HOWES MAKES IT HAPPEN
Tommy Howes qualified his ’68 Camaro fourth in the
eight-car field and advanced to win his career-first Nitro
Coupe final.
|
Words
and photos by Ian Tocher
4/6/05 |
Now in its 25th season, the Super Chevy Show rolled into
South Georgia Motorsports Park April 1-3 for its third of
19 events this year. Rain washed out Friday’s action
and high winds forced the Nitro Coupe and Top Sportsman
classes to qualify over the eighth mile on Saturday, but
on race day, sunny skies and temperatures in the low 70s
greeted racers and fans at the facility and it was back
to quarter-mile action.
ADVERTISEMENT
|
|
Regardless, Nitro Coupe competitor Tommy Howes didn’t
really feel like racing. Howes, from Laytonsville, MD, had
been hospitalized earlier in the week for a yet-to-be-diagnosed
illness and said friends and family encouraged him to skip
the race. “When we got here Friday, I thought I was
gonna have to go to the hospital again. I felt that bad,”
he admitted.
Howes beat Dave Tomasino, Randy Adler, and Mel Eaves for
the win. He was unhappy with his reaction times all weekend,
but saved his best light (.058)—though his slowest
pass—for the final round, going 6.598 at 209.88, while
Eaves banged the blower on his car, slowing to 6.862 at
166.91 mph. “It just happened to go my way,”
Howes concluded.
Eaves, from Bayonet Point, FL, slotted into the third qualifying
position with his ’63 ‘Vette, a car he bought
from Brian Gahm last year. Gahm ran it as a nitrous Pro
Mod entry and Eves said “it cost about $10,000 just
to switch it over to a blower car,” explaining the
chassis was stiffened, fuel capacity was increased from
three to 12 gallons, and “it has a full-floater rearend
now. Everything’s different.”
Mel Eaves said he plans to enter
a few ADRL Outlaw Pro Mod races this year. “I can
still pull 200 pounds out and now that they’re allowing
nitro I think we can be competitive.”