In Lucas Oil NA 10.5, Bryan Cobbet wheeled his Mustang to a win against the Camaro of Anthony Valentino in the first round of eliminations while the former champ, Tony Aneian, took the bye. Round two saw Randy Jones light the win light against Aneian and Cobbet scoot through with the second bye. In the final round, Cobbet (left) put an 8.26 on the board while Jones had trouble making it down the track.  (James Drew photo)

In the smallest tire class of the series, ARP Outlaw 8.5, Ryan Jones put a half second on the clock between himself and Eric Carlstedt in the first round while Eric Outland lost at the hands of DJ Reid. In the quarterfinals, Reid went head-to-head with Eric Gustafson who wasn’t able to match Reid’s 5.23 pass. The semis saw Jones go 5.21 against George Raygoza while Reid took the bye straight to the final. In the last round, Jones put a 5.12 on the board and paired it with a .007 light to defeat the 5.21 of Reid.

The K&N Pro Comp class started off strong with a 28-car first round that saw Paul Wiechmann run 9.90 with a six against Dave Kemblowski who was close, but not close enough with a 7.94 on a 7.90 index. Don Meziere went 7.92 on a 7.90 index against Pete Jimenez who had trouble getting down the track. A narrow victory for Val Torres in round three saw him advance to the semis while Wiechmann took the bye. In the final Wiechmann ran a near perfect 9.907 on a 9.90 index against Torres’s 9.91 on the same index earning him the class win.  (James Drew photo)

In the always-crowded field of the popular Headman Hedders Nostalgia Street Car class, competition was fierce. After surviving four grueling rounds of competition, Ron Aschtgen went out in the semis at the hands of Josh Edwards while Frank Coscarelli rode the bye into the last round. In the final, a 10.509 on a 10.50 index and a .019 light earned Edwards the Wally and saw Coscarelli earn the runner-up spot.

In Granatelli Motor Sports Mustang Madness, Gary Guerrero made it through five blue-oval rounds before facing off against Cal Gordon in the final. Gordon, despite having the jump on the tree, was unable to keep up with Guerrero and found himself in the runner-up spot.