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

ROBERT PATRICK - #12 MMPS ALL-TIME

mmps_30_logo_220.jpg

The Good Book instructs parents to raise their children in the right way and when they are old, they will not depart. Eli and Bonnie Patrick instilled solid and positive values in their son Robert – honesty and IHRA Mountain Motor Pro Stock racing.

Those are two traits the second-generation Patrick proudly says he holds dear to his heart. The Fredericksburg, Va.-based driver has been on the fast track to success since entering the fast doorslammer ranks in the early 1990s.

“Where I lived the mountain motor cars were king,” Patrick said. “Growing up as a kid there were a lot of old tracks within an hour where the promoters booked in those cars. Whenever those cars came to town, because my dad had a dealership, they would display their cars at the shop. I was a starry-eyed kid. I never wanted to do anything but run like they ran. They had an impact on me. My dream was to be one of them.”

Patrick said that he dreamed one day of driving one of those IHRA Pro Stockers and his inspiration came from watching legends such as Lee Edwards, Rickie Smith, Roy Hill and Ronnie Sox.

WAXING NOSTALGIC - 1983 IHRA SPRING NATIONALS

While the NHRA event broadcasts were syndicated throughout the country,
the IHRA was on to a new deal with the Mizlou Network and then ESPN.
This one is worth watching if you prefer names like Don Prudhomme,
Raymond Beadle, Al Segrini, Connie Kalitta, Richard Tharp and Mark
Oswald.

MOTEL 6 RENEWS WITH NHRA

Motel 6, the largest corporately owned and operated budget hotel chain
in North America, has renewed its contract with the National Hot Rod
Association (NHRA), continuing to serve as the Official Motel of the
NHRA through the 2010 NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series season. 

“We greatly value our relationship with the NHRA and its millions of
passionate fans,” said Eric Studer, senior vice president of marketing
services for Accor North America.  “The NHRA provides us multiple
platforms to communicate with motorsports fans, including traditional
media, online communications, sales promotions and on-site access to 3
million NHRA race attendees annually.”

VANDERGRIFF’S GRIPE WITH ESPN2

DSA_6225.jpgBob Vandergriff, Jr. is
scratching his head trying to figure out the answer to a question that has been
bugging him for the last few races. The UPS-sponsored driver from Alpharetta, Ga., said he wants to know what it takes to
get on the event broadcasts.

 

Vandergriff said he
felt that he’s got all the ingredients that should garner sufficient airtime,
such as winning rounds and making the Countdown to the Championship. He said
that despite the logical qualifying factors, he feels he is being treated as an
outcast when it comes to the televison coverage.

 

“You have one of the
largest companies in the world on the side of our car as a sponsor and they
should want to feature that any way because it sends out a good message about
our sport,” Vandergriff said. “It’s a valuable asset within NHRA Championship
Drag Racing. The big picture is that it might inspire others to look and see UPS
involved and look into our sport. Evidently that doesn’t fit the
criteria.”

 

Vandergriff said the
situation came to a boil between he and the television team last weekend in
Memphis. He said
he voiced his displeasure to the television crew and then moved on. When they
came to interview him later, he said, “No way.”

 

Why would a driver turn
down television coverage?

WHEN YOU WIN INDY ...

leet-shirtpics002.jpg

...our
brave soldiers in Iraq hear about it and wear your shirt into combat
that day. They are proudly showing off their Mike Ashley Torco Race
Fuels "Fuel Doctor" shirts.

Lee McKinney sent us this photo of the 1st squadron. 2nd Stryker Cavalry regiment led by Capt. Andrew Steadman. They heading
out in the red zone on patrol with their strykers. McKinney provides security for what was once Saddam's palace.

DEVOUR BUYS L&T CLUTCHES CO.

0709BDEVOUR1.jpg

Bob Devour has purchased L&T Clutches from John Medlen, who has owned the company for the last eight years.

The
name L&T has long been recognized in racing clutch development and
manufacturing. Founded decades ago by the late Tony Miglizzi and later
supported by his talented son Lanny, the company was always at the
forefront of clutch technology.

BECKMAN RUNS VALVOLINE SCHEME IN DALLAS

For the second time this 2007 NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series season, Jack
Beckman and the Mail Terminal Services Dodge Funny Car team will represent their
iconic sponsor Valvoline by running a Valvoline body on the MTS/DSR Funny Car at
this weekend's O'Reilly NHRA Fall Nationals at the Texas
Motorplex.

Beckman, who moved into second in the Countdown to Four
playoffs point standings following his runner-up finish in Memphis on Sunday,
with two races remaining to determine the final four, is a fan of all the
Valvoline products used by his team.

"I've used nothing but Valvoline in
all my own race cars since 1994," said Beckman. "I use Valvoline in my (Super
Comp) tow vehicle and in my passenger cars and have done that more than a dozen
years. And it's very easy to support a company that you feel that passionately
about their product and their people. And I'm sure that is also why more top
mechanics choose Valvoline."

For Beckman, having this competitive
advantage at the race track is just as important. "At 8000 horsepower in the
Funny Car, our Valvoline gets changed every run as the engine is torn apart. In
my passenger car I always change mine every 3000 miles."

CAPPS & BERNSTEIN TALK COUNTDOWN

Ron Capps led the points in Funny Car for 14 consecutive races
before the points reset for the playoff and he’s slipped back to third
place right now heading into Dallas. Ron, what’s it like to be in the
middle of this Funny Car race with only 41 points separating … this
Murderer’s Row of drag racers from third to seventh place, you have
yourself, Gary Scelzi, Tony Pedregon, Mike Ashley, and John Force?

RON CAPPS:  Yeah, it’s pretty brutal.  I was looking at the
points again and the other categories don’t seem to be as close when
you take ‑‑ everybody is bunched up from third to six within one round,
I think, something like that.  But either way, it’s close.  We’ve been
through it … the way we came down to the wire at Pomona the last few
years and Tony Schumacher’s run last year to win on the last run we
felt like we’ve been in it.  So we can take that experience.

But even being through it like we have, nothing prepares you for it. 
Once you get to the starting line, it’s we’re not like Cup drivers
where we get to go around and around and you get to make up a bad lap
the next lap.  A crew chief has one shot at getting the car to go down
the track and I think that’s really what sets our score apart.

SCHUMACHER “DECISION CAME AS A TOTAL SHOCK”

Don Schumacher said he was
unprepared for Wednesday’s notification


 

schumacherDSA_4875.jpg
Friday’s announcement that the U.S. Army was ceasing their
association with the Don Schumacher Racing Pro Stock Motorcycle team
came as a total shock on Wednesday to the racing world. Two days later
it shocked the rest of the racing community.

“The conference call on the Wednesday prior to the Memphis event, this
decision came as a total shock to me,” Schumacher said. “The last word
I had heard prior to that was that they were continuing with the
present program in place and that everything was just fine.”

In Memphis, last Friday, the racing world learned otherwise.

Schumacher’s program with the U.S. Army runs on a year-to-year basis
with a particular deadline every season. He said the advertising agency
who represents the U.S. Army account had already verbally given a
commitment within the specified time to continue for 2008. That order
was rescinded.

Fans of the Angelle Sampey and Antron Brown tandem might be forced to pick one of the two for 2008.

JOHNSON'S MEMPHIS ADVENTURES

johnson_sunday.jpgSteve Johnson enjoyed his best weekend of the season after advancing to
the final round on his Snap-on Tools Suzuki during this weekend past at the NHRA Mid-South Nationals in Memphis, TN.
The Alabama resident defeated Chris Rivas, Hector Arana, and Craig Treble on a
holeshot to reach the money round for the first time this season.

The 20-year racing veteran
broke in the final round against Andrew Hines to end his fantastic weekend.

But, while all might have appeared peachy on the outside -- on the inside Johnson's weekend was a tempest. 

“As a competitor, I’m pretty proud of my riding contributions
this weekend," Johnson said. "It’s so easy to redlight,
or have an okay light or even be late, but this weekend I was in the zone, where
everything worked perfectly.  I don’t
know how to explain it, but every time I went to the starting line my vision
narrowed down and it was just me, our Suzuki and the Tree.  Everything else faded away, and that’s why we
had really good Reaction Times in every round.

Pages