FRIDAY DALLAS QUALIFYING
Reigning
Rookie of the Year J.R. Todd knows he needs a big weekend to keep his
championship hopes alive and he responded with a top-qualifying effort
of 4.541 seconds at 318.47 mph Friday night at the 22nd annual O'Reilly
Fall Nationals presented by Castrol Syntec.
The Top Fuel racer joined surprise Funny Car leader Tim Wilkerson, Pro
Stock stalwart Greg Anderson, and Pro Stock Motorcycle points leader
Andrew Hines on the provisional low qualifier's podium.
Currently 77 points behind the fourth and final spot in the Countdown
to Four, Todd has two races to make up the deficit. He's off to a good
start with a quick 4.541 seconds at 318.47 mph in his Skull Gear
dragster.
"Last week we missed a perfect opportunity to make up some ground on
the guys in front of us but, it is what it is, and now we've got our
work cut out for us this weekend," Todd said. "Hopefully now can go
some rounds, pick up some points, and go into Richmond and get in that
top four. This is a good morale booster for us because we've all been
down in the dumps. Right now everyone is pumped up."
Reigning
Rookie of the Year J.R. Todd knows he needs a big weekend to keep his
championship hopes alive and he responded with a top-qualifying effort
of 4.541 seconds at 318.47 mph Friday night at the 22nd annual O'Reilly
Fall Nationals presented by Castrol Syntec.
The Top Fuel racer joined surprise Funny Car leader Tim Wilkerson, Pro
Stock stalwart Greg Anderson, and Pro Stock Motorcycle points leader
Andrew Hines on the provisional low qualifier's podium.
Currently 77 points behind the fourth and final spot in the Countdown
to Four, Todd has two races to make up the deficit. He's off to a good
start with a quick 4.541 seconds at 318.47 mph in his Skull Gear
dragster.
"Last week we missed a perfect opportunity to make up some ground on
the guys in front of us but, it is what it is, and now we've got our
work cut out for us this weekend," Todd said. "Hopefully now can go
some rounds, pick up some points, and go into Richmond and get in that
top four. This is a good morale booster for us because we've all been
down in the dumps. Right now everyone is pumped up."
Points leader Tony Schumacher had to surrender his second pass after
smoking his tires a few hundred feet into the run. His earlier pass of
4.608 at 322.19 mph left his U.S. Army dragster 13th on the ladder.
Countdown participant Doug Herbert is not qualified with two rounds on
time trials remaining.
He's
not in the Countdown to the Championship field, but independent Funny
Car racer Wilkerson showed he can still match-up well with those teams
by posting a 4.787 seconds at 318.17 mph in his Levi, Ray & Shoup
Chevrolet Impala SS.
"We really feel like we have nothing to lose," Wilkerson said. "We're
not in the Countdown or chasing points. But we do need to qualify
because that money is important. That's what helps pay the guys.
They're back in the pits doing handstands right now. I feel more for
them than I do for me. I got the best job in the world."
Countdown participant Mike Ashley is 10th with a 4.868 in his Torco
Dodge Charger R/T. The devout Jew will not race Saturday in observance
of Yom Kipper, so he'll have to hope his qualifying time holds.
Points leader Robert Hight will have a sleepless night as his Auto Club
of Southern California Ford Mustang has yet to crack the top 16.
The
top two racers in the Pro Stock points are first and second on the
qualifying sheets with No. 2 points earner Anderson edging current No.
1 ranked racer Dave Connolly by two-hundredths of a second. Anderson's
6.668 seconds at 206.92 mph in the second session put his Summit Racing
Pontiac GTO in the lead with Connolly close behind with a 6.686 seconds
at 205.72 mph in his Torco Chevrolet Cobalt.
"Dave definitely isn't going away and I don't expect him too," Anderson
said. "He's running strong and basically mistake-free and that's what
we're gonna have to do. And let's not forget about some of these other
cats. I wouldn't be surprised at all to see some of these other teams
step up in the next few weeks. We're gonna have to be perfect for the
rest of the year or we're not gonna win this thing."
Surprisingly, Jason Line is all the way down on the bump with a 6.729
at 206.29 mph in his summit Pontiac. Line had to abort his first round
when his car got lose halfway down the track. Fellow Countdown racer
Jeg Coughlin failed to qualify Friday.
Hines
took over the POWERade points lead in Pro Stock Bikes for the first
time this season with his win last weekend in Memphis. Now he's trying
to stretch his advantage with a top qualifying effort here. Hines'
7.015 at 190.62 mph crushed an eight-year-old elapsed time record by
two and a half tenths of a second and put his Harley-Davidson V-Rod on
top at the midway point of qualifying. The Pro Stock Motorcycle class
last ran in Dallas in 2000.
"This is the time of the year when we usually do well, at least that's
been our track record," Hines said. "The team's done a great job and
stuck with it through the highs and the lows. I'm really proud of them.
To be No. 1 at a track I've never run at is special. My brother [Matt]
is defending champion of this race and he showed me the fast way down
the strip."
Chip Ellis, who is grasping to the fourth and final spot in the
Countdown to Four, has out-qualified his closest pursuers with a
second-best 7.017 seconds at 190.75 mph, a track speed record. Ellis'
effort is noteworthy because he entered the race exactly 40 points
ahead of Angelle Sampey. By out-qualifying her, it will force Sampey to
go at least three rounds further than him on Sunday. Sampey is sixth
with a 7.075 seconds at 189.02 mph.