Drag Illustrated Issue 147, August 2019 | Page 46

Special Section THE PDRA TOP 3 LIST FIRST APPEARED IN DRAG ILLUSTRATED IN JULY OF 2018 AS AN EVER-CHANGING LIST OF THE BIGGEST NEWSMAKERS AND POWER PLAYERS IN THE PDRA’S PROFES- SIONAL CLASSES. THIS MONTH’S EDITION, REPRESENTING PER- FORMANCES FROM THE PDRA SUMMER NATIONALS PRESENTED BY LITHIUM PROS BATTERIES, DOES NOT REFLECT THE CURRENT POINTS STANDINGS, THOUGH MOST OF THE DRIVERS WHO APPEAR ON THIS LIST CAN ALSO BE FOUND NEAR THE TOP OF THE POINTS STANDINGS IN THEIR RESPECTIVE CLASSES. AS DRIVERS BATTLE BACK AND FORTH FOR NO. 1 QUALIFYING SPOTS, EVENT WINS AND NATIONAL RECORDS OVER PHOTOGRAPHS BY TARA BOWKER THE COURSE OF THE 2019 SEASON, THIS LIST WILL CHANGE TO REFLECT THOSE ACCOMPLISHMENTS. PRO BOOST 1. JOHN STRICKLAND 2. MELANIE SALEMI 3. KRIS THORNE PRO NITROUS 1. JASON HARRIS 2. TOMMY FRANKLIN 3. JIM HALSEY EXTREME PRO STOCK 1. JOHN MONTECALVO 2. STEVEN BOONE 3. CHRIS POWERS PRO OUTLAW 632 1. JOHNNY PLUCHINO 2. CHRIS HOLDORF 3. WES DISTEFANO PRO NITROUS MOTORCYCLE 1. ERIC MCKINNEY 2. TRAVIS DAVIS 3. RONNIE SMITH John Strickland was on the outside looking in after Moroso Pro Boost qualifying was complete, but a finish- line fire knocked Terry Leggett out of competition, allowing Strickland to slide into eliminations. He drove his ProCharger-boosted GALOT Motorsports Camaro to a 3.759 over fellow alter- nate Tommy Gray, a 3.742 over Kris Thorne’s turbo- charged Corvette and a 3.781 to beat Melanie Salemi in the final round. Salemi’s “Purple Reign” Firebird was the quickest roots-blown entry, firing off a 3.731 over defend- ing world champion Tommy D’Aprile and a 3.755 over GALOT’s Kevin Rivenbark before the final. Thorne’s 3.704 in the first round showed promise, but the Floridian slowed to a 3.851 when Strickland was picking up steam. Jason Harris raced to Switzer Dynamics Pro Nitrous world championships in 2014 and 2018 on the strength of a strategy that revolved around making A-to-B passes rather than shooting for moonshot runs. That same strategy netted the “Party Time” Camaro driver his first win of the season at South Georgia, as he ran low-3.70s to defeat Johnny Camp and Jay Cox before slowing to a 3.936 to take out two-time world cham- pion Tommy Franklin in the final. Franklin broke traction in the final after stunning the crowd with his 3.653 and 3.685 in prior rounds. Points leader Jim Halsey fell victim to Franklin in the semis fol- lowing a stout 3.700 in the opening round. While John Montecalvo’s No. 4 spot in the Liberty’s Gears Extreme Pro Stock points doesn’t reflect it, his Son- ny’s-powered Camaro is possibly the most consistent car in the class. Tuner Tommy Lee drove it to a runner-up finish at Virginia, then Montecalvo added another two final rounds at Maryland and South Georgia. He went red in the SGMP final, but his prior 4.103 and 4.128 indicated he was ready to take the win. Defending world champion Steven Boone capitalized on the red light, running a 4.223 to take his first win of the season. His semifinal opponent, Chris Powers, also red-lit, negat- ing a strong 4.123 preceded by a first-round 4.098. Four races into the season, defending Schwing America Pro Outlaw 632 world cham- pion Johnny Pluchino has won three races in four final- round appearances. His latest win in his Kaase-pow- ered Ford Escort came at the Summer Nationals, where he qualified No. 2 and defeated 2017 world champion Dillon Voss, championship chal- lenger Wes Distefano and consistent late-round player Chris Holdorf. He beat Diste- fano by just one thousandth of a second in the semis, then used a holeshot to take down Holdorf’s hard-charg- ing nitrous Corvette. Holdorf was deadly consistent on race day, going 4.27, 4.293 and 4.306. Distefano record- ed low ET and top speed of the event, 4.258 at 171.88, in the first round. Three-time Drag 965 Pro Nitrous Motorcycle world champion Eric McKinney needed a big performance at South Georgia. That’s exactly what he got, as he rode teammate Ashley Owens’ Hayabusa to the No. 1 qualifying spot, a career- best 3.977 at a world-record 179.92 in the opening round and three more round wins to claim the Summer Nation- als victory. His opponent in the final round was 2017 world champion Travis Davis, who reached the money round after holeshot wins over Chris Garner-Jones and defending world champion Ronnie “Pro Mod” Smith. Smith qualified No. 2 and was locked in the low-4-sec- ond zone, maintaining his points lead with the semifi- nal finish. 46 PDRA660.com