Curtain Up in
SoCal
Story by Darr
Hawthorne
Photos by Zak Hawthorne
3/19/04
t's
being compared to the '50s. It's said to be
in its infancy, but the reality is that when
the curtain was raised on the 2004 NHRA Summit
Sport Compact Series opener at California Dragway
in Fontana, the actors were not ready for center
stage.
Stout performances were never lacking with 2003 Hot Rod Champion Marty
Ladwig setting a new national record in Saturday qualifying with a run of
8.34 at 170.62 mph in his new Pontiac Sunfire. Ladwig had a single run in
Sunday's semi-final, however the transmission let go on the burnout.
The Circuit City/Street Glow-sponsored purple Toyotas out of New Jersey's
Bullish Racing put both George Ioannou and Ara Arslanaian in the top two
slots of Pro Rear Wheel Drive, marking the new dragway's first 200 mph runs.
They would have met in the final had there been enough parts, so Ioannou
went on to single in the Pro RWD final.
It looked to be a competitive race without many racecars, since less than 45
cars showed up for the 5-eliminator categories, making for very short fields.
There were plenty of no-shows, but it looked as though building a one-off car
for the professional categories in NHRA Sport Compact racing takes a lot
more time than most of the teams had anticipated.
Example:
Mopar's Shaun Carlson had a busy off-season.
Not only did he sub for injured Darrell Alderman
at the Winternationals, he also built two Dodge
Vipers for the new D1 Drifting series. So much
of Shaun's new Dodge SRT-4 is purpose-built
that he needed to cannibalize parts from last
year's race car and had no back up to race.
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