Drag Illustrated Issue 110, June 2016 | Page 94

DR AG I LL U S T R AT ED R O UN D TABLE 94 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com COOL HAND LUKE Whether he’s racing for contingency money in the NHRA Super classes or entering a big-money bracket race, Luke Bogacki expects the prize potential to come close to matching the growing investment that sportsman racing requires. image at tech inspection and a check ready at the finish line. I don’t know if that’s true, but it would be king. I think that’d bring a lot of people back and a lot of good sponsors back if they knew it was going to be paid up front like that. It’s much easier from a paperwork standpoint, too, I can tell you that. I just runnered up at a divisional and I’m still getting these checks and you’ve gotta stay on top of it. It’s certainly not an inconvenience, but it’s sometimes pretty interesting trying to track it all down. LB: Obviously, involvement. I don’t know if this is necessarily a common opinion, but I think the new regime at NHRA is doing a better job. They’re heading down the right road. We aren’t necessarily seeing the results yet in terms of a ton of increase in manufacturer involvement, but they’ve made it a lot easier on manufacturers to get involved and much more cost-effective. They seem to be listening to the manufacturers. It’s going to take some time, though. It would benefit everyone involved to pay at the racetrack, and I don’t see the downside to it, as long as you have “If you take a look at it, NHRA contingency postings are lower now than where IHRA was when I started with them in 2003. Where are they going to be 10 years from now?” Beard wonders. Issue 110 PHOTOS: DRAG ILLUSTRATED ARCHIVES There’s something to be said for racing on the same track as the pros. The stands are full. Most of your coworkers don’t know anything about bracket racing, but when your national event comes into town and you tell them, ‘I’m going to be racing at Englishtown on the same track as John Force’, a lot of your average fans or friends, they’ll say, ‘oh, I heard about that on the radio. That’s great, you’re going to be racing on the same track as John Force, blah, blah, blah.’ There’s something to be said for that. On the flip side, if you’re strictly about competition and you want to get the most amount of runs down the track in a fourday period, you can’t beat bracket racing because you get a separate event each day. I think that the competition is definitely toughest at bracket racing. At national events, if there’s any type of bad weather or oil downs, typically the sportsman racers are going to be the first ones to feel the effects. NHRA has the time constraints with the live TV and that sort of thing, whereas if you go to a bracket race you are the show. You don’t have to ever worry about getting bumped, so to speak. In your opinion, what are some of the shortcomings of modern contingency programs? SL: I think the idea behind what NHRA is doing with the contingency program and what the companies are doing is a great thing. Unless NHRA is going to increase their payouts, they have to continue this contingency program to keep sportsman racing alive. All these companies that are involved in it make it to where these racers can keep coming back, and if you’re winning races, keep the funds coming in. Back 10 years ago when I was racing sportsman full-time, there was a lot of companies that were involved, so it was very worthwhile to go out there and race a national event with upwards of 40 or 50 stickers that were on your car and get that money rolling in. With the decrease in contingency support it’s made it pretty tough. I think with a little bit of restructuring we can get these companies involved again, and get it to where these companies aren’t just putting money out there; they’re getting the return back in the form of product support from racers and also the notoriety that they deserve for doing these contingency programs. It’s not cheap for these companies to do it. TJ: I think it’s getting better. I think with Peter Clifford being at NHRA, he’s a little more proactive in listening to new ideas, so I think you’ll see that improve. I’ve heard some rumblings of an