Drag Illustrated Issue 111, July 2016 | Page 96

Melissa Surber Of course the media wants to talk to Surber. Why wouldn’t they? She’s attractive and talented and in a sport that is starving for young and marketable personalities, she is very much the future of drag racing. Surber’s story is a good one and it needs to be told, just don’t expect her to share it without a bit of coaxing. “Yes, doing interviews is probably the most nerve-wracking part of racing,” Surber admits. “Gainesville was a big race for us and I couldn’t believe the [FOX Sports] crew wanted to interview me. Thankfully, I got through it. I’m sure I looked nervous but I did my best. The problem is that I’m just not an outgoing person. Growing up, my siblings are much older so I was sort of raised like an only child. I remember times we’d go to a restaurant and my parents had to order for me because I was too shy to talk to the waiter or waitress. “I am making progress, though,” she says. “A couple weeks ago I had a local radio station here [at her home in Northern California] do a phone interview with me and we talked for an hour. The hardest thing right now is if someone asks questions about the bike and I don’t know the answer. Then, I feel a little silly.” L W ith all due respect to those who drive Funny Cars, Pro Mods, small tire Outlaw cars or anything else that requires equal amounts of skill and fearlessness, there are few things in drag racing more difficult than riding a Pro Stock Motorcycle. Besides the inherent danger of running nearly 200 MPH with no seatbelts and no roll cage, the rider must be precise and eliminate any unnecessary movements. Every single motion must be calculated and precise. Miss a shift by 100 RPM and you’ll lose two- or three-hundredths. Forget to tuck in your elbows or get your helmet below the windscreen? There goes another three- or four-hundredths. Make enough tiny errors and before you know it, you’re at the bottom of the qualifying sheet and packing up the trailer on Saturday night. It isn’t always obvious watching from the grandstands, but pay close attention to every rider’s body language and you can spot the good ones. At about 5’1” and maybe 115 pounds, Surber is just about the perfect size to be a great rider, but size alone won’t do it. A rider still has to have the upper body strength to wrestle a 500-pound bike when it decides not to cooperate. Three-time world champ Angelle Sampey didn’t start winning races until she got serious about fitness training and Surber is well aware that she needs to do likewise. During her initial licensing runs Surber performed better than even she had expected. She paid attention to all the advice her father provided, and even managed to get herself out of a tough situation when her front brakes locked up at the end of a run. “On the first few runs the bike felt really fast, but after a while it started to slow down,” says Surber. “On one run, I was testing in Sonoma and I’m still not exactly sure what happened but the front brake locked up. I had it sideways for a long time. I burned a lot of tread off the front tire but I never went down. I was thinking clearly enough to pull the dead-man switch and I finally got off the brakes and sat up and everything was fine after that. I was prepared for the worst. I was ready to hop off to make sure the bike didn’t land on top of me, but nothing bad happened. That’s pretty much when I realized that I could do this.” “I’ve never found anything else that I’m good at and nothing else I enjoy this much. I want to be out here for a while.” ike many kids who grow up in a racing family, Surber’s first trip down the drag strip came behind the wheel of a Jr. Dragster, but she didn’t spend a lot of time racing on four wheels. By the time she turned 16, her dad had convinced her to trade a firesuit for a set of leathers and she began racing motorcycles. Her first bike was a single-cylinder Buell Blast – a perfect entry-level machine. “They used to have this class for Jr. Drag Bikes, and I was going to start there but they got rid of the class so we built a Jr. Dragster,” Surber recalls. “I had fun in the Junior and sort of wanted to stick with cars but by the time I was 16, my dad was like, ‘Okay, it’s time for you to get on a bike.’ I tried it a few times and I learned that I actually liked riding the bike. My Buell Blast had wheelie bars and it was pretty easy to ride. Then, we moved up to a no-bar bike, and that was hard because you can’t launch them at full throttle. You had to learn how to ease the clutch out.” About the time she turned 19, Surber got a surprise when dad told her she was going to ride his S&S-powered Buell Pro Stock Bike. James had seen enough to believe that Melissa was up to the challenge, although she wasn’t nearly as convinced. “I remember we were headed to the races with my Blast and dad just said, ‘You know, you might 96 | D r a g as well get some practice on the big bike.’ I was stunned. I was used to going about 120 and now I was going to ride this bike that could go almost 200. I wasn’t really scared of it; I just wanted to make sure I was ready.” I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com Surber made just enough runs to qualify for her NHRA competition license before heading for Denver last summer to make her official debut. She didn’t qualify, but a week later at her home track in Sonoma, she announced her arrival with a 6.97, quick enough to qualify for the all-six-second field. On race day, Surber tattooed five-time champ Andrew Hines on the starting line and ran another 6.97, but it wasn’t enough to hold off the Harley rider’s 6.85. For someone who had ne ver been quicker than 7.50, it was a true eye-opener. Issue 111