STREET/RACE Issue 1, Winter 2016 | Page 22

The Best & Worst of TX2K16 What better way to kick off the 2016 street car race season than with TX2K, arguably the biggest event of the year? For enthusiasts with true street-driven machines, TX2K is widely considered the biggest and best event to attend, with all different types of vehicles attending. From four-digit-horsepower GT-Rs to the wildly-tweaked machines of Pennsylvania’s Speed Warhouse to Underground Racing’s twin-turbo Lamborghini Gallardos, TX2K quite literally features all levels of street-worthy performance as it takes over Houston’s Royal Purple Raceway and the surrounding area. With Peter Blach at its helm, the now-annual gathering began in Houston back in the spring of 2000, and consisted of only a few dozen cars. Originally named The Supra Nationals—for obvious reasons—attendance has grown since then to beyond anyone’s wildest expectations. Over the past 16 years, not only has the event attracted the country’s quickest and fastest street cars, but in order to be considered a real player, one has to show up with a car capable of spinning the dyno roller north of the two-ton mark. TX2K is known for attracting some of the fastest domestic, import, and exotic drag racing cars in the nation. TX2K16 enjoyed the support of more than 70 sponsors, including premier tuning shops and car builders such as TopSpeed Motorsports, T1 Race Development, and Real Street Performance, which not only use TX2K as a testbed to prove out their winter projects, but also as a showcase to attract potential customers. It is within the confines of TX2K where a shop can make or break its reputation. Those that tear up the drag strip with impressive numbers create a buzz for the course of the event and beyond, while those whose performance falters when the pressure is on get pushed to the back burner. The sheer number of media members in attendance, along with the dozens of videos that pop up during the course of the event, prove the public’s interest in the amazing vehicles of TX2K. TX2K16 kicked off with the Roll Race Nationals, with a limit of 130 cars hand-selected by Blach for their performance levels. There are no gutted, clapped-out, tin-can race cars here; these are real street cars, with full-width front tires and DOT-approved rear tires. The goal of the Roll Race Nationals is to provide the fans with as many side-by-side races as possible and Blach goes so far as requiring entrants to provide him with a wheel horsepower number so he can arrange the matches. There are three brackets: Unlimited, Super Sport, and Sport. Once paired up, each pair of cars has 350 feet to pace one another with a 60-mph starting-line goal, and once they are in this target area, as they pass through the green zone, the tree may go green at any point within that segment of the track. First car to the finish line wins, and just as with any other elimination-style bracket race, drivers advance until a winner is crowned in the final. 22 STREETRACE