Words and Photos by Bryan Ellis
4/5/04
Rock
me in the evening and roll me all night long
The Fabulous Thunderbirds
as
Vegas is an all night town; still I dont
think the Goodguys staff and LVMS crew had planned
on this shindig lasting till the wee hours of
Sunday morning. They did a superlative job considering
the weekend overall. High car counts is always
a great start, but the track was oiled much
more than I was accustomed to at any Vintage
Racing Association (VRA) event. Even with a
laid back atmosphere these drag racers run hard
with record and parts-breaking performance at
times. Then strangely on Friday night a natural
phenomenon unlike any ever seen in drag racing
descended on the strip, not rain or wind this
time but GRASSHOPPERS by the billions! Im
not kidding, they were flying off the slicks
during burnouts and green elongated splats were
left on the track surface following a pass.
The mobile brush and vacuum crew were hard at
it from starting line to the shut down area
as race crews cleaned the bugs off the front
of their cars in the pits. The bug catcher
on several gassers necessitated a pest removal.
I will admit I laughed when I pictured the animated
movie Its A Bugs Life
and lets ride if you know
what I mean!
Jack Harris led Top Fuel (A Field) with low
e.t. of 5.867 and reset the clocks with a final
round victory of 5.839 & 255.48 mph! Sean
Bellemeur followed suit in the Master
Cam Top Fuel (B Field) low e.t. 6.072
at 242.19 mph! Mike Adams in Nostalgia Nitro
Funny Car took all with a string of brilliant
reaction times, climbing out of the seventh
position (in an eight car field) nailing DROs
very own Nostalgia editor Jeff Utterback at
the line in the final!
A
real treat during Friday night qualifying was
without a doubt the nitro cars, and if ever
there should be a header fire contest for Nostalgia
Top Fuel, Jim Murphy would likely be champ.
Unlike the strong running WW2 race team, Murphy
could only slip into Top Fuel (A field) in the
number eight spot with a 6.244 at 229.70 mph.
Nitro Thunder was still without
paint and folks were penning their names on
the 250 mph tin. Jack The Sheriff
Harris gives the thumbs-up, I think we
have this hot rod figured out, so the wheelie
bars are now off the car and were adding
some ballast up front.
If youre planning on going front motor
Top Fuel racing, youll eventually have
to deal with the Sheriff and thats not
always easy, at least thats how it is
out west. Pete Kaiser in the John Eirich owned
Ground Zero entry fell short in
round one to Jack Harris with a 6.006 at 240.98
mph; Kaisers .445 reaction, a .105 quicker
than Harris, just didnt make up the difference
with a 6.119 at 225.63 mph attempt.
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