Drag Illustrated Issue 122, June 2017 | Page 26

Dirt with a host of other prestigious wins and awards. He is well-versed in the mechanics of the sport, seeing through the eyes of a manufacturer, spon- sor and racer, so it’s no surprise that before long his in-depth knowledge of the sport, mixed with a modeling background, had him in the sights of TV production crews. His first stint as an on-air com- mentator came in 2001. He’s now a regular fixture on the NHRA on FOX broadcast and hosts two shows, Garage Squad and TruckU, on Velocity. “It’s fun. It really is. It’s not as fun as racing, but it’s the next best thing,” Massel said of his TV career. “A couple of people had some faith in me and that’s what’s been the difference to be able do this for a living.” While much of Massel’s on-track success has come in th e Comp Eliminator class, he has in re- cent years competed in the NHRA Factory Stock Showdown in a COPO Camaro. “It’s totally differ- ent than what I’m used to,” Massel explained. “I’ve never been in a production-type car, with a little tire on the back. We make a ridiculous amount of power for what those things are. It’s crazy.” This year he debuted a new ‘17 COPO and, at Norwalk, unveiled a new engine program with Jon Kaase. “This is kind of a big deal – a Ford guy doing a Chevy motor. It’s cool to see him involved in this class and taking a leap to the Chevy side with me. The motor made significant power, so I’m looking forward to seeing what it will do the rest of the season. “The class has a lot of potential right now be- cause there’s so much factory support for it. Dur- ing all the broadcasts on Sportsman shows it gets highlighted. They show all three rounds of it. And then they usually show the final round on the Mello Yello Pro show as well. I think NHRA and FOX consider it a possibility of something really going somewhere, so they’re trying to help support it as well, which is huge.” Things seemingly couldn’t be better for Mas- sel, but it was less than a year ago when things literally burnt to the ground. “We were going to go run an outlaw race, had put a big turbo on my Cobalt for the no-rules thing and we had an injector o-ring failure,” Mas- sel explained. “During the burnout, alcohol got onto the distributor and the thing caught fire. I knew there was a fire right away, but because it was methanol no one else saw it burning. I’m screaming to the other people. Unfortunately, the track’s fire truck didn’t work, and they didn’t know where their fire extinguishers were. My fire bottle actually didn’t go off. I ripped the handles off; the lines were completely frozen up in my car. I learned the hard way that every year you’re sup- posed to take the lines out and oil and grease them and put them back in, which I was never aware of. The track crew didn’t have a screw driver or a Dzus wrench or anything to get the nose off. So I literally ran back to the starting line with my firesuit and helmet on and grabbed the fire extinguisher and was trying to put my own car out while everybody else just stood back and watched. Something that could have cost a few hundred dollars turned into about thirty thousand real quick. It was a bad, bad day.” Despite the tragedy of the day, there were some redeeming threads woven into the story. Massel was uninjured, and thanks to his sponsor, was able to continue competing in Comp in 2017. “Without Autogeek’s support I would have never been able to rebuild that car and I would never have been able to continue to race with all the other stuff I’ve got going on. Five years ago, I was all but done racing. They stepped up last minute without knowing anything about the sport and supported me. Without them I would have been out of racing.” Massel not only came back out, but came out winning, scoring a victory at Charlotte. Later this year he’ll bring out his dragster in addition to the Cobalt and COPO. Garage Squad is in its fourth season of production, and TruckU is going on season 11. Add to that the FOX broadcasts, efforts toward his own pilot show, Behind the Helmet, and time spent at the family business, and it’s clear Massel truly is an automotive jack of all trades. DI DI DI DI DI DI DI 26 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com DI DI DI Issue 122 BRUNO MASSEL JR.