Sammy
Miller would need to recuperate from a lot of runs. He would go on to
be the first drag racer in the three-second zone, and to this day, is
the only one to enter that rare air. However, it would be a few years
before he cranked numbers like that. After his introduction to Fox at
Irwindale, Miller chauffered the "Pollution Packer" and very briefly
John Paxson's Armor All rocket dragster during the first half of 1975.
When he had free time, though, he was preparing a car of his own and
not just any car.
Miller's "Spirit of '76" Ford Mustang II was to be the first rocket
Funny Car. The car actually featured a Frank Huszar funny car chassis,
but had been radically altered by former NHRA Comp racer Eugene Terenzio
to accomodate the rocket set-up. In August of 1975, he debuted the car
at ESTA Safety Park Dragstrip in Cicero, N.Y. and with the power not
even on to half-track, he logged an effortless 7.00. For 15 months,
he ran the car at all of the match race tracks.
There was a problem, however. The rockets were heavily scrutinized
by the sanctioning bodies, especially NHRA, and with good reason. Two
of the class' biggest stars were killed in them, Anderson and Russell
Mendez (at the '75 Gatornationals), and famed Funny Car and Salt Flats
racer Paula Murphy sustained a badly broken back when her dragster crashed.
The accidents were usually very bad, hardly surprising when you consider
how fast the cars were going.
Miller said that NHRA wanted to watch him make some checkout runs and
they did so at Orange County Int'l Raceway in late 1975. The officials
checked it out from all angles, how it launched and how it handled at
mid course and on the top end. Miller had no problems, running "right
around 300 mph" on every run, and even going so far as to wave at the
top end NHRA official as he shut off in the traps on his last pass.
Miller may have shown his mettle, but the sanctioning body was still
uneasy about rockets.
In the summer of 1976, after running numerous low fives and 290-mph
runs, Miller sold his Mustang II to a group who renamed it the "Chicago
Patrol" and ran it as a regular Funny Car. Meanwhile, Miller was building
another car, which he debuted in late 1977, his first "Vanishing Point"
Funny Car, a 1978 Vega, in which he would run his first three-second
run.
Actually, it was his first "unofficial" three and it occurred in an
incident that probably soured the reluctant NHRA on the rocket cars
even more. During a Division 1 points race in 1978 at Raceway Park in
Englishtown, New Jersey, Miller was told not to make a full quarter-mile
run, but shut it off just past half track. He did, but the damn thing
still ran a 3.94, a run that went unannounced and one that pissed off
the officials.
In the 1970s, Miller was never able to really lay one down in the United
States. When he debuted his Vega, he ran a 4.32 at Raceway Park and
then 3.94 a little later, but the days for all-out runs in the U.S.
- and, frankly, opportunities to run - were dwindling down in number.
He could get work at match race tracks like New England Dragway and
Great Lakes Dragaway, but he and the other half dozen or so rocketeers
found it harder to display their wares. Add in the fact that time restrictions
(4.50 or slower) were instituted by the sanctioning bodies at member
tracks, and the picture was not rosy.
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