Let's Go to the Tape
By Jeff Burk
4/15/03
"Gimme a bottle of Nyquil and a roll of duct tape please..."
Lyrics from Nyquil Blues, a song by Texas country and western fiddle
player Alvin Crow
The buzz in the pro pits at NHRA's national event in Houston was about
an incident that occurred in Virgil Hartman's pit during a warmup of
one of the team's two Top Fuel cars during the previous week's race at
Las Vegas. Seems like Jerrod Felix -- who owns the "NitroMater"
website/chatroom and is a contract photographer for the NHRA,
furnishing photography for the NHRA.com site -- convinced car owner
Virgil Hartman to let him sit on the rear wing of the one of their cars
while the engine was being warmed up.
According to sources who related the incident to DRO, Jerrod was
sitting on top of the wing with duct tape wrapped around him to help
keep him from falling off while the team warmed up the car and he
took photos. That position probably wouldn't be at the top of any of
DRO's professional photographers' list of places to photograph a nitro
engine warm up, but we will acknowledge that it did afford Jerrod Felix
a great perspective for a unique photo.
The photographers and other pit crews and personnel that travel from
race to race found the whole thing to be humorous and there were a lot
of jokes going around about Top Fuel racers, bondage, and duct tape.
Evidently NHRA officials saw no humor in the situation at all, however,
and decided to make an example of Virgil Hartman. According to DRO
sources NHRA levied a $5,000 fine against Hartman, suspended him
(not the team) for two races and even went so far as to ban him from
the track at those events.
A portion of NHRA's letter to Hartman accuses him of " blatant
disregard for the safety of our fans, the professional image of the
sport, and refusal to comply with the instructions of an NHRA official."
Hartman says those accusations are false.
According to several drivers, NHRA also made a point of revealing their displeasure
with the incident in the pre-race driver's meeting
and threatening more discipline should
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anyone
else do something similar. DRO sources indicate
that Hartman has filed an appeal with NHRA over
the fine and suspension based upon the fact
that he broke no written rules. As far as anyone
knows NHRA has done nothing publicly to punish
NitroMater's Jerrod Felix. Interestingly, any
mention of the incident and the Virgil Hartman
team has been expurgated from the NitroMater
chat room, which is slightly reminiscent of
the 17 missing minutes of the old Richard Nixon
tapes.
There is no question that the area in and around any running nitro-
burning engine is a dangerous place. The fact is that photographers
(both print and electronic), crew persons, and spectators are in some
danger, especially the television cameramen and NHRA photographers
who act as if they are bullet-proof and go virtually anywhere on the
track they feel like.
There is no question that Virgil Hartman and Jerrod Felix probably
should have thought about what they were doing before they did it and
deserve to be reprimanded, but there is also a case to be made that
NHRA could have handled this a little quieter and kept it an in-house
affair instead of a public one that embarrasses themselves and the
parties involved.
Whatever the outcome, it will go down in the
history of drag racing as one of those deals
that shows that drag racers and their press
people are a breed apart from the starched collars
that have invaded and sanitized the rest of
motorsports.
Editor's note.
[4/16/03]
DRO recently got a few more facts about
this incident and in keeping with our
credo of always trying to get to the
truth we came up with a few more facts.
- Jarrod wasn't duct taped to the
wing rather he stood on the rear-end
housing and gripped the wing struts
we believe that duct tape was used
- This wasn't Jarrod's idea
- He didn't have a camera although
photography and video cameras did
record the event.
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