Category: News (Page 15 of 40)

race-by-race wrapups

PSM – GAINESVILLE 2021

Backed by the greatest team in motorcycle drag racing history, Cory Reed made his first official runs with Vance & Hines power at one of the sport’s true “majors,” the Gatornationals. “When you have Vance & Hines’ stuff, you unload the bike and know you have a real chance to win,” he said. “These bikes should never be out of the top half.”

After just a handful of test passes in Bradenton and Gainesville, Reed sped straight down the groove to a 6.98 at 191 mph in Pro Stock Motorcycle’s first qualifying session of 2021. The former Rookie of the Year, who ran three races with his own power last year and went rounds at two of them, got only better from there, first with a 6.87/197 that catapulted him temporarily from the bubble to the top half of the field, and then with a 6.83 at 198.61 mph that planted him right in the middle of the pack.

“Yeah, I ran a 6.83,” Reed said, “but the 60-foot was only 1.09. I mean, 1.09? That’s terrible. If I was 1.05 or 1.06 in 60, that easily would have been a 6.79 – maybe a .77 or even a .76. You lose that much in the first 60 feet, it affects everything else. It just kills the rest of the run.”

Solidly in the middle of the field when eliminations commenced, Reed dropped a first-round match to reigning U.S. Nationals champ Scotty Pollacheck, against whom he had a winning record, 6.83/196 to 6.87/195. “I lost, but I can tell Vance & Hines really cares about what we’re doing here,” he said. “It’s not like they just dropped off the bikes and said, ‘Here you go.’ [Four-time world champion] Eddie [Krawiec] and [six-time champ] Andrew [Hines] were right there for every run. I was thoroughly impressed. Terry Vance himself came up after the race and said, ‘Good job, boys,’ and that meant a lot.”

For Reed, the future is now. “If we don’t win at least one national event this year, I won’t be happy,” he said, “I want to win a couple and contend for a championship. Finishing 5th, 6th, 7th would be OK, I guess, but if I ended up third or something like that … that’s what we’re really trying to do. We want go after the record and win races, and now we have the power to do it.”

TAFC – GAINESVILLE NATIONAL 2021

Belle Rose winner Annie Whiteley opened qualifying with back-to-back 5.49s – one at 269 mph (top speed to that point) and the other at 268 – but at the Gatornationals, where two-thirds of the field was in the .40s, 5.49s didn’t get you very far. In last-shot qualifying, two pair after A/Fuel driver Jasmine Salinas miraculously survived a horrifying over-the-wall 250-mph tumble, Whiteley shook and shut off, settling for sixth on the nine-car grid.

“It wasn’t that the car overpowered the track,” she said. “It was a weak shake, actually – the track was better than it had been all weekend, and the tires really grabbed. Plus, for some reason, the clutch didn’t wear evenly that time – it just wore on the inside. We still don’t know why.”

Prepping for a first-round showdown with Bob McCosh, whom Whiteley barely beat in the Belle Rose final and narrowly lost to last week here at the regional, the YNot Racing/J&A Service team realized that the rear tires had grown two inches in circumference, effectively changing the rear-end ratio and totally throwing off their combination. “We didn’t notice it until right before we went to the lanes,” she said. “And at that point, you really can’t just throw a brand-new set on there, can you?”

Stuck with the old tires and facing, for once, a faster-qualified car, crew chief Mike Strasburg had to make his best guess on the tuneup. He wasn’t far off. Whiteley left on McCosh and sped to a 5.52 at 269.40 mph – top speed of the entire round – but he tracked her down with a 5.49/268, crossing the stripe first by just 1/50th of a second.

“It’s frustrating,” said Whiteley, who has now raced McCosh at every race this year. “When the guys got down to the top end to pick me up, Mike told me, ‘The car’s not responding to anything I’m doing.’ We really haven’t struggled like this in a long time. I mean, 5.52 is all it would run.”

PRO MOD – GAINESVILLE 2021

Down to his last shot to get in, two-time NHRA world champion Jim Whiteley deftly guided his new ’69 Camaro down Gainesville Raceway’s treacherous left lane and into the Gatornationals Pro Mod field under the lights Saturday night. Minutes later, others wouldn’t fare so well: Whiteley’s crew chief, 2019-20 NHRA world champ Stevie Jackson, failed to qualify by two-thousandths of a second, and Brandon Pesz had it much worse, veering across the track at 200+ mph and careening into Dustin Nesloney in a fiery crash that destroyed both cars.

Under pressure, Whiteley drove his J&A/YNot Racing team into eliminations at the first race of the 2021 NHRA season with a 5.826 at 246.17 mph. He barely made it, 16th in the 16-car qualified field and just ahead of “Stevie Fast’s” indistinguishable 5.828/246.84. But had Whiteley gone the distance from the bump, it wouldn’t have been unprecedented – for him. The former Top Alcohol Dragster champ won Pro Mod at Houston five years ago from the No. 18 spot, slipping into the field as an alternate for Sidnei Frigo, who survived a horrifying high-speed qualifying crash that ended upside-down in a muddy ditch.

At Gainesville, Whiteley motored to a competitive 5.88 at 243 mph on his first qualifying attempt and picked up to a quicker and faster but ultimately disappointing 5.87/243 Saturday morning that left him just outside the field. The sun was down and darkness had long set in when he came through with the 5.82, then looked on helplessly as others pushed it to the limit – and, in Pesz’s case, over the limit – trying in vain to bump him out.

Race day ended early Sunday morning when Whiteley, victimized by his own intensity, disqualified himself as he never had before. He staged first, and, when it was time to leave, reacted to a corner of the Tree that had nothing to do with him: opponent Justin Bond’s staged light. When it came on, Whiteley took off. Bond, who’d qualified No. 1 with a national record 5.638, cruised unopposed to a 5.72 win, and one pair later eventual winner Jose Gonzalez swiped his record with a new all-time best of 5.621.

TAFC – GAINESVILLE REGIONAL 2021

In a scene eerily reminiscent of the 2019 Gainesville regional opener, where, shockingly, Annie Whiteley didn’t qualify, she found herself on the wrong side of the bump spot once again as time wound down. Eleventh of 11 potential qualifiers two years ago, she stood ninth of nine this time – the only driver not in the field – when Top Alcohol Funny Car was called to the lanes for last-shot qualifying.

With everything on the line, Whiteley’s YNot/J&A Service Camaro shook the tires and kicked itself sideways for an instant right before the 1-2 shift, but she deftly short-shifted to save the run and charged through the back half to a 5.61 at 267 mph to easily make the cut. “You think you’re good, you’re definitely gonna make it, everything’s fine, and all of a sudden it’s, ‘Oh boy,’ that caught me off guard,” Whiteley said. “I had to drive my ass off. When the car’s moving around that much, it feels like you’re running a 5.30-something and then they tell you it was a 5.60.”

Lined up in the inverse order of their incoming qualifying position, every driver in line behind Whiteley stared down the prospect of a disastrous DNQ but got into the field, too – first Whiteley with the 5.61 that bumped out DJ Cox, then Cox with a 5.44 that erased upstart Rob Pfeister, then Pfeister with a 5.91 that squeaked in ahead of Kris Hool, and finally Hool with a 5.47 that knocked Pfeister back out of the program.

“In a deal like that, you just try not to put everything on your shoulders,” Whiteley said. “You try not to think too much about anything – there’s nothing you can do anyway. Everybody’s telling you, ‘Last shot here, gotta get it in the show,’ but you have to just ignore the pressure and do your thing. When the car’s not going down the track, my guys are pretty good at figuring out why – I knew they’d know what to do.”

They did, but instead of parlaying last-shot heroics into victory, as the team did here at the 2017 Gatornationals, or throwing down the fastest run in Top Alcohol Funny Car history (276.18 mph), as they did last year, her stay in eliminations was short. Returning veteran Bob McCosh, who narrowly lost to Whiteley last week in the Belle Rose final, chose this moment to lay down the quickest, fastest run of his new career – an outstanding 5.44 at 269.83 mph, top speed of the meet to that point and ultimately second only to his subsequent 270.00.

Leaving first and running a 5.54 typically is more than enough to win a round – especially in regional competition and particularly in the first round – but not this time. “That was the smoothest run we made all weekend,” Whiteley said of an otherwise fine 5.54/268 that left her a car-length short in the lights. “It felt good, but I guess that time it wasn’t good enough.”

With everything on the line, Whiteley’s YNot/J&A Service Camaro shook the tires and kicked itself sideways for an instant right before the 1-2 shift, but she deftly short-shifted to save the run and charged through the back half to a 5.61 at 267 mph to easily make the cut. “You think you’re good, you’re definitely gonna make it, everything’s fine, and all of a sudden it’s, ‘Oh boy,’ that caught me off guard,” Whiteley said. “I had to drive my ass off. When the car’s moving around that much, it feels like you’re running a 5.30-something and then they tell you it was a 5.60.”

Lined up in the inverse order of their incoming qualifying position, every driver in line behind Whiteley stared down the prospect of a disastrous DNQ but got into the field, too – first Whiteley with the 5.61 that bumped out DJ Cox, then Cox with a 5.44 that erased upstart Rob Pfeister, then Pfeister with a 5.91 that squeaked in ahead of Kris Hool, and finally Hool with a 5.47 that knocked Pfeister back out of the program.

“In a deal like that, you just try not to put everything on your shoulders,” Whiteley said. “You try not to think too much about anything – there’s nothing you can do anyway. Everybody’s telling you, ‘Last shot here, gotta get it in the show,’ but you have to just ignore the pressure and do your thing. When the car’s not going down the track, my guys are pretty good at figuring out why – I knew they’d know what to do.”

They did, but instead of parlaying last-shot heroics into victory, as the team did here at the 2017 Gatornationals, or throwing down the fastest run in Top Alcohol Funny Car history (276.18 mph), as they did last year, her stay in eliminations was short. Returning veteran Bob McCosh, who narrowly lost to Whiteley last week in the Belle Rose final, chose this moment to lay down the quickest, fastest run of his new career – an outstanding 5.44 at 269.83 mph, top speed of the meet to that point and ultimately second only to his subsequent 270.00.

Leaving first and running a 5.54 typically is more than enough to win a round – especially in regional competition and particularly in the first round – but not this time. “That was the smoothest run we made all weekend,” Whiteley said of an otherwise fine 5.54/268 that left her a car-length short in the lights. “It felt good, but I guess that time it wasn’t good enough.”

In a scene eerily reminiscent of the 2019 Gainesville regional opener, where, shockingly, Annie Whiteley didn’t qualify, she found herself on the wrong side of the bump spot once again as time wound down. Eleventh of 11 potential qualifiers two years ago, she stood ninth of nine this time – the only driver not in the field – when Top Alcohol Funny Car was called to the lanes for last-shot qualifying.

With everything on the line, Whiteley’s YNot/J&A Service Camaro shook the tires and kicked itself sideways for an instant right before the 1-2 shift, but she deftly short-shifted to save the run and charged through the back half to a 5.61 at 267 mph to easily make the cut. “You think you’re good, you’re definitely gonna make it, everything’s fine, and all of a sudden it’s, ‘Oh boy,’ that caught me off guard,” Whiteley said. “I had to drive my ass off. When the car’s moving around that much, it feels like you’re running a 5.30-something and then they tell you it was a 5.60.”

Lined up in the inverse order of their incoming qualifying position, every driver in line behind Whiteley stared down the prospect of a disastrous DNQ but got into the field, too – first Whiteley with the 5.61 that bumped out DJ Cox, then Cox with a 5.44 that erased upstart Rob Pfeister, then Pfeister with a 5.91 that squeaked in ahead of Kris Hool, and finally Hool with a 5.47 that knocked Pfeister back out of the program.

“In a deal like that, you just try not to put it all on your shoulders,” Whiteley said. “You try not to think too much about anything – there’s nothing you can do anyway. Everybody’s telling you, ‘Last shot here, gotta get it in the show,’ but you have to just ignore the pressure and do your thing. When the car’s not going down the track, my guys are pretty good at figuring out why – I knew they’d know what to do.”

They did, but instead of parlaying last-shot heroics into victory, as the team did here at the 2017 Gatornationals, or throwing down the fastest run in Top Alcohol Funny Car history (276.18 mph), as they did last year, her stay in eliminations was short. Returning veteran Bob McCosh, who narrowly lost to Whiteley last week in the Belle Rose final, chose this moment to lay down the quickest, fastest run of his new career – an outstanding 5.44 at 269.83 mph, top speed of the meet to that point and ultimately second only to his subsequent 270.00.

Leaving first and running a 5.54 typically is more than enough to win a round – especially in regional competition and particularly in the first round – but not this time. “That was the smoothest run we made all weekend,” Whiteley said of an otherwise fine 5.54/268 that left her a car-length short in the lights. “It felt good, but I guess that time it wasn’t good enough.”

TAFC – BELLE ROSE 2021

Like Manzo at Maple Grove, Glidden at Indy, or Garlits at Ontario, Annie Whiteley doesn’t lose at Belle Rose. But instead of being virtually unbeatable at her favorite track like those all-time greats are at theirs, Whiteley is literally unbeatable at in Belle Rose. She’s never lost there – five career starts, five wins, and a 15-0 lifetime win-loss record.

Whiteley, who topped Bob McCosh in a wild final last year, got him again this time, again in easily the best side-by-side matchup of the entire weekend, 5.53 to 5.58. “I never think about anything or worry about anything no matter what anyone in front of me does,” she said. “Half the time you can’t even hear what the announcer’s saying anyway, but that time I could: ‘I don’t know how many times in a row she’s won this thing,’ he said. ‘It’s got to be at least three – probably four.’ And I’m sitting there, strapped in, thinking, ‘You know, I don’t think it’s four in a row – I think it’s five. No, I’m pretty sure it is five…’ And then I’m like, ‘What are you doing? Quit thinking about that and drive the car.’ And I did.”

Whiteley outran everybody in qualifying, earning a first-round bye, outdueled Kris Hool in the semi’s, and squashed McCosh in the final – just like last year. En route to her 18th regional/divisional victory and 24th career win overall, she started No. 1 by almost two-tenths of a second (5.562) and set top speed of the meet (266.70 mph). Neither mark would last the weekend; both ultimately would be bettered, repeatedly – by her.

In the first pair of the first round of the first Top Alcohol Funny Car race of 2021, Whiteley’s safe, straight-down-the-groove 5.64/263 gave her have lane choice over Hool in the semi’s. McCosh, who’d turned back veteran Mark Billington in the opening stanza with 5.56/264, tying her for low E.T. to that point, produced a consistent 5.57 in the semi’s to show he’d be a handful in the final. He was, but minutes later in the other semi, Whiteley reclaimed low E.T. in a 5.535/268.03 (top speed) decision over Hool.

Then, in a fitting final between the Nos. 1 and 2 qualifiers, Whiteley and McCosh posted their quickest reaction times of the entire event. “I’ve never really cut good lights at this place,” she said. “I don’t know if it’s because they have the car slowed down so much early that it hurts my reaction times or what, but I can’t cut a light here no matter what I do.”

Whiteley didn’t trail McCosh by much off the line and steadily pulled away downtrack, resetting low E.T. one last time in a 5.531/267 to 5.58/262 win. It propelled her to an early lead in the national standings and stood as the YNot/J&A Racing team’s first victory in exactly a year, since she got the best of McCosh here in the wild 2020 final, when he pushed it to the edge in an all-out quest for his first NHRA win. “I still have no idea why we always win here,” she said. “Jim and I were looking at each other this weekend, saying it’s got to end sooner or later. But it wasn’t this year.”

TAFC – LAS VEGAS REGIONAL 2020

At The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the final race of a trying and largely unfulfilling season, Annie Whiteley wrapped up 2020 with a dispiriting first-round loss to outgoing Top Alcohol Funny Car world champ Sean Bellemeur.

The four-time TAFC Regional Champion (2013-14 in the West, and 2018-19 in the Central) never made a representative run all weekend. Whiteley, a many-time Vegas winner, posted an OK .974 60-foot time in Friday afternoon’s opening qualifying session but had to lift and slowed to a 12.47 at 66 mph, eighth in an eight-car field and the only one not to get to the finish line under power. Under the lights in Q2, she made it further downtrack but ultimately had to back off the throttle again and coasted to an 8.77 at 120 mph to enter eliminations on the bump for the first time in years.

Whiteley’s weekend came to an unceremonious, abrupt end not far off the line in the first round. Bellemeur, who had more than a tenth on the field going into last-shot qualifying with a 5.48/268 and ran in .40s in the only other qualifying session (combined .40s for all other teams: 0), claimed a lopsided victory. The 2019 series champ was long gone with a with a winning 5.50/269 in the left lane while over in the right, Whiteley’s suddenly stubborn, uncooperative machine refused to respond to crew chief Mike Strasburg’s between-rounds adjustments. Again she was forced to lift almost immediately, slowing to a 9.23 at 106 mph and winding up an up-and-down season on a decidedly down note.

“Too much wheel speed,” Whiteley said. “It’s been that kind of year.” She closes the door on 2020 second in the Central Region standings behind returning veteran Bob McCosh and sixth the national rankings. It wasn’t the best season the YNot/J&A Service team ever had, but in the end Whiteley qualified No. 1 four times (all in the first half of the year), racked up three final-round appearances and a win (at the 2020 opener in Belle Rose, where she’s still never lost), and finished with a 12-12 win-loss record, including a respectable 10-9 mark in NHRA competition.

PRO MOD – LAS VEGAS 2020

At the Dodge NHRA Finals, the end of the line for Pro Mod drivers every year but this year for all the pros, too, Jim Whiteley lined up against theoretically the toughest possible opponent and definitely the last one he wanted to see lose, YNot teammate Steve Jackson. But with absolutely everything on the line for defending NHRA Pro Mod champion “Stevie Fast,” locked in a down-to-the-wire battle with incoming points leader Brandon Snider for the 2020 championship, Jackson is exactly who Whiteley got first round.

To intensify what already would’ve been an epic showdown, Whiteley, the No. 8 qualifier (5.836) in a short but stout field, and Jackson, surprisingly just fifth in the order with a 5.788, had a couple friendly side bets going: $100 for the best reaction time head-to-head, and another $50 for supertuner “Philbilly” Shuler if Whiteley’s car got into the .70s. In the end, everybody won.

Whiteley and Jackson staged almost simultaneously, the Tree flashed, both were way more than on time, and “Stevie Fast,” who would have lost it all with anything slower than a 5.773, stayed alive with a 5.770. Staring down the most pressure imaginable, he came through with a clutch .011 reaction time, but Whiteley outdid him with a near-perfect .005 only to be edged out in the lights by four-thousandths of a second, 5.770 to 5.780. Anything less than a .015 reaction time, and “Stevie Fast” would have been done. “I wasn’t messing around up there,” he said.

“Neither was I,” joked Whiteley, who matched Jackson stride for stride and shift for shift the length of the quarter-mile: 2.53-2.53 to the 330-foot mark, 3.79 at 196 mph to 3.79 at 196 mph at the eighth-mile, and 4.86 to 4.86 to 1000 feet. At the top end, the superior aerodynamic characteristics of Jackson’s late-model Camaro trumped the early ’60s “aero package” of Whiteley’s split-window Corvette. With equal power under the hood, Whiteley could only look on helplessly as Jackson crept incrementally ahead in the final quarter of the course, 248.48 mph to 246.71.

From there, Jackson got the best of a winner-take-all second-round match with Snider and went on to the event win, his third this season, and a second consecutive NHRA championship. Whiteley locked up his first Top 10 finish as a Pro Mod driver and first since he retired from Top Alcohol Dragster with seven in a row, from 2007-13 – and not just Top 10s. All seven were Top 5s, including back-to-back championships in 2012-13. “Next year, that car’s gonna run better than ever,” Jackson said of Whiteley’s’ old-school hot rod. “You just wait.”

PSM – LAS VEGAS 2020

Cory Reed never really got going at the 2020 NHRA Finals, which, for the first time since way before he was born, wasn’t at Pomona. With California locked down by the state’s draconian COVID-19 restrictions, Las Vegas, long the penultimate event of the season, became the Finals.

It was a disappointment by any name and over early for Reed, who, until now, hadn’t lost in the first round in his abbreviated 2020 campaign. The second-generation racer barely made it off the line in the opening qualifying session and rolled to a stop not far downtrack while in the other lane teammate Joey Gladstone, who’d made the first final-round appearance of his young career two weeks earlier in Dallas, charged to a 6.89 at 195.56 mph to assume an early qualifying lead he didn’t relinquish until the final pair went down the track.

“My front brake was locked up,” Reed said. “I could tell right away that something was wasn’t right, but I’ve never had this exact thing happen before, so I didn’t know what it was.” Stuck in the first pair in the only remaining session because teams run in the inverse order of how they performed in the first go, he stumbled to a 7.31 at 190 mph but at least got a time up on the board. Meanwhile, Gladstone backed up the 6.89/195 with a mirror-image 6.90/195 and headed into eliminations in the No. 3 spot, a career best that had him qualified higher than championship contenders Scotty Pollacheck and Andrew Hines.

Gladstone advanced to the quarterfinals, but Reed, 16th in a 16-bike show, had no chance in the first round opposite top qualifier Eddie Krawiec, who paced the field with a 6.81 and took him out with a 6.90/196. “It wasn’t our day,” Reed said. “It’s cool – we’ve got better things ahead, and I’m really looking forward to next year. But that front brake held me back all weekend.”

TAFC – LAS VEGAS NATIONAL 2020

With the season winding down, Annie Whiteley dove into the first of back-to-back events at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, her favorite track on tour with the possible exception of Louisiana’s No Problem Raceway, where she’s never been beaten. “We couldn’t get the car to run good early here,” she said. “Our 330-foot times were off all weekend.”

Things got off to a promising start Friday afternoon when the YNot/J&A Service team cruised to a competitive 5.54 at 267.43 mph opposite outgoing world champ Sean Bellemeur. She was quicker and faster that evening but ultimately dropped a few spots in the order when others drivers dropped into the 5.40s and entered eliminations 6th on the final qualifying grid with a 5.53/267.96 (top speed of the meet to that point).

“All our E.T. was lost early,” Whiteley said, and the numbers bore it out: both 60-foot times were 2.52s. “Five guys are in the .930s [to the 60-foot mark], and we’re only in the .970s? [Crew chief] Mike [Strasburg] was shocked that the car only picked up a hundredth [of a second].” In the first round, an otherwise forgettable weekend was highlighted by a significant milestone: her 100th career round-win in national event competition. Whiteley, runner-up here in her 2012 rookie season, train-lengthed friend Steve Macklyn, at the wheel of one of her old cars, a ProStart-built ’13 Mustang, for the landmark win, 5.57/266 to 5.91/238.

The wheels came off in the quarterfinals when a perplexing electrical glitch intermittently cut the power in high gear. “It felt like my head was going to hit the dashboard twice after the 2-3 gear change,” Whiteley said. “The car stopped and then took back off, stopped and took off. It almost felt like when the rear end broke [in the first qualifying session last week] at Houston.” It didn’t matter – there was no winning that round anyway when Bellemeur unloaded low e.t. of the entire event, a 5.45 at 266 mph.

TAFC – HOUSTON 2020

For Annie Whiteley’s YNot/J&A Racing Top Alcohol Funny Car team, the rescheduled “Spring” Nationals started poorly and only went downhill from there. Contested a week after the Fall Nationals because 2020, the first qualifying session was a disaster. A shelled rear end ignited a chain-reaction of mechanical chaos, starting with a dropped valve and ending when the freewheeling, over-revved engine eventually couldn’t take any more.

“I don’t know about this place,” Whiteley said of Houston Raceway, which has always been kind to husband Jim Whiteley but never to her. “We’ve never had any luck here. I blew a tire one year and it just about ripped the whole back end off the car. I ran the final round in the rain one time, and it wasn’t the first time that weekend I’d gone down the track in the rain on the windshield.”

The already abbreviated 2020 COVID-19 two-shot qualifying format was compromised further by biblical rains Friday afternoon that shut everything down for five hours, and, with half the drivetrain from the fuel pump to the wheelie bar trashed in the opening session, Saturday morning represented Whiteley’s only other opportunity to get a spot in the top half of the field.

The conditions were ideal: 59 degrees with a track temp of 78 degrees. All four cars in front of her ran 5.40s, and Whiteley managed a safe but still fast 5.52 at nearly 269 mph for the No. 6 position in the 10-car field. Then, right when everything already wasn’t going right, the car wouldn’t start first round. “Things happen to us at Houston that don’t happen anywhere else,” she said. “We’ve had a switch go bad and shut the car off. We blew the transmission up here one time, and that’s the only time that’s ever happened anywhere. Whenever we get here, it’s always something.”

Just as first-round foe Jay Payne was halfway back from the burnout, Whiteley’s engine came to life and she rushed through an abbreviated burnout to keep from interrupting his notoriously fast routine. In Payne’s 900th round of national event competition – the most in alcohol racing history and 22% more than the second-most experienced driver, Frank Manzo – what could have been a classic battle of seasoned veterans was over almost immediately. Whiteley’s car practically jumped off the ground, leaving her no choice but to click it and granting Payne safe passage to the quarterfinals with an ordinary 5.57/265. “I don’t know what it is about Houston,” she said. “Sometimes I think God just doesn’t want us to come back here anymore.”

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