Wed, 24 Nov 2004, 11:35 AM

Hail To The Chief
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By Bob Frey
Photo copyright 2004 Auto Imagery, Inc.
Or At Least the “Sarge"
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Before I get onto this week’s column I wanted to remind
everyone that the on-line items for the
Darrell
Russell auction are now up for bids. You can go to
nhra.com and see the story and check out all of the items and then
make your bid. There are some really nice items and, of course, all of the
proceeds go right to Julie, Darrell’s wife. If you’re a drag racing fan, a
NASCAR fan, or a sports fan in general there’s bound to be something for you,
so check it out and bid if you want to, and as they say in the auction
business, good luck.

Schumacher lights up the sky.
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About this time last year I was saying that
Larry Dixon and his
“Miller Lite” team had one of the best
Top Fuel cars that I had seen in quite some time, and they did. Well, for one
year, the
“U.S. Army” car is about
as good as any that I’ve seen and it will be interesting to see how
Tony Schumacher and his group do next
year. Winning an NHRA
POWERade championship
is one thing, repeating as champion is another story altogether.
Did you know that in the entire history of NHRA, there have only
been six drivers who won back-to-back Top Fuel championships?
Larry Dixon,
Gary Scelzi, Scott Kalitta, Joe Amato,
Don Garlits and
Bennie
Osborne are the only guys to win the TF title in consecutive years and
that’s some pretty good company to be in, if you can get in that company. So
good luck to Tony in 2005. Of course you know that Tony’s ten wins this year
was a single season record and if you’re a regular reader of this column you
probably know that his sixty round wins was one round shy of the single season
mark for a year.
Kenny Bernstein set
the record in his 2001 championship season when he won sixty one rounds, but
did you know that Kenny did it in
twenty four races, and not twenty three like Tony did? 2001 was the year that
NHRA celebrated its 50
th anniversary with a special race in Pomona
in the summer and would you believe that at that extra race Kenny won exactly
one round. What are the odds, huh?

The Schumacher's with championship check.
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Tony’s domination this year was pretty thorough since he won
the first race and the last race of the season and eight more in between, and
all along he was only out of first place for two races.
Did you know that the first time he wasn’t in the lead was
after the Topeka race, the one that
Brandon
Bernstein won? Tony was in second place by one round after that race and he
made that up when he went to the final round at the next race in Columbus.
About the only time that you could say he went into a slump was at the two
races after that, Englishtown and St. Louis.
Did you know that those two races represented the only time
all year where Tony failed to make it to at least the semi-final round at
consecutive events. Now that’s amazing. His opening round loss to
Rit Pustari in Englishtown was one of
the big upsets of the year while his loss to
Doug Herbert in St. Louis dropped him back into second place for
the second and last time all season. After those little miscues Tony went on a
rampage, making it to the final round at eight of the final eleven races of the
season. Like I said, pretty impressive and pretty dominating in a Top fuel car.
Over those eleven races Tony ran up an amazing 1,065 points to put the title
out of reach.

Alan Johnson
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One of the real keys to any team’s title chances is
consistency and Tony certainly had that this year. Not only did he make it to
the final round thirteen times, but more importantly, he only lost in the first
round twice, once to Pustari and the other time to Scott Kalitta. That, in
itself, may be the real reason why he won the championship this year. Consider
this.
Did you know that his
closest competitors for the title,
Doug
Kalitta, Brandon Bernstein and Scott Kalitta lost a combined fourteen times
in the opening round? Doug and Brandon each dropped five while Scott lost four
times in round one. Do the math and you’ll see that that will slow your title
chase down in a hurry. By the way, Larry Dixon was the best at never losing in
round one in the Top fuel class and that’s why he won two titles.
Did you know that in his
championship year of 2003 Larry only lost once in the first round? And
did you know that he once went
thirty consecutive races without dropping an opening round match? Thirty,
that’s the best in the history of Top Fuel and that’s one reason why that team
was so tough to beat for two years.
Tony’s consistency started with qualifying and ran right
through the entire weekend. Although he wasn’t normally the top qualifier, he
was always near the top. Did you know
that he qualified in the top four spots at fifteen of the races this year and
he was in the top half of the field at twenty one of the twenty three races in
2004? And the only two times that he didn’t make it into the top half he still
went to the final round. He was the ninth qualifier at the first Las Vegas race
and he won that race and he was tenth at Denver and he went to the final round
there. The Las Vegas race is significant because, other than Tony, Larry Dixon
was the only TF driver to win from the bottom half of the field all season
long. So you see, it didn’t seem to matter where he qualified, Tony Schumacher
could win from any place on the ladder and that’s the sign of a true champion
and a really good team. One other factor that contributed to his great season
is the fact that Tony beat all the cars that he was supposed to beat, and by
that I mean that he very rarely was an upset victim. Case in point, other than
that one round loss to Rit Pustari, Tony only lost one other time all year long
to a team that finished out of the top ten. Once. He was a combined twenty
three and two against teams that finished eleventh or worse this year and
that’s a whole pile of points in the win column. A whole pile.

The U.S. Army top Fuel team.
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Tony and his father, Don, will be the first to tell you that
they can’t win anything by themselves and that this championship was truly a
team effort. Throughout the season, crew chief
Alan Johnson did everything right and everyone knew that he could
make a lot of power, but then so could most of the top teams. Alan’s secret was
the fact that he could tame the car down when he needed to and when that didn’t
help, like in the final round at Pomona, Tony could save the run and the team
with his driving. Of course Alan and Tony were helped by a very good crew, a
crew that made very few mistakes all season long. Included in that group (in
alphabetical order) is the fuel specialist
Joe
Arena of Galveston, Texas, a nine year veteran in the sport.
Randy Cargo from Indianapolis handles
the wheels and tires and provides general mechanical assistance.
Kevin Eckstein of Tiro, Ohio, is the
team’s bottom end specialist while
Brian
Husen of Grand Rapids, Michigan, is the shop supervisor and the on-the-road
manager.
Jason McCulloch, who has
been around the sport all of his life, thanks to his dad Ed, is the assistant
crew chief on the car, and
Lanny
Miglizzi is a consultant to the team who specializes in track conditions
and clutch application. Also on the crew of the year are
Nick Peters, the short block specialist,
Tom Turkal, an eight year veteran and the cylinder head specialist
and
Rodger Whitworth, a native of
Wichita Falls, Texas, who is the clutch specialist. Together, these guys and
all of the other people behind the scenes for the U.S. Army car made this the
2004 NHRA POWERade championship team.
With rumors of several new cars coming out for 2005, the
persistent rumors of a John Force
Top Fuel car and a ride for Melanie
Troxel, and with a new car from Houston, Texas that will have a famous
sportsman racer driving, 2005 could be even more competitive than this past
season. You could also see the union of two current teams and a major crew
chief announcement in the next few days along with the return of one of the
real veterans of the sport and all of that will serve to make the defense of
his championship a very tough chore for the “Sarge,” Tony Schumacher. But fear
not, Don, Tony, Alan Johnson and the rest of that team will look forward to the
challenge and there’s nothing to make me believe that they won’t be the team to
beat at the start of the ’05 season. Congratulations and good luck to the “U.S.
Army” Top Fuel team…the 2004 POWERade champions.


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