Drag Illustrated Issue 119, March 2017 | Page 60

LIGHTS OUT VIII PRESENTED BY “Nova Joe” Albrecht’s incredible rise to radial racing’s top tier By Ainsley Jacobs W inning one of Donald “Duck” Long’s famous No Mercy or Lights Out races at South Georgia Motorsports Park is an accom- plishment that instantly catapults the lucky driver to legendary status within the small-tire drag racing community. Many consider it to be a career-defining achieve- ment, but “Nova Joe” Albrecht of Bellmore, New York, is hoping his Radial vs. The World win this Feb- ruary represents more than just a once-in-a-lifetime thing. At just 26 years old, Albrecht already has done more with his driving career than most can even dream of and was honored by being selected as one of Drag Illustrated’s 2016 30 Under 30 inductees. Thanks to his father, John Sr., the fourth-generation gearhead has been around cars since day one. The family-owned shop, Thrift-Way Auto Body and Chassis Works in Hempstead, New York, served as a hands-on classroom during Albrecht’s youth to provide a strong wrenching education. “We used to go to car shows and see guys with ’55 Chevys and ’41 Willys with blowers hanging out of their hoods and I thought it sucked that they’d just idle down the road,” Albrecht remembers. After begging his father to build a race car, an ’85 Monte Carlo bracket car evolved. As Albrecht was too tall to run in a standard issue Junior Dragster, he had to wait until 2007 when he was 16 before he could race in a real car. Dying to get his hands on whatev- er he could, he started out bracket racing his mom’s Suburban, then eventually acquired a Chevy Nova 60 | D r a g of his own and went on to win a Wally at just 17 years old in the NHRA Division 1 Bracket Finals. Albrecht then traded his bracket racing days for seat time in an Ultra Street car by way of an opportunity from car owner Eddie Whalen. A customer of Thrift- Way, Whalen had the shop finish up his Al-Lee Motorsports ’67 Nova and Albrecht quickly cut his teeth in the Induction Solutions nitrous oxide-enhanced ride. Running 4.80s in the eighth mile, he went on to win Ultra Street in December 2015, at the Snowbirds Outlaw Nationals at Bradenton Motorsports Park in Florida, I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com the Outlaw Street Car Shootout in August 2016, at Cecil County Dragway in Maryland, and various other events. “We had gone to Duck’s No Mercy VI race in 2015,” Albrecht recalls of the fateful event that changed his trajectory as a driver. “Eddie saw Radial vs. The World and said, ‘I’m gonna’ have one of those blower cars!’” Quick to make good on his word, Whalen found a 2006 Pontiac GTO online, so he and Albrecht went to check it out. “I had no clue what I was looking at,” Albrecht admits. “I had never raced anything like that and had always worked on nitrous cars. I didn’t know anything about this screw-blown deal, but Eddie bought the car.” Originally built by Vanishing Point Race Cars for Outlaw 10.5, the SFI 25.2 GTO was purchased as a turn-key car. Knowing that radials were the route they wanted to go, Thrift-Way did some up- dates to suspension and wheels to get the Goat to work with the new set of stickies. Additionally, a Ross Pistons-filled BAE 526 c.i. Hemi topped with a screw blower, QuickDrive transmission and Neal Chance converter were installed into what would soon be known as one of the baddest GTOs ever. Fi- nally, a fresh coat of red paint was sprayed because, well, Whalen simply loves the color red. Through Jeremy Evrist at Brad Anderson Enterprises, Whalen and Albrecht got hooked up with Jon Salemi of Resolution Racing. Salemi met up with the car owner and driver for the first time at Cecil County in May 2016, intro- ductions were made, and a plea for help was professed. “We could barely start the car before we met Jon,” Albrecht laughs. With Salemi’s expertise to rely on, the car ran a 4.12-second elapsed time on its first pass right off the trailer. “It was a big jump going from Ultra Street to this type of car, but I can’t thank Eddie enough for the awesome oppor- tunity,” Albrecht says gratefully. Ironically, his bracket racing background has been a huge help in his heads-up competition career. “I try to do things method- ically, and that’s helped tremen- dously when we made the switch to radials.” Knowing they had a promising Pontiac ready and waiting, Wha- len and Albrecht headed down to North Carolina in the late summer of 2016 for a test session at Shady Side Dragway. The car ran decent- ly enough, but the guys knew they still had a lot to figure out before being competitive. “We original- ly weren’t planning on going to Issue 119 Hard Work Pays Off