Santa Ana, CA (April 8, 2019)
A wet start to the weekend on Friday threw a wrench in the racing schedule, but the NMRA and NMCA staff worked hard to get the track ready as quickly as possible to maximize the racing at the 11th Annual Scoggin-Dickey Parts Center NMRA/NMCA All-Star Nationals presented by MAHLE Motorsport. Atlanta Dragway in Commerce, Georgia, hosted the second stop on the NMRA Keystone Automotive Ford Nationals tour with traditional southern hospitality and the race was able to be run to completion. Despite the unavoidable delays, winners were crowned, records were set, and new parts wish lists were made as another exciting chapter of NMRA drag racing was officially added to the history books.
Phil Hines captured the coveted number-one qualifying position in the NMRA and NMCA combo VP Racing Fuels/Mickey Thompson Street Outlaw class, besting the bunch with a 4.373 at 164.49 mph pass out of his ProCharged ’01 Mustang. The final came down to the number-six qualifier, Rob Goss, and the number-two qualifier, Vince Palazzolo, and neither left anything on the table when they left the line. Ultimately, Rob Goss was the quicker contender—both with his 0.008-second reaction time and with his ’09 Dodge Challenger’s 4.38-second eighth-mile trip—to take down Palazzolo’s valiant 4.39 effort in his ’09 Mustang and take a trip to the Aerospace Components Winner’s Circle.
NMCA racer Jessie Coulter topped the qualifying list in the NMRA/NMCA Edelbrock Renegade/Xtreme Street combined class. Coulter cruised through the rounds all day long until he reached the finals, where Tim Knieriem had also earned a chance to run for all the marbles behind the wheel of his ’95 Mustang. After a small Ford-vs-Chevrolet staging battle, the green light lit and Knieriem left the line in a big wheel stand. Coulter used the opportunity to drive around him, and picked up the win, going 4.73 while Knieriem stopped the clocks in 4.87-seconds instead.
In ProCharger Modified Street, it was Bob Cook and his ’90 Mustang GT that claimed the top spot after qualifying had been finalized thanks to a 7.789 at 178.68 mph blast. Cook went out in the semi-finals, but Brad Schehr and Martin Connelley were still in the game. The number two and number four qualified drivers, respectively, met up in round three for the finals, and it was a battle of the ‘80s-era Mustangs. A close match down the track ended with Schehr edging out Connelley at the stripe, 7.84 over 7.89, picking up his second win in a row for the year, and his second trip to the Aerospace Components Winner’s Circle.
Qualifying in Advanced Fuel Dynamics Limited Street saw last season’s champion, Michael Ciborowski, show that he’s still the man to beat as an 8.736 at 153.89 mph proved his ’14 Mustang was the quickest of the class in qualifying. Eliminations, however, wound down to Bill Putnam in his ’99 Mustang who qualified fourth, and Chad Wendel in his ’07 Mustang GT who qualified fifth. Wendel had the holeshot, but Putnam had the power and drove around him to finish out the weekend with a winning 8.905 time slip in his hand. |