can be,” she admits. “I guess when I was young and I didn’t know the whole perspective, I thought I wanted to race Top Fuel. Now that we’re in the middle of it with the Pro Stocker, I know it’s just not for me. I love racing and I love everything that is Stock Eliminator. If they came up with a factor showdown class one day, I’d like DI DI DI to do something like that too.” DI DI DI DI 32 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com DI DI DI Issue 110 PHOTOS: PRO SPORTSMAN ASSOCIATION, AUTO IMAGERY, SADIE FLOYD Rocket Shipp