50 YEARS UNDER HIS BELT –
SONNY TINDAL CONTEMPLATES LIFE AFTER DRAG RACING
Racing legend, Sonny Tindal, will be
the first to admit that he’s been around the block in drag racing and even did a
second lap. This off-season the cagey veteran doorslammer from Cayce, South
Carolina will contemplate whether he’s up for racing a 51st season in
the eighth-mile Quick Eight events throughout the
Carolinas.
Tindal says he can still cut a light
with the competition; it’s just the between-rounds demands that have put a
strain on his 70-year old body.
“I still love to drive them although I
don’t like to work on them as much as I used to,” Tindal said. “Working on them
is harder on me now than it used to be.”
Make no bones about it. Tindal has a
strong following at those events as well as his few stops on the American Drag
Racing League tour.
“I still have a lot of fans but I
think the car might have a lot to do with it,” Tindal said. “I still have pretty
decent reaction times and that makes me enjoy it. It keeps me competitive and
sometimes when you aren’t competitive – then you don’t have a lot of
fun.”
Tindal says his racing is fun because
it remains a family affair. His wife and daughter still accompany him to the
races.
The local scene works well for Tindal
because he admits he was never one for the national
events.
“When you work for a living, you
really can’t take off all the days you need to do that,” Tindal said. “The
expense adds to all of that and makes it tough on guys like
me.”
Tindal last pursued the IHRA
championship in 1982 and finished sixth.
“Since then I’ve run stuff around the
Carolinas,” said Tindal.
Everyone keeps asking me when I am
going to retire and that makes me want to do it more. – Sonny Tindal
Tindal has exemplified the term no
fear when running many of those tracks. He won’t admit it, but those around him
testify some of those facilities have been less than top
quality.
“That comes from a long time ago,”
Tindal said. “When someone would get a car they weren’t quite sure of, they’d
get me to test it out. I’d jump in there and make sure it was all right for
them. I’ve just done that through the years. I love going down that
track.”
Tindal said he straightened out more
cars than he condemned to the graveyard.
“We had a way of making them work from
that point on,” Tindal said.
Tindal is also credited with winning
the first pre-Quick Eight ever hosted at the defunct Shuffletown Dragway outside
of Charlotte, NC. Three weekends later, he suffered one of the worst crashes in
the track’s history. Not only did he barrel roll the car, he also took out a
utility pole by striking it halfway up.
“I broke a hip and messed up my
shoulder pretty bad,” Tindal said, recalling his injuries. “Someone told me I
was supposed to quit after that but I was out there a few weeks later. I dropped
my crutches and was back in a car. I forgot to look at the light pole I struck,
so I was okay from that point on.”
Tindal said he was going to quit after
last year but his daughter talked him into coming back for
2007.
“I am planning on retiring next year,”
Tindal told his daughter in 2006. “She said we’d talk about it next year. I’m
gonna go pretty hard next year and make it my final
one.”
“Everyone keeps asking me when I am
going to retire and that makes me want to do it more,” Tindal said. “These cars
require you to have a fresh motor every time you go to the race. There are so
many things on these cars that need to be checked and I just can’t do it. We’re
trying to run at least twice a month now.
“This is still expensive and I need to
do a lot of electrical work just to pay the local racing. It all goes together.
If I don’t work I can’t race. If I don’t race, I don’t have to
work.”
In a world that demands individuals
act their age, Tindal admits he’s found that difficult to
do.
“I don’t feel like a 70 year old,”
Tindal said. “I see people younger than me that can’t do the things I do. I feel
very fortunate to be able to do this. I’m not sick often and that all works well
for me.”
Tindal credits his work ethic for
ensuring he’s still able to race after all these
years.
“I get up and leave for the shop every
morning at 7:30,” Tindal said. “I’ve had to work hard for much of my life and
that has done more to keep me in shape for all of my
life.”
Does Tindal have any regrets about
racing for a half-century?
“No
regrets,” Tindal said. “I’ve always run the top class. When we got to the Quick
Eight, I felt like that was the top of the line for me. This Pontiac that I
drive has been a good car to me.”