Only one week and one town away from the deadly Napa earthquake of 2000,
California's wine country was shaking again. This time, it was caused
by the front-motored fuelers attempting to hook a brand-new M&H rear tire
up to Sears Point International Raceway's notoriously short launch pads.
Everyone seemed to be talking about The Tire Problem during Goodguys'
Fall Classic, but not Firestone's; the issue at Sears Point (as at Pomona,
a month earlier) was the first new AA/Fuel Dragster slick in a decade.
Instead of the traction edge that new-tire customers expected from a
one-inch-wider M&H Racemaster, everyone running the new, soft-sidewalled
13-incher shook and/or went up in smoke on virtually every lap, while
the trusty, stiff 12.00-16s were qualifying and going rounds. Consequences
included an all-12-inch Top Fuel final; a reshuffling of the Red Line
Oil Championship Series points standings (with only one race to go);
lots of frustrated, disgusted racers; plenty of disappointed fans; and
the first poor Goodguys competition in recent memory.
Illustrative of this slippery situation was the 3B2-Main showdown between
nonqualifiers Bill Dunlap (above photo, far lane) driving for Mike Fuller
and Mark Malde (near lane) driving for Arnold Birky. What appears to
be side-by-side burnouts is actually the third and final round of consolation
racing. Dunlap's winning numbers speak volumes: an awful 7.08 e.t. at
a blazing, brake-grabbing, never-say-die speed of 216 mph. (Malde trailed
at 8.58/107.) Both cars were shod with the new, 13-inch Racemasters.
The
Champion Speed Shop Car was suffering no such problems. After qualifying
second at 6.07 -- just a tick behind surprise- polesitter Kirk Kuhns
(6.06/240, also overall Low ET/Top Speed) -- Rance McDaniel returned
to shoot down prior-winners Lee Jennings, Jim Murphy and Jack Harris
with successive blasts of 6.17/237; 6.10/214; 6.21/199. (The final numbers
would've been better, had the mouse motor's 6-71 supercharger not exploded
ahead of the lights, giving the longtime-NHRA contender his first taste
of blinding by fire and oil.) Winning his first major front-motor meet
at age 60, McDaniel finds himself leading a major points series for
the first time in his illustrious career.
Moreover, the Champion team's final-session 6.07 simultaneously wrestled
the Number One spot on Nitronic Research's Top 10 list from South San
Francisco arch-rival Larry Gotelli, who'd been paired up with McDaniel
just for the occasion. (The kid got loose on the big end and lifted.)
Nearly four decades of history between the speed shops of Ted Gotelli
and Jim McLennan made this much, much more than a grudge match. The
entire Champion team even showed up on the starting line with brand-new
T-shirts that read, "Got Goat's Milk?" Making matters worse for the
unqualified Gotelli was a 6.34/204 time ticket that relegated Little
Larry to the consolation program, meaning zero points would be earned.
The worst was yet to come: With the next day came a less-than-amicable
dissolution of relations between Ted Gotelli's grandson and his talented-but-intense
co-tuners, Pete and Fritz Kaiser. Eight days later, approaching his
84th birthday, Terrible Ted suffered a fatal heart attack. One has to
wonder whether one of the greatest, longest-running rivalries in drag
racing has been renewed for the final time.
Victorious co-owners Bob McLennan and Tony Bernardini had elected to
stick (pun intended) with the 12.00-16, hard-sidewall, old-construction
tire that's been the West Coast's "spec" slick since the early 1990s.
That's when warring contingents of nostalgia racers from northern and
southern California finally agreed to adopt common rules for blower
overdrive, fuel-pump size and tires and begin to race together, instead
of apart.
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