There was a time when Gaige Herrera could roll through the gates at an NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series event and the trophy already felt spoken for. That was the case until it wasn’t.

Herrera returned to the winner’s circle Sunday at zMAX Dragway, sweeping the weekend in Pro Stock Motorcycle by following Saturday’s Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge victory with the Four-Wide Nationals title. For a rider who watched teammate Richard Gadson claim the championship last season, the result looked less like relief and more like a warning shot.

Herrera rode his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki to a 6.758-second pass at 199.88 mph in the final quad, defeating Gadson, Clayton Howey and Chase Van Sant. It was his first victory of the season, the 29th of his young NHRA career, and his third four-wide win in Charlotte.

The final round was no soft landing spot. Gadson entered as the reigning world champion and current points leader, Howey had been sharp throughout the weekend, and Van Sant had shown the ability to steal rounds with one clean hit.

Herrera did what elite racers do when the room gets crowded. He ignored the noise, trusted the motorcycle, and finished the job.

“Yeah, that final, we all knew we were going to push the tree or beyond the tree,” Herrera said. “I think that’s the tightest I’ve seen a 4-Wide in the bike category in the final as far as reaction time. And not only that, it was pretty cool to have all Suzukis in the final.”

“I had basically a bracket bike all day long between running 75 and so, but same with Richard. Richard was on it too. And Clayton, he’s been doing a phenomenal job on the rental bike. It’s awesome to get the 4-Wide win here at zMAX, and to get my first Diamond Wally is pretty cool.”

What made the win matter was not only the trophy, but the timing. Herrera opened the season with a second-round loss in Gainesville, and for a racer accustomed to dictating terms, that kind of exit lingers.

He said it did not break confidence, but it did sharpen focus.

“After Gainesville losing second round, I wouldn’t say it took any wind out of my sails, but it kind of lit a fire under me as far as just got to be better as a rider and everything,” Herrera said. “I feel like this weekend it showed and I proved it to myself.”

That admission says plenty about the current state of Pro Stock Motorcycle. The days of Herrera simply unloading and overpowering the field are gone.

The class has tightened. Gadson is now a title winner, Howey has emerged as a factor, and other teams have found enough speed to make every round expensive.

Herrera acknowledged as much when discussing the jump in competition.

“Everyone stepped up,” Herrera said. “You see Matt and them all out there testing going 104s and laying out big numbers. After qualifying, we knew we had our work cut out for us. So it’s a big relief to get to win here, for sure.”

Herrera also credited the style of racing that built him long before NHRA trophies lined the shelf. Bracket racing, grudge racing and repetition taught him to study details others miss.

“I think it makes just you a better racer,” Herrera said. “It makes you analyze every little thing and try to critique yourself on riding and try to make everything as precise as possible. I feel like having that kind of background definitely helps, especially on a motorcycle.”

The Vance & Hines program spent the spring break between Gainesville and Charlotte working while others talked. Herrera said the shop stayed busy, and he stayed riding, including a grudge-race win last weekend.

That combination showed when the pressure arrived Sunday. He was the only rider qualified in the top six to survive the opening two rounds.

For all the trophies already won, Herrera said the Diamond Wally ranks near the top.

“I would say it’s second right now,” Herrera said. “Number one’s always winning the Championship Wally, of course. But it’s a pretty cool Wally. Hopefully I can get a couple more.”

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HERRERA REMINDS PRO STOCK MOTORCYCLE WHO STILL RUNS THE ROOM

There was a time when Gaige Herrera could roll through the gates at an NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series event and the trophy already felt spoken for. That was the case until it wasn’t.

Herrera returned to the winner’s circle Sunday at zMAX Dragway, sweeping the weekend in Pro Stock Motorcycle by following Saturday’s Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge victory with the Four-Wide Nationals title. For a rider who watched teammate Richard Gadson claim the championship last season, the result looked less like relief and more like a warning shot.

Herrera rode his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki to a 6.758-second pass at 199.88 mph in the final quad, defeating Gadson, Clayton Howey and Chase Van Sant. It was his first victory of the season, the 29th of his young NHRA career, and his third four-wide win in Charlotte.

The final round was no soft landing spot. Gadson entered as the reigning world champion and current points leader, Howey had been sharp throughout the weekend, and Van Sant had shown the ability to steal rounds with one clean hit.

Herrera did what elite racers do when the room gets crowded. He ignored the noise, trusted the motorcycle, and finished the job.

“Yeah, that final, we all knew we were going to push the tree or beyond the tree,” Herrera said. “I think that’s the tightest I’ve seen a 4-Wide in the bike category in the final as far as reaction time. And not only that, it was pretty cool to have all Suzukis in the final.”

“I had basically a bracket bike all day long between running 75 and so, but same with Richard. Richard was on it too. And Clayton, he’s been doing a phenomenal job on the rental bike. It’s awesome to get the 4-Wide win here at zMAX, and to get my first Diamond Wally is pretty cool.”

What made the win matter was not only the trophy, but the timing. Herrera opened the season with a second-round loss in Gainesville, and for a racer accustomed to dictating terms, that kind of exit lingers.

He said it did not break confidence, but it did sharpen focus.

“After Gainesville losing second round, I wouldn’t say it took any wind out of my sails, but it kind of lit a fire under me as far as just got to be better as a rider and everything,” Herrera said. “I feel like this weekend it showed and I proved it to myself.”

That admission says plenty about the current state of Pro Stock Motorcycle. The days of Herrera simply unloading and overpowering the field are gone.

The class has tightened. Gadson is now a title winner, Howey has emerged as a factor, and other teams have found enough speed to make every round expensive.

Herrera acknowledged as much when discussing the jump in competition.

“Everyone stepped up,” Herrera said. “You see Matt and them all out there testing going 104s and laying out big numbers. After qualifying, we knew we had our work cut out for us. So it’s a big relief to get to win here, for sure.”

Herrera also credited the style of racing that built him long before NHRA trophies lined the shelf. Bracket racing, grudge racing and repetition taught him to study details others miss.

“I think it makes just you a better racer,” Herrera said. “It makes you analyze every little thing and try to critique yourself on riding and try to make everything as precise as possible. I feel like having that kind of background definitely helps, especially on a motorcycle.”

The Vance & Hines program spent the spring break between Gainesville and Charlotte working while others talked. Herrera said the shop stayed busy, and he stayed riding, including a grudge-race win last weekend.

That combination showed when the pressure arrived Sunday. He was the only rider qualified in the top six to survive the opening two rounds.

For all the trophies already won, Herrera said the Diamond Wally ranks near the top.

“I would say it’s second right now,” Herrera said. “Number one’s always winning the Championship Wally, of course. But it’s a pretty cool Wally. Hopefully I can get a couple more.”

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