Drag Illustrated Issue 147, August 2019 | Page 45

Special Section I keep an override where I can make up ground and I got a brake pedal if I need to take it away, but you first have to realize where you’re at and where you’re supposed to be at that point in the race.” Thrift is the first to admit his 2019 season isn’t going according to plan, though he hasn’t had a first- round loss all year. He believes he’s driving as good as he ever has – his reaction times varied by just two thousandths at the Summer Nation- als Ignited by Lithium Pros at South Georgia – things just haven’t gone his way. The absence of main crew- member Mickey Miller coupled with a mechanical gremlin have pre- vented Thrift from running to his full potential. “We’re just struggling,” Thrift admits. “I had a crank trigger wheel go out, and I’ve never as long as I’ve been racing even heard of anybody have a crank trigger wheel go out. That’s what it was the whole time. [The engine] would pop and bang and struggle. “Plus, it’s been like trying to walk one-legged without Mickey here,” Thrift says. “It’s just been one of those years, but I ain’t given up. I still feel like I have a shot at the championship. I’m seven rounds out and there’s 16 rounds of racing left.” While Thrift has been around the PDRA long enough to experience the generous and sportsmanlike conduct of his fellow competitors on plenty of occasions, his latest troubles and the help he’s had to fix them reas- sured him that he’s racing with the right group of people. “It don’t matter if you’re running Pro Nitrous or Top Sportsman, ev- erybody is treated the same,” Thrift says. “You can be having problems and the Pro Nitrous guy will step up to help you just as quick as the guy parked next to you. Anything you need, there’s someone right there to help. It’s just a big family- oriented deal.” Thrift also called upon the Top Sportsman community when it came time to make repairs to his RJ Race Cars-built GTO after his crash at Florida’s Gainesville Raceway in early 2018. Before thanking Hoosier Racing Tires and Buck Racing Engines, Thrift offered up his grati- tude to the people who helped him get back on track with a car that looks better than ever. “I have a bunch of people that help me,” Thrift says. “Clayton Murphy at Chassis Engineering, he always hangs out with us and we try stuff for him. He redid the car and did a really, really good job for me. FTI Converters, that’s the backbone of going fast. Aaron Glaser at Glaser Collision in Kentucky did the paint job. It’s just unreal, the art and craftsmanship that went into it. When you see it, you know it’s me. I’m from the hippy days – I’ve gotta have every color in the crayon box on it.” PDRA660.com 45