NOTES FROM THE TUCSON TESTING
Words by Susan Wade. Photos by James Drew
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Clay Millican took the Werner Enterprises-backed
dragster out for some shake-down runs and turned a 4.645/318.77
on Sunday. |
BUD PRINCE HAS TO WAIT ON KING
Brandon Bernstein is used to waiting. So what was one
more weekend? He's preparing for his second season in a Top Alcohol
Dragster, marking time until dad Kenny completes his "Forever Red: A
Run To Remember" farewell tour this year and hands over the car keys
to the Budweiser King Top Fuel Dragster.
Kenny Bernstein said if all had gone as planned, Brandon
would make three to five passes during the Tucson testing session. But
his crew, like every other, was struggling somewhat with the newly mandated
Goodyear tire. And it was a situation in which he was needed for any
runs the car might make.
STRATUS-FEAR FOR FUNNY CAR FIELD?
The way Dean Skuza has it figured, his showing in the
2002 Funny Car NHRA POWERade points chase will be hard to predict.
"When you make a prediction, you base things on previous
performance," said the proud new owner of a smooth-styled Dodge Stratus
R/T body. "And that's going to be impossible to do. We were racing a
brick last year."
Skuza said the Stratus, a step up from his aerodynamically
inferior Dodge Avenger, is the first Funny Car body that has made the
jump "from computer screen to reality."
He
said Mopar engineers have waited a year and a half, until NHRA officials
refined the sanctioning body's specs, to move forward with the project.
Roush Engineering did the molding for the eye-catching and efficient
body. And Skuza said two Daimler-Chrysler engineers remain with his
Team Mopar crew, trying to resolve what he called "structural issues."
Skuza said he's excited because "we have 3,000 more pounds
of downforce." On the other hand, the Brecksville, Ohio, resident knows
that puts his driving abilities under the microscope.
"Can a one-car team win the championship? Absolutely,"
he said. "It's not David and Goliath. Funding always could be better
. . . but our funding is adequate. There areas where we have to be smart
shoppers. But we never have raced so that if we had had more money we
would have done better. That car is always prepared when it comes to
the starting line."
THANKS, JOHN
Even Force expressed his excitement about the Stratus.
"I'm really excited for the new Chrysler product. Cute little car. Love
it. I thought it was Bernstein's (1980s) Buick."
EPLER IN THE BOOTH?
Jim Epler's tentative Bass Pro deal wriggled off the hook,
along with a possible NAPA sponsorship. That leaves the accomplished
Funny Car driver without a ride for the first time in 10 years.
But the Phoenix resident might buckle himself into a seat
in the broadcast booth. He's been talking with Fox about providing commentary
for the NHRA segment of that network's Fast Track TV program.
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