:::::: News ::::::

ANTRON: FOLLOWING THE BOSS’ LEAD

ashley_0722-04600D.jpgtf_winner.jpgAntron Brown hopes that what worked well for the boss will eventually funnel down to the employee.

In 2007, team owner Mike Ashley won his first national event at Heartland Park in Topeka, Kan.

Brown has yet to win in Topeka but a semi-final finish last year has
success so close for the sophomore Top Fuel driver he can taste it.

"I'm excited to get back out there to Topeka. We came up just short
last year,” Brown said. “I always like performing at Topeka because one
of the guys I looked up to growing up, Gary Ormsby, has a great legacy
at Heartland Park. Topeka is a fun little town and we're ready to get
back to racing and to keep this Matco Tools dragster up there in the
standings."

JEGGIE: TOP DOG ROLE FITS

ps_winner.jpgUnless you’re the lead dog the scenery never changes.

In the dog-eat-dog world of NHRA Pro Stock, five-time world champion
Jeg Coughlin Jr. has grown fond of the view as his 714 championship
points ranks the highest of any NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series
professional category.

Coughlin has reached the final round in five of the first eight of the
10  national events of 2009. He’ll be looking for more as he enters
this weekend’s O’Reilly NHRA Summernationals in Topeka, Kan.

Coughlin, 38, of Delaware, Ohio, is one of only four professional
competitors who has qualified for every race this season and advanced
past the first round of eliminations.

LUCAS: TOP FUEL WILL HEAT UP IN TOPEKA, LITERALLY

Morgan Lucas believes the Top Fuel program at this weekend’s O’Reilly NHRA Summernationals will heat up both literally and lucas.JPGfiguratively.

This weekend’s event, 10th on the 24-race NHRA Full Throttle Drag
Racing Series tour, is expected to present the warmest conditions the
tour has faced thus far in 2009. That factor is certain pose a tuning
challenge to even the most seasoned decision makers.

Lucas speaks with authority when he says the weather will separate the contenders from the also ran operations.

"Topeka is going to be the first consistently hot conditions we're
going to face this year," said the 25-year-old from Indianapolis. "As
we've seen in the past, the teams that transition the best from cool
weather racing to hot weather racing are usually the ones in the hunt
for the championship at the end of the year. We want to be in that
group.

MARTIN RETURNS TO QUICK 32 SPORTSMAN SERIES COMPETITION

 
martin_57.jpgHe’s been racing a long time, and has returned to quarter-mile action after taking some time away from the sport.
 
Driving his 1957 Chevy in the new Quick 32 Sportsman Series, Paul
Martin said he is looking forward to the six-race series which began
May 15-17 at Cayuga Dragway.
 
“This deal is real sweet,” he said. “It will be great with no travel involved and a group of high-caliber guys to race with.”
 
Qualifying his Shoebox Chevy eighth in the 12-car field on the doorcar
side of the series, Martin went to the second round in the opening
event. After this first of six events for 2009, he is sixth in points.

TORQUE CONVERTER HISTORY

Jason Hamstra had two clearly defined goals headed into qualifying for the ADRL Quarter-Max Memphis Drags. He wanted to first hamstra.JPGensure
he qualified safely within the sixteen car Pro Extreme field. Once
there he wanted his team to be the first to run over 200 miles per hour
in the eighth-mile with a torque converter-equipped doorslammer.

Hamstra succeeded on both counts, which came as a pleasant surprise.

“We had it set up pretty lazy because of the forecast for Saturday,”
Hamstra said. “We are pretty happy that it ran 200 miles per hour.”

PATRIOTISM AND A PRO STOCKER

mojo.jpgMorris Johnson Jr. can’t help it. Every time he hears those lyrics
from the famous Lee Greenwood song “Proud to be an American” his eyes
well up with tears.

“I am the kind of guy who looks at the flag for the greatest country in
the world and gets goose bumps,” Johnson admits. “I get a tingle that I
don’t know
that everyone gets when they see the flag or the Star Spangled Banner
is sung. When Lee Greenwood sang that song it became almost as popular
as the national anthem.”

Johnson, of Smith Mountain Lake, Va., remembers the day a pair of
brothers approached him on behalf of their deceased brother who lost
his life during the Vietnam War. The Pro Stock driver was already
emotionally charged after watching the skydiver fly above him carrying
the flag as the Greenwood song played over the public address system.

NHRA LODRS DIV. 1 RESULTS

In the final results from Maple Grove Raceway and the NHRA Northeast
Division Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series former division champion Frank
Aragona Jr., Freehold, N.J., won in Comp Eliminator and local racer Dan
Walleigh of Reading, Pa., won in Super Street.

Aragona turned on the win light with his ’32 roadster when Stephen Szupka, Willow Grove, Pa., broke in the final round.

Walleigh picked up his first NHRA win driving his ’60 Falcon past Scott
Steiner of New York, while defending division champion Mike Sawyer of
Acton, Mass., drove to the win over Jason Kenny, Kingston, Ont., in
Super Gas.

Joining in with victories of their own were John Benoit, Montpelier,
Vt., and Don Milson of Richmond, R.I.  Benoit went 6.801 seconds,
203.37 mph in beating Robert Tagliareni, Oakland, N.J., in the Speed
Shop Top Sportsman class and Milson held off Laura Zeffiro, Winchester
Center, Conn., in the Mx Industrial.com Top Dragster class running
78.450 seconds, 181.50 mph

NHRA LODRS DIV. 5 RESULTS

Top Alcohol Dragster pilot Dan Kracht, Gretna, Neb., scored his first
win of the season at the Thunder on the Lakes event, a round of the
NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series at Brainerd Int’l Raceway.  Roger
Bateman, a Calgary, Alb., racer, made his way to the winner’s circle
for the first time this year in his Top Alcohol Funny Car.

Kracht, who was in the final round at an out-of-division race in Dallas
in April, scored the win in his second out of the year.  Starting from
the No. 1 qualifying spot, he laid down a 5.434-second, 242.58 mph pass
against runner-up Jared Dreher of Clinton, Ind.  Dreher red-lighted in
the final round.

Bateman squared off against Prior Lake, Minn.’s Bruce Carlson in the
first round of eliminations and had a bye run in the semis.  In the
final he was slated to run against Scott McVey, Winnipeg, Manit. 
However, in his win over Vern Moats in the semis, McVey damaged his
motor and was unable to make the call in the final handing the win to
Bateman.

NHRA LODRS DIV. 6 RESULTS

Delta resident Shawn Cowie won his third race of the year in Top
Alcohol Dragster at the Lordco BC Nationals, a round of the NHRA Lucas
Oil Drag Racing Series, at Mission Raceway Park.  Brian Hough, Junction
City, Ore., joined Cowie in the winner’s circle after scoring the Top
Alcohol Funny Car win and Rob Harrison of North Vancouver earned the
Comp Eliminator trophy.

Cowie, who won out-of-division races in Phoenix and Las Vegas, started
the day from the No. 2 qualifying spot.  He beat High River, Alb.,
racer Ashley Bart in the opening round and in the semis he blasted a
5.290-second, 271.08 mph pass to beat Joey Severance of Spanaway,
Wash.  In the final, Cowie ran 5.330 seconds at 270.10 mph to beat Dale
Carlson of Olympia, Wash.

Hough was event’s No. 1 qualifier and due to the odd number of Top
Alcohol Funny Cars in competition, he had a bye run in the first round
then, in the semis and the final round, his competitors red-lighted. 
First it was Rob Atchison, London, Ont., and in the final it was John
Evanchuk, Edmonton, Alb.

NHRA LODRS DIV. 5 FINAL QUALIFYING

In the final rounds of qualifying at Brainerd Int’l Raceway’s Thunder
on the Lakes NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series event, Dan Kracht,
Gretna, Neb., held on to No. 1 qualifying spot in Top Alcohol Dragster
while Roger Bateman, Calgary, Alb., moved his Top Alcohol Funny Car to
the top of the field.

Kracht blasted a 5.395-second, 256.80 mph pass in yesterday’s
qualifying and that was enough to keep him in the top spot.  Because of
the odd number of cars in competition, Kracht will have a bye run in
the first round of eliminations Sunday.  Former division champion
Richard Putz of Earlville, Iowa, made a 5.422-second, 263.41 mph lap to
move from the No. 5 spot into the No. 2 position.

Bateman, who is the defending division Funny Car champ, started the day
in the No. 6 spot and made a 5.588-second, 255.43 mph pass to put him
in the top spot.  Scott McVey, Winnipeg, Manit., is the second-place
qualifier with a 5.693-second, 253.71 mph pass.

Comp Eliminator racer Pat Nahan of St. Cloud, stayed in the No. 1
qualifying spot as did Ronald Roddel, Sioux Falls, S.D., in Super
Stock.  In Stock Eliminator, Peter Boslovitch, Lockport, Manit.,
grabbed the No. 1 spot in his ’80 Malibu.  J.J. Heber, Aurora, Colo.,
remained No. 1 in Top Sportsman and Dean Dubbin, Royalton, Minn.,
continues to lead in Top Dragster.  Alex Barmettler, Maplewood, Minn.,
moved to the top of the field for Sportsman Motorcycle presented by
Harley Davidson.

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