A Few Bumps in the Road
By Susan Wade
DRO file photos by Jeff Burk
he road to Hell is paved with noble intentions.
But the left lane presumably is wide and smooth
and too tantalizingly easy to drive -- unlike
at Pacific Raceways.
The Seattle stop has made the National Hot Rod Association's Western Swing diabolically difficult. And drag racers are losing patience with the Fiorito family's promises that they're going to transform the facility into a postcard-pretty palace.
The left lane was the tail that wagged the pooch at the July 25-27 CARQUEST Auto Parts NHRA Nationals. In the pro classes, 35 of 45 winners came from the right lane, which by consensus was the lesser of two evils.
"Ain't
neither one of them stellar, trust me," Funny
Car driver Scotty Cannon said. And that was
about the most positive comment Cannon could
muster.
"It's beating our cars to death. It's so bad it broke the bolts out of the back end of the car," he said "Ray Charles could see there's speed bumps."
Pro Stock veteran Warren Johnson called them moguls. But Cannon wasn't in the mood for diplomacy.
"It's got to be a damn nightmare for the crew
chiefs. They've got to be pulling their hair
out. It's ridiculous," Cannon said. "How do
you tune for speed bumps? You hope you get lucky
and it makes it over one bump and don't hit
the other bumps. You just hope and pray. You
got too many other things to worry about than
10 durn speed bumps."
Cannon said he understands that at every track, each lane has subtle differences. But he said both drivers should have an equal chance to win. "Good gracious, you can't put one guy in the dirt and one guy on a good track," he said.
"They ought to fix it like they've said they
were going to fix it the last four or five years,"
he said. "All I ever hear is how many improvements
we've done to Seattle. I hear that two weeks
in a month. I come in here and I don't see nothin'.
Well, maybe they've cut a few trees down. I'd
like to have a good, sweet race track out there
to race on."
He also wanted the answer to a Catch-22 question.
"Usually when fuel cars drop a hole, the car
starts misfiring. And they're prone and known
to throw the rods out of it. Then we get fined
or penalized for oiling the track down," he
said, setting up the problem. "They talk about
'First is worst.' Now, hold on a minute. . .
. Who was worse? Them guys for having the speed
bumps for us to run over and then us dropping
the hole and oiling the track down? Or just
because we're dumb-ass drag racers, we shouldn't
do that? Is that the way it works? I ain't so
sure. That's the question I'd like to ask.
"If I was NHRA, I couldn't even justify charging
a man for oiling down the track here, unless
he just left his oil pan off or something. It's
stupid. It's frickin' ridiculous," he said.
Want to make Cannon really angry? Remind him
that NHRA enlists the help of drivers in the
name of entertainment.
"Until the tracks, especially this one, get
up to equal," Cannon said, "I don't think NHRA
or none of the track owners should say one damn
word to none of us about how we can make the
show better. Because the way I think the show
should be made better is for our cars to go
out there and run good. Give us something."
OWNERS PLEAD THEIR CASE
They got little more than reassurances from
Pacific Raceways President Jason Fiorito that
his family, who owns the property, has a terrific
master plan. The perturbing reality is that
it won't be completed until 2007 or 2008. These
drivers can be placated by dining at Salty's
on Alki Beach or gawking at majestic Mount Rainier
only so many times.
Fiorito said his family has repaved part of
the concrete launch pad in an effort to make
a smoother transition to the asphalt portion
of the track. Bazemore said he hopes he'll still
be racing by the time improvements are finished,
and his crew chief, Lee Beard, likened the nickel-and-dime
spiffs to whitening one's smile by bleaching
one tooth at a time.
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