FINAL NOTEBOOK – WINNERS ARE CROWNED UNDER THE LIGHTS AT HISTORIC DARLINGTON DRAGWAY
FIRST TIME IS THE RIGHT TIME – As a former competitor in Piedmont Dragway’s monthly Big Dog Shootout series, Scott Lang is no stranger to racing against Carolina doorslammer hitters like Jason Harris, Travis Harvey, and Todd Tutterow. It’s a little different in Pro Boost, though, where the class newcomer proved his mettle Saturday night when he earned his first career win in the category. He beat Harris in the final round when Harris went red by .010 seconds on a 3.613 at 207.28, while Lang coasted to a 4.066 at 142.50 in his ProCharged AML Motorsports ’18 Camaro.
“These are the baddest racers on the planet,” Lang said. “Randy Weatherford said that, and that is the truth. You qualify and the bump spot is .60 something. That’s flying. I’m racing the guys that have been out here for years, and like I said, I have a lot of support, but these are the best guys in the business, period, and I’m just ecstatic that I got the opportunity to do it.”
Lang joined the Pro Boost scene earlier this season when he brought out a proven car previously campaigned by Randy Weatherford. In just six races, the North Carolinian is a Pro Boost winner. He’s the fourth first-time winner this season.
“I want to thank God first, and my team: Lee White, Kyle Pettis, Walter McBride, Michael Lane, Robert McClure,” Lang said. “You can’t do this without a good crew. I want to thank Randy Weatherford for giving me a great car and standing behind us. The car was broke. Randy helped fix it last night and tonight. I can’t even tell you how much help they give me. I’m just grateful for that because you can’t do this without a team. This ain’t a one-man show. I know I get the credit, but teamwork makes the dream work. I also want to thank Pro Line, Mark Micke [of M&M Transmission], all my sponsors, AML Motorsports, Keenan Allen, my son, KA13. I can’t tell you how I feel right now.”
Lang qualified No. 12, one of 14 drivers to run in the 3.60s in qualifying. In a bizarre first-round match, Preston Tanner couldn’t stop after his burnout, then Lang left before the tree activated. A fierce battle with Weatherford followed, as Lang cut a .002 light to Weatherford’s .006, then he ran a 3.642 at 202.79 to a 3.661. Lang then beat No. 1 qualifier Melanie Salemi on a holeshot with a 3.623 at 206.42 to Salemi’s 3.620 at 208.33 in the semifinals.
Harris, who qualified No. 2 in his ProCharged “Party Time” ’69 Camaro, was the hero of the opening round with his 3.66 over Bubba Greene’s career-best 3.709. He got a close win in the second round with a 3.651 to Rob Cox’s 3.671. The two-time Pro Nitrous world champion fired off a 3.607 at 206.80 to beat Scott Wildgust’s 3.819, racing to his fourth final round of the season.
“Everybody wants to win, but we’re out here racing for a championship,” Franklin said. “That’s what we want to do. I always say to beat any of these teams out here, you’re doing something, and Halsey is obviously a great team. It’s far from over. We made up a couple of rounds this weekend and that’s great. But I know they’ll come back swinging for everything else. All we can do is keep trying to turn on win lights, and that’s what we’re focused on. We don’t look at anything else – just try to turn on win lights.”
Franklin was sure to share the credit with his Tommy Franklin Motorsports team and its partners.
“We’ve got a great group between my whole crew – Chris [Murray, crew chief], [wife] Judy, my family, my friends, everybody that’s here, Jeff Pierce. Mark Menscer has been helping us, got the car just flawless right now. Ty-Drive, Liberty, Red Line Oil, and thank you to Mark Beatty [Red Line’s brand director]. He’s here this weekend. It’s great to be able to get a win for him and to get him in the winner’s circle.”
Franklin started the day with a 3.872 at 200.27 over Cam Clark and his 4.61. He improved to a 3.69 at 205.01 to knock out Brian Shrader and his 3.728 at 203.53 in the second round. Semifinal opponent “Tricky” Rickie Smith negated his 3.687 at 206.99 with a .005 red light, but Franklin was ready with a 3.657 at 205.95.
Cox, who qualified No. 1 in his Musi-powered Butner Construction “Pumpkin” ’69 Camaro, held off Travis “the Carolina Kid” Harvey’s holeshot advantage and 3.744 with a 3.709 in the first round to win by just .003 seconds. He set low E.T. of the second round, 3.661 at 206.99, to beat Tylor Miller’s 3.738. Cox advanced to his first final round of the season by making the quickest pass of eliminations, a 3.645 at 207.09, over Jim Widener and his 3.673 at 204.36.
Drinkwater was without his tuner and teammate, two-time world champion Johnny Pluchino, who stayed home from the Carolina Nationals to be with wife Monica as they welcomed their first baby over the weekend.
“I hate it that our buddies from Long Island couldn’t make it here, but I’m glad we were able to rise to the occasion and really do this for them,” Drinkwater said. “Johnny just had a baby, so I’m glad we were able to put it in the winner’s circle and just represent us as a team, as a whole. We thrashed on the car all weekend. Pat with Ram Clutches helped us out a bunch. Johnny, obviously on the phone, my crew: Kenny, Termite, Preston, David, Mike, my mom and dad. It’s been a hell of a weekend, and it feels good to be in the winner’s circle.”
Drinkwater, who qualified fifth, picked up a first-round win on a holeshot with a 4.373 at 170.84 over Dwayne Rice and his 4.22. Drinkwater and past world champion John Montecalvo left the starting line together in the second round, but Drinkwater pulled ahead to win with a 4.087 at 177.30 to Montecalvo’s 4.112. He then made his best pass of race day, a 4.077 at 177.58, to move past the semis over No. 1 qualifier John DeFlorian, who ran into traction issues.
Powers qualified No. 7 in his Chuck Samuel-tuned Sonny’s Racing Engines ’21 Camaro. He and Elijah Morton both struggled to get down the hot track in the first round, but Powers recovered quicker with a 4.46 to Morton’s 6.681. He bounced back with a 4.092 in the second round over Kurt Neighbor, who was backed off the line. Powers and semifinal opponent Dillon Voss were separated by just .001 off the starting line, though Powers charged on to a 4.069 to beat Voss and his 4.093.
“It’s me and my daughter [Samantha] here, and a couple of my bracket racing buddies, just having a ball this weekend,” Clauss said. “We worked hard all weekend. We’re fighting some little issues, but we got through them and did what we had to do. I had to do my job on the tree and I feel like I did it and that’s it, man. It was awesome. I can’t believe it. When I let go of the button and I didn’t see him, I said, ‘I can’t believe it.’ I just can’t. And then I see my win light. I was like, ‘You’ve gotta be kidding me.’ But it’s awesome. Calvin [Starcher], the car owner, is here. Great guy. It’s Meade Baldwin’s engine and transmission in the car. A lot of guys help me. Three years into this, for this first time, it just feels great.”
After qualifying No. 8, Clauss used a 4.309 at 165.93 to win the first round over Lexi Tanner, who lifted to a 6.894. The holeshots started in the second round when Clauss left on No. 1 qualifier Daryl Stewart, who recorded a quicker 4.22 at 170.58 to Clauss’ winning 4.285 at 165.75. Clauss and newcomer Hank Hughes were both hesitant to leave the starting line in the semis, but Clauss got to the finish line first with a 4.285 at 166.17 to Hughes’ 4.46.
Nicholl’s first-round opponent, Patrick Patterson, couldn’t start his car for the round, while Nicholl laid down a 4.215. His next opponent, Chris Holdorf, also ran into issues as Nicholl set low E.T. of the round with his 4.184. Nicholl’s Troy Russell-tuned ’68 Camaro was quickest of the semis as well, running a 4.167 at 171.10 for the win over Jason Ventura, who broke in the previous round.
“That was a win for me, seeing [Alawad] in the finals,” said Garner-Jones, who thanked his brother and tuner, William Garner-Jones, the rest of his family-based team, and Jerry Meddock of Red Line Motorsports Media. “After the semis, we got to the trailer, took the clutch apart, and our crank was messed up. So we had to change motors in between rounds. That was the first pass on that motor and it went 3.98. It took a lot to get the win, and of course, my tuner is pretty good.”
As the No. 1 qualifier, Garner-Jones started eliminations with a bye run, which he used to set low E.T. of the round, a 4.037 at 177.30. He stepped up in the semis with a 4.014 at 178.57 to beat Tyrone Lemons’ 4.076.
Alawad ran a 4.142 in the first round over Gerald Smith. His second-round match with points leader Brayden Davis was decided on the starting line, as Davis went red by .004 on a 4.039 pass. Alawad got the win with his 4.076.
“Pulling this win off, we gained a lot of points back in the championship,” said Mota, who thanked tuner Jamie Miller, his team, and girlfriend Nicole Walker. “We set the record. That gave us 50 points. We got the No. 1 qualifier, and then we went on to win the race. That should bring us right back up to the points to try to win this thing. That’s our plan. Get ready for the next one and be there. I couldn’t have done this without my team and Jamie and just everybody involved in my program. We put so much work and so much time and effort into the car, and this weekend, it actually paid off.”
Mota ran in the 4.60s on all but one pass, a 4.700. He raced past Connor McGee and Dan Whetstine before getting a bye into the final round.
McBride had a fairytale debut weekend in his home-built ’63 Volkswagen Fastback until he broke in the semis. He earned the Best Engineered Car award early on race day, then picked up round wins over Kaitlin Quartuccio, David Knight, and points leader Blake Denton to reach the final.
Two consistent late-round finishers, Nick Meloni and Robbie Crenshaw, outlasted a tough Top Sportsman 32 field to reach the final round. Meloni was victorious in his Nesbitt-powered TT Motorsports ’69 Camaro with a 4.272 on a 4.25 dial-in. It was Meloni’s second consecutive win. Crenshaw followed with a 4.413 on a 4.30 dial-in in his Albert-powered ’89 Cutlass.
Two of the quickest cars in the 16-car Elite Top Dragster field were left standing in the final round, as No. 2 qualifier Brian Anderson in his ProCharged ’23 Race Tech entry lined up against No. 3 qualifier Frank Falter IV in the supercharged “Candy Man” ’20 Miller dragster. Both drivers slowed from their usual pace, though Falter’s 3.778 was closer to his 3.73 dial-in for the win. Anderson recorded a 3.849 on a 3.74 dial-in in the runner-up effort.
The Top Dragster 32 final round came down to two North Carolina-based drivers, Nick Reavis and Cameron Manuel. Reavis secured the win in his ’13 Race Tech dragster with a 4.507 on a 4.50 dial-in, while Manuel broke out with a 4.417 on a 4.42 dial-in in his ’18 American dragster.
UP NEXT- The 10th PDRA season will continue in just three weeks at DragWars presented by ProFab, October 5-7, at GALOT Motorsports Park in Benson, North Carolina
FRIDAY NOTEBOOK – FRIDAY UNDER THE LIGHTS IN DARLINGTON JUST LIKE OLD TIMES
“I always want to run like that,” said Cox, who credited engine builder Pat Musi, teammate and sponsor Marcus Butner, and Smithfield Collision. “I’ve just struggled the last year or two to get the car happy. We tested a lot last year at the end of the year. This year, I feel like I’ve had the top one or two car all year. I hadn’t won, but, man, I’ve had a bad hot rod. We came out at the World Series of Pro Mod, and man, we hauled tail down there. I’ve been fast. It just takes luck here a little bit. All these guys are good, but it’s good. That’s the way I like to race. I race wide open. I don’t know no other way.”
Halsey, also a three-time low qualifier this season, ended up second with a 3.638 at 206.61 in his Fulton-powered “Daddy Shark” ’68 Camaro. Two-time world champion Tommy Franklin recorded a 3.645 at 205.67 in his Musi-powered “Jungle Rat” ’69 Camaro for the third spot in the 16-car field.
“We definitely put our heads together really, really well today and made some really good adjustments to the car,” said Salemi, who thanked her team, including husband Jon, brother-in-law Jim Salemi, car owner Eddie Whelan, and engine builder Mike Stawicki. “It made a couple of really, really nice runs. One of the qualifiers it actually went to the left, and I had to abort, but we learned a lot on that run, believe it or not. We knew everyone was going to come swinging [in Q3], and we just kind of fell on the lucky side of that one, I think. These guys will continue to work and work and work, and I’ll do my job behind the wheel like I did tonight, and hopefully we can end up in the winner’s circle tomorrow.”
Points leader and two-time Pro Nitrous world champion Jason Harris qualified second in his ProCharged “Party Time” ’69 Camaro on the strength of a 3.611 at 208.04. Dustin Nesloney used a 3.613 at 208.62 in the ProCharged GALOT Motorsports ’22 Camaro to qualify third.
“We made one run – the first run we made in March – and we hadn’t been down the racetrack since,” said DeFlorian, who thanked his team, including crew chief Brian “Lump” Self, wife Liann, and Jeff Graber, as well as partners like Amsoil, Kevin and Karen Bealko, and Graber Concrete. “We developed this problem with the car. We’ve spent over five months trying to find it. We finally found the problem, came here, and knocked the tires off the first two runs. We made a bunch of changes, changed tires, and that did it. I felt like I won the race out there already just by that run. To roll out here at the PDRA race and be able to do that, I’m on top of the world. Absolutely awesome deal.”
Multi-time winner JR Carr, who’s making his return after selling his entire operation over the offseason, drove Richard Freeman’s Elite Motorsports ’21 Camaro to a 4.057 at 178.36 to qualify No. 2. Past world champion Steven Boone qualified third with a 4.059 at 178.50 in his Allen-powered Boone Motorsports ’07 Cobalt.
“We were so down, so Clay and I were just excited to get it done on the last run like that,” said Stewart, who thanked engine builder Daryl Hameetman, Chassis Engineering, Ram Clutches, and Joe Oplawski with Hyperactive Performance Solutions. “We had a feeling if we could put the whole package together, we would lay down a lick because of that Liberty [transmission] and the brand-new motor that HRE just did for us. We got lucky and it was perfect timing. Now we’ve got our work cut out for us. Hopefully tomorrow we come out and somehow make it to the final. That’s what we’re shooting for.”
Fellow South Florida driver Jason Ventura held the No. 1 spot until Stewart grabbed it. Ventura slid into the No. 2 spot with his 4.168 at 170.97 in his HRE-powered Gladiator X Racing ’70 Camaro. Michigan’s Doug Nicholl qualified third in his Musi-powered ’68 Camaro with a 4.169 at 170.84.
“We came in here looking for a victory. Nothing less than that,” Garner-Jones said. “No. 1 qualifier, that’s a start. Hopefully we can capitalize off of that and get us a victory tomorrow. I’m coming out tomorrow first pass looking for a 3. I was looking for a 3 on my first pass today. A victory would be great because I haven’t had one since the second race. Last race, we got to the final but we blew up in the final. It’s been rough this year, man. It really has, but we are going to keep chipping away at it, and we’ll try to get us a victory tomorrow.”
Kuwait’s Meshal Al-Saber rode Brad McCoy’s Q80 Racing Hayabusa to a 4.002 at 175.78 in the final session to sit No. 2 behind Garner-Jones. Fellow Kuwait-based rider Mohammed Alawad qualified third with a 4.083 at 174.76.
REBOUNDING – A cracked crankshaft in car owner Dave Mancini’s ’68 GTO put an early end to Derek Mota’s weekend at the Norwalk race in May, then he missed the Maryland race. But after starting the season with a win in his Super Street debut at Virginia, Mota was determined to get back into the championship chase this weekend. The Massachusetts-based driver and fabricator put his own X275 Mustang into Super Street trim, and after making a few strong test passes, he laid down a 4.65 at 163.76 in the turbocharged Mustang to qualify No. 1.
“We found some stuff in the rear end after our last race and we decided to cut the car apart and Jamie [Miller] made a set of custom ladder bars for it,” Mota said. “We pretty much got the car back together Saturday, loaded up Sunday, and we were on the road on Monday. We went to North Carolina before here, tested, got here, and this thing has just been on rails. I can’t thank Jamie enough for everything he does for us, and thanks to Hart’s Turbos, my crew, and my girlfriend at home. We’ve just got so much time and testing in the car, and this weekend, it’s all paying off. It’s just printing tickets and .60s and that’s what we wanted. Now, hopefully we can get back in the hunt for the championship.”
Brad Cox qualified No. 2 in his nitrous-fed ’90 Mustang with a 4.737 at 150.35. David Knight took his Kannapolis, North Carolina-based ’72 Nova to the third spot with a 4.768 at 155.60.
THE TOP SPORTSMEN – Past world champion Buddy Perkinson drove his Musi-powered, nitrous-fed LAT Racing Oils ’69 Camaro to a 3.729 at 202.16 to claim the No. 1 spot in Elite Top Sportsman. Bryan LaFlam’s supercharged ’67 Mustang laid down a 3.749 at 195.31 to qualify second. Another nitrous car, Glenn Butcher’s ’69 Camaro, took the third spot with a 3.789 at 197.98.
Vonnie Mills’ 4.084 at 179.93 wasn’t quick enough to make the all-3-second Elite field, but it did put her Sonny’s-powered Show-N-Tell ’15 Camaro on top of the Top Sportsman 32 field.
Another past world champion, Pete Maduri, earned the No. 1 qualifier award in Elite Top Dragster when he fired off a 3.764 at 195.31 in the Bauer family’s ProCharged Dynabrade ’15 Chrome-Worx dragster. Not far behind, Brian Anderson in his ProCharged ’23 Race Tech dragster posted a 3.765 at 191.41 to end up No. 2. Frank Falter IV rounded out the top 3 with a 3.78 at 198.50 in his supercharged “Candy Man” ’20 Miller dragster.
Boiling Springs, South Carolina’s Brandon Page secured the No. 1 spot in Top Dragster 32 with a 4.086 at 175.37 in his ’17 Maddox dragster.
TODAY’S SCHEDULE – The PDRA Red Line Oil Carolina Nationals will continue Saturday at 9:30 a.m. beginning with Jr. Dragster final qualifying, followed by eliminations in the sportsman and Jr. Dragster classes. Pre-race ceremonies and pro eliminations will kick off at 3 p.m.
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