Drag Illustrated Issue 119, March 2017 | Page 62

LIGHTS OUT VIII PRESENTED BY Coming on Strong JOE ALBRECHT underestimated it. When we saw Barry Mitchell spin ahead of us, we knew something was wrong. Jon [Salemi] came running up with a laptop, plugging in, and took power out, but I still spun.” Albrecht still smoked the tires— but so did Stack—and fortunately for him, Albrecht was able to recover first and made it to the finish a fraction of a second ahead of his opponent. Albrecht kept his GTO’s setup fairly soft for round three when he lined up against Alan Pitt- man, hoping not to lose traction again. After taking a .05 holeshot advantage, Albrecht wound up not needing it as his 3.99 at 198.88 easily bested Pittman’s effort of 4.07 at 160.10 mph. The semifinals were good to Al- brecht, too, with a stress-free 3.84 at 201.40-mph pass leaving Tim Slavens a tenth of a second behind at the finish line. “I saw that win light come on and it was like ‘you’re going to the finals, man, 62 | D r a g don’t screw it up!’” Albrecht jokes about reminding himself not to put too much pressure on himself. With just one round standing between him and redemption, validation, and ever-important In- ternet fame, Albrecht lined up in his second-straight Radial vs. The World final against tough-as-nails Mark “Woody” Woodruff. “Woody of sportsmanship and maturity to rival that of even the most seasoned drivers. Eventually, Woodruff ’s camp was ready and the two got started on their way to making history. They bumped in, triggered the stage lights, and waited for the green to signal the time to go all out. Albrecht got the jump “After being so close in October with that (No Mercy 7 runner-up), to come back and win was truly incredible.” was flying all weekend,” remem- bers Albrecht, who felt rightfully apprehensive about facing such a challenging competitor. But unbeknownst to him, Woodruff had mechanical issues earlier in eliminations and was rushing to get things fixed. “I told them, ‘hey, if we’ve got unti l 10:00 pm to race, I’ll wait to run ya’ at 9:59 p.m.,’” says Albrecht, revealing a sense I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com at the tree with a .061 reaction time over Woodruff ’s .074 light, and Albrecht ran straight out the back door as he held the lead all the way to the wire. His 3.83 at 202.00-mph pass was the final in a string of 3.8-second runs he’d made all weekend, and obvious- ly was the most important one since it officially earned him the win over Woodruff ’s 4.00 at 196.42-mph hit. The celebration began imme- diately and was “like a fantasy” for Albrecht. “Before I could even get out of the car at the end of the track, Dean Marinis put his head in the car and was scream- ing,” Albrecht says, savoring the memory of an incredible moment. “After being so close in October with that, to come back and win was truly unbelievable,” Albrecht says in a surprisingly understated manner. Prior to the race, he had commented that “whoever wins this race is the guy whose stuff holds together for an entire week; this race is a marathon!” and it wound up being him who took that monumental honor after all. In the winner’s circle, Albrecht was joined by scores of enthusi- astic supporters, including his girlfriend, Aimee Ehrlich, his father, brother, John Albrecht Jr., car-owner Whelan, crew guys Rico Mariani, Joe Alagna, and Mi- chael Lang, Jim and Jon Salemi, and most importantly, Albrecht’s grand prize check for $50,000. Issue 119 As one of the fresh, new faces in Radial vs. the World, Albrecht has risen to stardom with his runner-up and win at two of the most prestigious races in drag radial racing. With a dedicated team owner and consistent tuner, Albrecht’s star power will continue to rise.