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It didn't get any easier for Samuel in the
final round, where number-four qualifier James
Clark was waiting. Clark, from Laurel, MS, left
first, but Samuel drove around him when Clark's
engine went sour just after the 1,000-foot mark,
slowing him to 6.756 at 206.45 mph, while Samuel
posted a winning 6.626 at 217.42 mph.
Lawrence Conley, who set
the previous Pro Outlaw E.T. record of 6.556
secs on
his way to winning in Atlanta last year, lost
in round one this time around.
MUSI MAKES IT LOOK EASY
Defending NMCA Pro Street champion Pat Musi
started out right where he left off with a number-one
qualifying pass of 6.651 secs at 211.30 mph
to eclipse the 6.68 elapsed time record he set
last April in St. Louis. After getting a bye
in the first round due to only 15 cars qualifying,
the Carteret, NJ-based nitrous engine builder
stayed fast, going 6.680/212.29 in his 2000
Firebird to beat the 6.701/208.36 combo put
together by number-eight qualifier Mike Steele.
Musi then faced off against a red-lighting Paul
Dailrepont in the semis and went even quicker
to back up his qualifying pass and lower the
E.T. record to 6.612 secs at 212.29 mph.
Comp Cams/TCI Engineering
Pro Street winner Pat Musi said he had a brand-new
648 c.i. engine fresh off the dyno bolted into
his Don Reems-owned 2000 Firebird.
"Now I can take it home, dissect it, and see
what it looks like," he said.
"Then it'll be really fast."
On the other side of the ladder, Dan Parker
was tearing it up in Musi's famous 1969 "Popeye"
Camaro. Parker, who owns a chassis shop in Columbus,
GA, that often does
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work
for Musi, got the word he'd be racing just two
day s earlier, and qualified number two with a
6.685-secs pass at 211.30 mph in his very first
trip in the car. He then also got a bye in round
one when his scheduled opponent broke, and easily
beat Joe Bardtke in the quarters before edging
past Justin Kalwei to set up a final-round match
against his benefactor.
In a decidedly anti-climactic finish, Parker
redlighted in the final, while Musi had a lethargic
.707 light before his car got out of shape off
the launch, then coasted through for a 13.564-secs
win at just 61 mph. Regardless, Musi appeared
happy with the results.
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