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It’s the best of times
. . .sort of
10/27/05
y
friend, former IHRA Top Fuel champ Paul Romine and I sat on the
aluminum that makes up the racer/sponsor grandstands at Bruton Smith’s
magnificent speed palace known as “The Strip at Las Vegas
Motor Speedway” watching Saturday night’s unbelievable
Funny Car session during the Las Vegas Nationals. The desert night
air was crystal clear and the air temp hovered around 70 degrees,
and we each had a frozen margarita in our hand. Simply put, the
conditions were absolutely perfect for watching or racing nitro-burning
race cars.
As an avalanche of 4.70s came up on the board, Romine and I sat
there, slack-jawed like everyone else, watching pair after pair
of fuel coupes charge down the best track either of us had ever
seen. One pair of cars after another made side-by-side runs with
giant flames spewing out of the pipes, over the roof, then bending
back over the rear spoiler. Almost every time the board numbers
lit up it signaled someone’s career best ET! The 4.70s were
cheap! By the end of the session Gary Scelzi sat on the pole with
a mind-bending (for an altitude track) 4.746 and Gary Densham was
on the bump spot with a 4.834.
Romine, I and the crowd of racers, manufacturers, crews and journalists
sitting in those stands had just watched the best fuel Funny Car
session in the history of the sport. We had seen a session that
should have put us all in a state of nitro-induced euphoria. Sadly,
it didn’t appear that be the case.
The truth is that during that entire remarkable session I was never
moved to get on my feet by the drama or action I was watching. And
I’m sad to say that none of those sitting around us did either.
By the time the last pair were doing their burnouts, my mind wasn’t
on the speeds or ET's. Instead, I was pre-occupied by the fact that
my butt was sore from sitting on that aluminum bleacher for a couple
of hours and that I had paid 22 of my hard-earned bucks to purchase
Romine and myself just one frozen Margarita each. (Romine did buy
the second round.)
As we headed back to the pits after the last pair ran, Romine peeled
off to go see his pals on the Dexter Tuttle crew and I hoofed it
toward the tower, trying to reason why none of those who watched
that historic session showed much, if any, enthusiasm. I thought
back to the many times that I had sat in the grandstands at an NHRA
event watching nitro car qualifying when the fans stood up to watch
almost every pass.
I tried to determine what was different for me and those around
me about today’s fuel cars, and then -- to steal a line from
the Firesign Theater -- it hit me like the hot kiss at the end of
a wet fist. That fuel session I had just watched reminded me more
of a Pro Stock or Super Gas qualifying session in that every car
ran nearly the same speed and elapsed time. The fact is that there
was just 88-thousandths of second difference between the number
one qualifier and the number 16. That is Pro Stock qualifying.
I decided that perhaps the reason those knowledgeable spectators,
Romine and I were somewhat blasé about what we saw was that
we all had probably witnessed quicker ET’s and faster speeds
than what we saw that night. Perhaps, because of the restrictive
rules instituted by the NHRA to ensure that the fuel cars' performances
would be limited, we were all fairly certain that we weren’t
going to see a record Funny Car elapsed time in the mid-4.60’s
or speeds over 333 mph.
In other words, there was nothing to anticipate. The NHRA rule
makers, if just for that one session, had achieved that which they
have long sought: A level playing field. Arrghh!
I’m one of those that screamed the loudest after Darrell
Russell got killed that NHRA had to make the cars safer. I just
never imagined that their solution would neuter the nitro classes.
As I flew back to Missouri on Monday I was still thinking about
my lack of enthusiasm and what is was about nitro racing that has
made me an addict of it for so long. I came to the conclusion that
the overriding factor has always been the unpredictability of the
cars that burn that smelly, yellow rocket fuel instead of alcohol
or gasoline.
From the first time I saw and heard a car burning nitro, part of
the attraction was that no one knew for sure if the car was going
to just go really fast, explode the engine, or perform some other
assault on my senses. Each experience with a nitro car used to offer
the chance of a unique experience, to see a record speed or ET or
a fire and explosion resulting in a car that was just a ball of
fire hurtling towards the sand trap. Yessss!!!!
Sadly, with the advent of politically correct racing predicated
on instituting stifling rules designed to absolutely control the
nitro cars' performance and the tuners' innovation, fuel cars have
gone from being an unlimited race car to just another “spec”
car like those we watch in NASCAR, F-1 and the IRL. I feel that
the attraction nitro race cars held for me and my peers is starting
to wane. I fear that before long record ET’s in Top Fuel will
be determined by the thousandth of a second. Yuk.
I wonder if all the twice-a-year fans that showed up at Las Vegas
really care about is close racing. Do they want drag racing to have
the same contrived drama that NASCAR foments by having fields of
identical cars and races where yellow flags and arcane rules are
used to ensure the last laps or last 10 races are drama-filled?
The biggest crowd reaction I heard all weekend at Vegas was after
a “pedal fest” in the first round of Top Fuel. A junk
surface that challenged the expertise of both the tuners and the
drivers brought the crowd to their feet, not the 4.48 lap that Tony
Schumacher made in the final.
Close racing is exciting to be sure, but not enough to make Super
Gas, Super Comp or even Pro Stock the main fan attraction at NHRA/IHRA
events.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. Please stop
the homogenizing of fuel racing. We now have rev-limiters that absolutely
control Top Speed. We are never going to see a 340-mph pass or probably
another 337-mph pass for that matter. So why is NHRA continuing
to implement rules that are ultimately sucking all of the creativity
and unpredictability out of nitro racing?
The NHRA officials are doing their best to make rules designed
to prevent parts failure, too much speed, too much horsepower, to
prevent any tuner from getting an advantage, prevent any team from
dominating. Hell, if they thought they could get away with it, they’d
probably make Don Schumacher get Alan Johnson a frontal lobotomy.
The NHRA and some racers who are just in it for the money will probably
be happy when Top Fuel and Funny Car are just a nitro-burning version
of the Pro Stock class.
I say keep the rev limiters because they’ll stop engine explosions
and oil downs -- that has been proven. Cut way back on track prep
and limits on nitro percentage, and put more emphasis on the tuner’s
abilities and innovation. There is still time to stop the madness,
but not much.
In the meantime, I’ll still be watching NHRA fuel cars and
getting a dose whenever a nitro car warms up, but I’m also
going to attend more independent drag races where the rules aren’t
so restrictive, where creativity is encouraged and where points
are awarded for breaking both speed and ET records. Races where
you want to get off your butt and on your feet to see if this is
going to be “the pass.”
And oh yeah, tracks where $11 will buy you a gallon of Margaritas.
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