Drag Illustrated Issue 111, July 2016 | Page 84

STATE OF DRAG too, ‘cause you can’t blow the motors up so much. That’s the truth. At this point in 2016 we have 330-plus MPH nitro cars on the 1,000-foot, 5.7-second, 260mph Pro Mods, 3.4-second, 220mph Outlaw Pro Mods and 210mph eighth-mile street cars. Generally speaking, what is your opinion on the incredible performance of today’s top race cars? Natural evolution of the sport? Out of control? Good? Bad? AJ: For Top Fuel and Funny Car – I don’t have much to comment on the other classes – it’s something that we are constantly addressing. I think the main focus for us it the cost that it takes to produce those numbers. I don’t think we’re in an area where it’s not safe, but the cost that it takes to perform those numbers – when that outweighs what we can charge a sponsor for the exposure that they receive from it we have to address it. That’s an important balance. We’re constantly discussing our options. RC: Considering all that we’ve seen in recent weeks and months in terms of the performance of Nitro Funny Cars, specifically, that’s a great question. I guess in the last few weeks some teams have complained about the Funny Car headers being laid back, and they’re claiming it’s unsafe and that NHRA needed to step in and do something about it. Of course, it’s just some of the teams that ran real well last year during The Countdown, which none of us complained about, that are now struggling to run at the front. They’re talking about the cars being more difficult to drive and being unsafe. After Hagan went 335mph in Topeka they hit us with a couple things – more rev limiter and ignition timing. You can’t put timing back into the engine at a certain point that is more than what it was at that time of the run. In other words, they’re definitely trying to slow us down right now. Honestly, we love to go fast, and we’ve got the best racing that we’ve seen in decades, not just years. I believe they will slow us down a little bit, but I don’t want NHRA to have so many static rules on things that nothing is left to the imagination of these crew chiefs. More than anything, I don’t want to see rule changes made in the name of safety when it’s really about competition amongst all these great teams. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a compliment to hear these guys complaining because of what we’re doing and, yeah, we’re melting some decals off the side of the car, but we have the same set of headers on that all these other teams have. I’ve had bad days at the track. Last year in St. Louis, I crossed the center line, took out cones, went through the gate, 84 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com almost ran a guy over because I didn’t want to go in the sand trap – one of the hardest weekends I’ve ever had as a driver. It’s not that I couldn’t drive, and I certainly didn’t want to slow the car down to make it easier to drive. I wanted to be able to drive a car that was on the edge of being ROLLERCOASTER RIDER Leah Pritchett has certainly experienced the highs and lows of professional drag racing in the last 12 months, but she remains as positive as ever about the value she can bring to her sponsors as a Top Fuel driver. out of control. I just don’t want to see these crew chiefs handcuffed completely. LP: I don’t believe that any more limitations should be set on Pro Mods at all. That class is the epitome of extreme and hardcore drag racing – giving it all you’ve got and being creative. When you start putting unnecessary limitations on that, you’re taking away from that class – no way around it. I get it with the speeds, but this is drag racing. We’re all about going quicker and faster sooner than the next guy. I do not agree with the additional weight put on turbo cars in NHRA, nor do I agree with them decreasing boost. The weight is an issue because these cars need to stop – it’s math. I’ve been in them and I see it. I don’t know why NHRA hasn’t let the Pro Mod series blow up to what everyone knows it could become, but I do think there are things in the works. Those cars are makin’ bacon to the eighth-mile and I understand that in the quarter-mile there probably needs to be some limitations because of the limited down force that is available. The thing about Pro Mods, specifically, is actually kind of a rule that I’ve always had in those cars – you can make almost any move in a Pro Mod car before the eighth-mile and you can probably save the run. If you start driving the car past there, though, it’s going to be disastrous. I’m really only speaking on Pro Mod here, but I just don’t want to see one of our sport’s most promising and exciting categories lose its spirit. JS: It’s drag racing. Honestly, that’s why PDRA believes so strongly in eighth-mile racing – because of the safety element. If we can go 240 or 250mph in the eighth-mile one of these days, well, I think we need to do it. That’s what it’s all about. It’s racing for a reason. NHRA has brought the fuel cars back to 1,000-feet and, yes, they’re still running 330mph like they did in the quarter-mile, but they have much more room to stop. As long as the tracks are safe, I don’t see a problem. Truthfully, I think the cars need to go fast – as fast as they can possibly go. I’m a racer, but that’s what the sport was built on. You can’t go backwards. SJ: Fuel cars are their own animal. All these cars are limited by the tire. Fuel car racing, they’ve pretty much decided that about 330 to 335mph is what NHRA wants them to run. They’ll take whatever steps are necessary to keep them there. That’s just because having a hard time keeping tires on the back of the thing, and that’s fast enough. As far as Pro Mods, at least quarter-mile Pro Mod racing, when they start getting to 250 and 260mph, it starts scaring me at the weight that they’re at. A lot of times what you’ll have in door car racing that you won’t have in nitro racing is you’ll have fairly new drivers come in, guys who have not been in and did not grow up racing. They’ll have the budget and funding to run what they want to run. Pro Mod is an entry-level class to get to nitro, and driving these cars is no joke. You don’t want to get a car that weighs 2,800-pounds and be flipping at 250mph. I think keeping the cars around that speed is a good idea. As far as the radial tire stuff, Issue 111 PHOTO: DON SCHUMACHER RACING ★★★★★