8-03-07davidpowers.jpgWho says you can’t have it

all?


David Powers is perfect

proof that not only is it possible to have one’s cake, but you can eat it

too…with some ice cream. 


Powers is doing just that,

owning one of the top operations in the NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series tour.

He does it while also operating David Powers Homes, a luxury home-building company

in Houston.


How does he maintain both

businesses to the top of their respective games?  



 


From successful

businessman to championship contending team owner …


 


DSB_8974_400.jpgWho says you can’t have it

all?


David Powers is perfect

proof that not only is it possible to have one’s cake, but you can eat it

too…with some ice cream. 


Powers is doing just that,

owning one of the top operations in the NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series tour.

He does it while also operating David Powers Homes, a luxury home-building company

in Houston.


How does he maintain both

businesses to the top of their respective games?  


The answer is simple and

to the point.


"I was born and

raised on a dairy farm (in Dubuque, Iowa)," said Powers, whose drivers —

Rod Fuller and Whit Bazemore — rank first and seventh, respectively, in

POWERade Series Top Fuel points. "I had the responsibility of milking cows

every morning and every evening. You had to get up about 4:30 in the morning,

milk the cows and get out to school. Then by 3:30, you did all your chores, ate

dinner and then it was time for bed. And then do it all over again the next

day, so a strong work ethic as a result of my upbringing on the farm was the

result. 


"I always tell people

when they ask me (how I do it, running both companies) that this is a lot

easier than dairy farming."


That holds true for his

racing team, which in about three years has risen from the ground up to a

championship-caliber operation. 


Fuller, a two-time NHRA

sportsman divisional champion, has enjoyed solid success since the team was

formed during the 2005 season. He’s scored five national event victories,

including winning twice this season. He’s also finished in the top 10 in each

of the team’s first two seasons and is the Top Fuel points leader after the

first 14 events of the season.


It’s been similar success

for Bazemore, who despite competing in his initial fray into the Top Fuel wars,

has raced like a veteran, advancing to one final round and is seventh in

points.  


"This is one big race

team," Powers said. "It’s not two teams, it’s one big race team. It’s

people working together and we’ll feel we are developing that culture every

race.


"We have the No. 1

car in the nation and the No. 7 car in the nation. Three years ago when I

started this, I always thought if we would have been in the top 10 that would

have been a great accomplishment. But it’s the proof of what good people do.
 



 


a d v e r t i s e m e n t



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fullerDSB_0645.JPG"I think it’s just

the belief in ourselves and trying to extenuate leadership throughout the

organization that is positive. We always look at the glass as half full rather

than half empty. We look at each other of what are the plusses of each other

rather than what are the minuses. We try to focus on the positive. It takes

time, but its worked and allowed us to do great things."


And great things have

always seem to follow Powers. It even goes back to when he was a competitive

racer in the 1960s and 70s.


Powers, like most of the

youth from his area, developed a need for speed. He formed a team with John

Riley and the duo raced a series of fuel altereds during the early portion of

the 1960s. The team was top qualifier at the famed Drag News Junior Eliminator

before scoring a Top Fuel title on the UDRA circuit in 1964. The Powers and

Riley team then went on the match-racing circuit for the rest of the decade.


"I think my first

pass in a drag car was in 1958," Powers recalled. "My last one in the

early 1970s. We raced under the Powers and Riley (moniker), with a Top Fuel car

and a Top Fuel Funny Car. It was one of the few direct-drive Top Fuel Funny

Cars at the time, because my partner, John Riley, and I developed the first

reverser for Top Fuel cars.


"Back then, you did

one really competitive event, and the rest of the time you were (running) match

races. It was all about matching racing back then"


But by the early 1970s,

Powers had quelled his need for speed and left the sport to go to work.


He joined a home-building

company in Colorado before moving on to a

national home-building company in Chicago.

He was transferred to Houston

in 1989 before starting up David Powers Homes in 1994.


He has earned quite an

amount of success in the industry, serving on the Committee for Mortgage

Finance in Washington,

D.C.for 10 years and has also scored several industry awards.


Yes, he has become quite a

home builder. But something kept calling him back to the straight-line set and

in 2005 he decided to take the plunge.


"Darrell Russell, bless his soul, who lost

his life in St. Louis

(in 2004), he was a friend of mine," Powers recalled. "He encouraged

me and talked to me all the time about getting back into racing. I guess that’s

what brought it about, more than anything else. 



 


 


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DSA_4477_400.jpg"I liked going to

(the NHRA event in Houston).

I liked going to (the U.S. Nationals in Indianapolis).

I went to Pomona (Calif.) quite a few times. I always kept my

roots alive. I continued to (read) publications on motor sports, particularly

drag racing. I’ve always had a love for it. I felt it was the point in my life

that it would be a good thing to do and it has been"


But building from the

ground floor is never easy, so Powers used the same principles that he built

David Powers Homes and applied them to David Powers Motorsports. 


"It’s like building

any good organization," Powers said. "It’s so important to understand

the group of people you put together and make sure they are a cohesive group of

people. It requires skill of them working together all the time to make them

better. Part of my philosophy of life is that you get a little better every

day."


It’s certainly been true

for the DPM, which has slowly but surely been a team to be reckoned with in the

POWERade Series.


The team, despite running

a limited schedule, scored one victory in three final rounds and finished in

the top 10 during its maiden season. It’s been a steady rise since.


A key ingredient to the

pie has been Fuller, who has molded quickly to the team concept. Some might

have questioned his experience at the time of his hiring, but Powers has proven

to been right about the Las Vegas

resident’s ability. And no one appreciates that faith more than Fuller.


"David took a chance

on me," Fuller said. "I was a Super Comp driver with little pro

experience and he gave me a shot. He put me through a series of IQ and

personality tests that big corporations use. That shows his vision and

commitment to the team and sport. He gives me and our team everything we need

to succeed and win and you can’t ask for more than that."


And they’ve succeeded by

leaps and bounds. Fuller scored two more wins last season en route to a

fifth-place finish in points last season, and he’s continued it this year,

winning twice and leading the points after 14 events. The addition of the

second car with Bazemore in the driver’s seat has added to that success. The

team recently enjoyed its first all-DPM final round. But it hasn’t been all

good. Their have been setbacks off the track, mainly corporate backing.


While the car driven by

Bazemore receives major sponsorship from Matco Tools, the car driven by Fuller,

despite its enormous success on the track, has done it this year without

full-time major corporate backing. Powers does have a limited sponsorship deal

with Wagner CAT, but that only covers handful of races. The remaining portion

of the schedule Fuller has been pilot to the "White Shark."


"It’s a tough

situation," Powers said. "We’re a prudent organization, and at the

same time, the team has never lacked for parts. They have the best parts all

the time. But between (financial partner) Tim Buckley and myself, we’ve been

able to make this happen. When I started home building, you don’t go out and

hang your shingle there and ask people to start buying homes from me without

seeing the value.
 



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bazemoreDSA_2610.JPG"People in the

home-building side don’t buy homes off pieces of paper. They buy it from what

they can see. It’s the same in motor sports. A lot of people have the

misconception that you can go around with a proposal and say you are going to

do this and that, but the reality is that when you do it, (that’s where the)

real perceived value on behalf of the sponsor begins. I believe in that theory

very much. You have to show people what reality is and then let them decide

from that reality versus somebody else’s reality and who they ought to invest

with.


"We’re in this for

the long term, and we want to have a good race team. I believe if you look at

our short-term and long-term goals, we’ve met or exceeded every one of them

much sooner than we thought we would." 


And Powers believes that

will lead to a sponsorship deal for his charter team.


"We’ve had opportunities

to bring on sponsorship, but the sponsorship was not compatible with

Matco," Powers said. "It’s very important that we recognize that

Matco was there first and we are going to treat Matco right in every way. It’s

not just about the dollars, but creating long-term relationships that we can

build upon. 


"There were

opportunities, but they were not good matches for Matco. But we feel through

good business and the grace of God, we’re going bring the right people

together. It’s coming."


And it might come with a

Top Fuel title. 


"That would be an

ultimate thing to have happen," Powers said. "It would be just an

awesome experience for all of our team, and when I say all of our team, I would

say (both) the Matco team and the Caterpillar team. It would be just a great

experience for our team and a true recognition of their skills, not only their

driving, but each and every member of the crew and every position they play in

the success of these teams."


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