Drag Illustrated Issue 124, August 2017 | Page 70

ANTRON BROWN A n t r o n Brown waltzes into the main entrance of Don Schumacher Racing’s immaculate Brownsburg, Indiana-based race shop, bringing with him an unmistakable energy that’s turned the former Pro Stock Motorcycle phenom into one of pro- fessional drag racing’s biggest stars. He greets the receptionist, asks how her day is going, then checks in with his publicist before we settle on a vacant board room, where we’ll spend the next hour talking about drag racing. The beaming smile on Brown’s face is replaced with a look of concern as we sit down at the table where numerous high-dollar sponsorship deals have been pitched and signed. Something is clear- ly on his mind. “Let me show you something,” he says as he pulls up a recent Seattle Times piece about the driver of the Matco Tools Top Fuel dragster on his iPhone. “This story says I have a 438-117 record in head-to-head competition—a winning percentage of 71.2—I never realized that until one of our sponsors at Toyota Racing showed me this article.” The story goes on to say Brown’s winning per- centage is higher than peers like DSR teammate Tony Schumacher (67.7 percent) and 16-time Funny Car World Champion John Force, who’s amassed a winning percentage of 69.6 over a decades-long career of head-to-head drag rac- ing. Brown isn’t sharing the article to show off or brag about his accomplishments. He’s using it to provide context to a question he’s increasingly asked by sponsors and friends: “Why aren’t you being nominated for Driver of the Year honors?” “It’s one of those questions that’s baffled me,” he admits. “I have sponsors that ask questions like, ‘Man, we figured you’d be nominated for this,’ or ‘Why didn’t your team get nominated for that?’. And we don’t know. We just don’t know what it takes to be recognized from that standpoint. Driver of the Year is always one big award from ESPN and the ESPYs, but there’s other awards besides that, too. Our main focus right now is we try not to look at things like that because one day when we retire we can look back at all the stuff we have done, our whole work together as a unit. “As of now we’re just going to keep our heads down and keep plugging and keep working hard. Then maybe one day people will recognize what we’ve done. Hopefully they don’t recognize it when you’re five championships down the road, you know what I mean? Right now, we’re working 70 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com on our fourth title and we’re working hard at it. That’s going to be our focus right now.” B rown grew up on his grand- mother’s 10-acre farm in Chester- field, New Jersey, a small Trenton suburb where in 2016 a street was named after the still-rising Top Fuel star: Antron Brown Way. He was exposed to drag racing at a young age, going sportsman racing with his father, Albert, and his uncle, Andre. By his senior year of high school Brown was racing motorcycles on the local drag strip. “I distinctly remember eating, sleeping and dreaming about drag racing,” says Brown, 41. “I used to draw and doodle dragsters when I was in school. I wanted to race. One person told me when you eat, sleep and you dream it, you don’t realize that you become it, and I became it probably when I was 10 years old. I just did every- thing along the way to bring me into that realm. I start- ed off working on a team, to testing motorcycles and riding street bikes.” Brown’s passion for two-wheeled drag racing continued in 1998 when he entered the NHRA Pro Stock Motorcycle ranks with a bike owned by star NFL cornerback Troy Vin- cent. After joining the U.S. Army team with teammate Angelle Sampey in 2003, Brown would earn 16 Pro Stock Motorcycle victories in 33 final rounds. “Four years into racing Pro Stock Motorcycle, I did the Army deal; went through basic training. When I got out of that basic training—to make it short and sweet—it taught me to believe in myself and that you should never settle. It’s not that ‘I can’t;’ it’s always ‘I will’ and ‘I can.’ Once I got that Army motto in my mind and started to live that lifestyle, that’s when I put my eyes on Top Fuel. Four years later, after still plugging away while I was riding bikes, I got to live the ultimate dream, and that was to drive a Top Fuel car.” Brown got the call t o move up to Top Fuel in late 2007, taking over the seat of the Matco Tools dragster fielded in 2008 by Texas businessman David Powers. He raced to his first Top Fuel win in just his fourth start, beating three-time world champion Larry Dixon in the final round at Hous- ton. The team later traded hands to Mike Ashley, who hired former Funny Car driver Mark Oswald and longtime Funny Car crew guy Brian Corradi to tune the car. The trio stayed together when Don Schumacher added the Matco Tools team to his expanding stable of nitro entries late in 2009. Brown and his “Matco boys” have done excep- tionally well during their time racing together. Lead- ing into this year’s NHRA Countdown, his Top Fuel credentials boast 49 event wins, 38 low-qualifier awards and three of the last five NHRA Mello Yello Se- ries world championships: 2012, 2015 and 2016. The Matco team’s ability to string together winning passes—especially in the crucial Countdown portion of the season—has created a unique situation for them. Whenever they win a race, they celebrate conservative- ly and pack up. When they finish the season as the number-one team in drag racing’s most elite category, the achievement isn’t met with overwhelming praise from the media, no ESPY award nominations or mag- azine covers. It’s almost as if a championship-level per- formance is expected from Brown and company, almost as if winning is just business as usual. One easily identifiable reason behind Brown winning no less than six races per year since 2009 (excepting 2010 and 2013), has been the consis- “As of now we’re just going to keep our heads down and keep plugging and keep working hard. Then maybe one day people will recognize what we’ve done.” Issue 124