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POMONA, Calif. --
Scelzi powered his Mopar/Oakley Dodge Stratus to a 4.696 second run at 329.18 mph at the Auto Club NHRA Finals to move in front of title challengers John Force, who qualified eighth in his Castrol GTX Start Up Ford Mustang, and Ron Capps, who was ninth in his Brut Stratus. "Yesterday I was nervous because if you go for the throat in the first session and smoke the tires then it seems like you're playing catch-up the rest of the weekend," Scelzi said. "But we ran a safe 4.77 and that allowed Zippy (crew chief Mike Neff) to go for it tonight. That was a good run and it's important to be ahead of John and Ron just for the message it sends them." Scelzi leads Capps by two points and Force is 28 points back in third place in the deciding race for the $400,000 POWERade world championship in the 7,000 horsepower category. "I've been on edge since Indy, a lot more than I ever was with my other championship runs, because we're up against the 13-time champ and it's been such a battle," Scelzi said. "But today I was walking up the staging lanes and I saw Frank Hawley and he told me, 'Scelzi, I don't need to tell you how to drive. All you need to do is remember why you started drag racing in the first place, and that was to have fun.' Ever since then my mind has been right and we're just going to try our best and enjoy the ride. Whatever happens, happens."
Bernstein was quickest in Top Fuel, as he drove his Budweiser/Lucas Oil dragster to a 4.491 at 325.45. "It looks like the other top teams were really shooting for it tonight, especially after they saw us go out there and run a 4.49," Bernstein said. "It either got too cold out or they just pushed it a little too hard because no one was able to pass us. That kind of surprised me." If Bernstein holds on it would be his third No. 1 qualifying effort of a season that has had its share of ups and downs for the second-generation driver. "Our season hasn't been the best," he said. "It would mean everything for our guys if we could head into the offseason and get ready for next year with a win here. We've performed well here in the past and Tim (Richards, crew chief) has a good track record here."
"It was a good lap, but I felt that given the conditions, somebody should have been able to go quicker than that," Line said. "We thought we could go 6.65 but for the most part the run felt pretty good. I doubt that number will hold up. If we get conditions tomorrow as good as they were today, then there are a lot of cars that will be able to pick it up." The parachutes on Line's car failed to deploy after the run and his car plunged into the sand traps at the end of the track. "We have some work to do on the car," said Line, who was not injured in the incident. "The front end is a little torn up and the engine probably has to come out, but we'll make it. It could be worse. By the time I realized the parachutes didn't open I was running out of race track. I tried to slow down and keep it straight, but we made it exciting for a few seconds."
"I got to the other end and they said I'd run a 7-flat," Smith said. "I was like, 'Wow, that's really cool.' Then they said it was a seven-flat with a zero. I was thinking if I'd just tucked a little tighter I'd be in the six-second club right now. I guess we'll have to do it tomorrow. The national record (6.968 seconds, Andrew Hines, Sonoma, Calif., July 2005) is probably just out of reach but I believe we can run a 6.98 or 6.99 in the morning session." Qualifying continues Saturday with sessions at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
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