Drag Illustrated Issue 120, April 2017 | Page 28

Dirt hard for him now, dealing with all the complaints and controversy that seem to dog SEGA on a regular basis. “I tell you, I raced for nearly 40 years with some of the toughest racers you could ever meet, and I had my ups and downs with some of them, I’ll admit, but at the end of the day we could sit down and talk and laugh,” Stott says. “But now with the South East Gassers it seems like I’m always at odds with someone, but it all goes back to me just wanting to stand my ground and make sure we put on a good show.” Among the accusations Stott has faced is the creation of SEGA primarily as a means to drum up business for his race car chassis shop in Co- lumbus, North Carolina. He’s also under constant pressure from certain tracks and competitors to loosen SEGA’s rules and allow more entries, or racers intent on exploiting any potential gaps in the rules. “Seriously, I don’t need SEGA to keep my shop busy. I was doing just fine working on Pro Mods and bracket cars and class cars for ADRL, NHRA, PDRA, all those kinds of racers, and I still do a lot of that stuff,” Stott says. “Yes, I do work on a lot of gassers now, but I was actually doing that even before starting up the South East Gassers. In fact, that’s kind of what got me thinking of a period-correct gassers series in the first place, because as soon as I would build one it would sell right away. I knew there was a demand for those kind of cars out there.” Regarding the rules, Stott says he keeps a tight rein because it’s so easy to stray off the historic path he wants SEGA to follow. “We have 22 pages of rules right now and our rule book is just for one class; NHRA don’t have that many rules in Pro Stock. Now, I’ve looked at the rules for gassers all over the world; I’m not talking only about the United States, I mean overseas and in Canada and I’ve looked at every rule that I can find posted for any other gasser organization in the world and theirs is usually less than a page because they’re pretty much letting everything run,” Stott says. “Now, there’s nothing wrong with that, I’m not knocking them, but that’s not how the South East Gassers are going to run. Too many of these nostalgia gasser series, what passes for nostal- gia at least, is they’re just using nostalgia bodies. They’ve got too big of tires on the back, beadlocks, four-link suspensions, automatics; there’s really nothing nostalgia about them but the bodies.” Plus, the SEGA formula is working and racers are buying in to the concept with no slowdown in sight. Stott says he knows of 148 SEGA-legal cars “on the books” and claims 86 currently active cars. “That means they can crank up and come to a race track with us at any time,” he says. “Keep in mind, in 2011 we had two. And you got to remember, these cars are no good for nothing else. This is worse than the Pro Stock truck deal, because think about it; you can’t even bracket race these ill-handling, four-speed race cars,” Stott says. “So these people have enough confidence in me or in the organization or in the fan support we’re getting, whatever it is that’s bringing them in, to build these special cars that are no good for nothing else. And remember another thing, too, we’re building them ‘wrong’ on purpose. Every one of us knows how to build a better race car than what we’re racing out here. But the fans get sick of the cookie cutters, and that’s what we would have if we opened up the rules, just another cookie-cutter race.” Still, beyond the internal challenges SEGA faces in order to remain true to Stott’s vision, perhaps most frustrating for him are rival or- ganizations and events popping up to dilute the overall “gasser” pool. “One thing we do know that made SEGA a suc- cess is having sense enough to not flood the mar- ket in one area. Sure, it would have been easier for us to just race within a 100-mile radius of home, but we had better judgment than that. Even the races we run in other states we pick tracks that don’t have any other type of old-school races—or if they do, we get involved with them. Never have we gone into an area that already had our type racing and flooded their market,” Stott says. “And now all we ask is for the other old-school shows to give us the same respect and find their own market, or build cars to fit our rules and join us. I have been told there is room for everybody— and I agree—but not in our back door. I under- stand it’s a lot easier to come in and take over an already strong market that was built by someone else, but this one won’t be took over without a fight from the loyal SEGA fans and racers. “Seriously, all I’m really trying to do here is educate the fans, because if we don’t preserve this history, it’s going to be gone forever.” DI DI DI DI DI DI DI 28 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com DI DI DI Issue 120 QUAIN STOTT