Wed, 22 Dec 2010, 11:02 PM

Just A Few Notes
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By Bob Frey
Photo copyright 2010 Auto Imagery, Inc.
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Buddy Perkinson
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As usually happens at this time of the year there are a lot
of rumors flying around about who is doing what and with whom next year. Also,
as usually happens at this time of the year, there probably won't be a lot of
official news until after the holidays. We do know one thing, thanks to a
release just issued yesterday, and that is that
Buddy Perkinson will be driving for
Jim Cunningham and his
Ford team
next year. Perkinson, who is nineteen years old and who competed at a few races
in Competition Eliminator this year, will drive one of the Fords that will be
built by
Jerry Haas and, as of this
time, tuned by
Bob Glidden..Still in
the Pro Stock area I expect a release any day now on what
Johnny Gray will be doing in 2011. Speculation is, and I think
rightfully so, that he will be moving to a fuel Funny Car next year leaving his
son, Shane, to run out of the team's Pro Stock shop. I spoke with Johnny the
other day and he mentioned that they are going full speed ahead with their Pro
Stock operation with Shane and that they would entertain the idea of building
and leasing or selling engines to some other Pro Stock teams. When I asked
Johnny about the Funny Car scenario he simply said, "We should have an
announcement before too long about what I'm doing." He didn't offer any more
than that and I didn't press him for any more information....I have heard that
Art Chrisman is having some health
problems and I hope you'll all keep him and his family in your prayers at this
special time of year. There is a new book out called, "The Chrisman Legacy,"
and it centers on Art,
Lloyd and Jack
Chrisman and a lot of the things that the Chrisman family has done over the
years. It's a limited edition book (I've already ordered my special edition copy) and I
think it would make a great addition to anyone's collection. You can find
out more about the book and order it by going to
www.thechrismanlegacy.com. Thanks
to the author,
Tom Madigan, and
Ed Justice Jr., who published it, for
this special edition. And get well, Art.
Since we are heading into the end of the year I thought
I'd take a moment to mention some of the more memorable runs, races or moments
from the 2010 season. I know that
National DRAGSTER will have their
year-in-review issue coming out very soon (if it's not already out) and they do
a great job picking highlights from the season. They're so good at it, in fact,
that every year when I read it they often mention runs that I had completely
forgotten about. Of course I'm sure I have some on my list that they don't have
and I guess that's what makes for a great bench-racing session. They also are
conducting an on-line voting for some of the top moments of the year. They're
calling it their
NHRA Fan Choice Awards
and I think it will be interesting to see who the winners are. I also know that
those nominations will get a lot of scrutiny, too. For example, in the "Driver
of the Year" category they have
Greg
Anderson, John Force, Matt Hagan, Shawn Langdon, Greg Stanfield and
LE Tonglet. It certainly isn't hard to
make a case for any of those drivers as the "Driver of the Year," but my first
question would be, where's
Larry Dixon?
In their synopsis for each driver
NHRA.com
mentions how many times guys were first off the line, what their average

Dixon vs. McClenathan in Reading final.
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reaction time was and things like that. And while all of that is good and must
be considered when picking the best driver of the year, I like to point out
what happens after the light goes green. Drivers like Larry and
Tony Schumacher, to name just two, but
two of the best, win a lot of races because they don't make mistakes, at least
not many of them, once they leave the starting line. I've watched enough races
over the course of the years to know that a driver can have a good reaction
time and then give it all back by messing up on the track. Driving it out of
the groove, not knowing when to "pedal" the car and letting the car get away
from you are mistakes that the great drivers don't make. Larry, Tony and others
fall into that category and I'd almost always have to have them in my "Driver
of the Year" voting. I know something like this is very subjective, and with a
limited number of spots open for the voting you can't put everyone on the
ballot, but in 2010 to leave Larry off the list is, to me at least, an
oversight. But then I guess that's what the off-season is for, to talk about
and debate these things. And if I want to have certain guys on a list I guess I
should have started my own. Who knows, maybe one of these years I will. By the way,
if I wanted to make an argument for Larry I would simply point to the final
round at
Maple Grove
this year. That was the tire-smoking, pedal-fest that he had with
Cory McClenathan, a race that Larry
won. I rest my case.

Dixon vs. Schumacher at Winternationals
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I should say right here that I do get asked by DRAGSTER to
contribute my selections to their year-in-review issue and I thank them for
that. I should also mention that Larry and Tony were both included in my "Best
of the Year" runs. Like the one they had at the Winternationals when they ran
identical numbers, 3.836 - 317.07 mph.
Did
you know that that was only the third time in Top Fuel history that two
drivers posted the exact same elapsed time and top speed? And stranger than that,
did you know that Tony has been
involved in two of them? He also had identical numbers in
Houston in 2009 when he raced
Morgan Lucas. Strange, but true....Tony
also gets special mention, from me at least, for his win at the second
Las Vegas event. Tony
qualified number one, set low elapsed time, recorded top speed and won the
event to move within striking distance of Larry going into
Pomona.
Did
you know that, in his career, Tony has swept fourteen events, but the

Schumacher vs. McClenathan in Topeka final.
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Vegas race this year was the first time that he did it since that same event in
2008? In fact, the Vegas win this year was the first time since 2008 that the
"Sarge" won a race after qualifying number one. Hard to believe, but true..Tony
also gets a nod from me for his win in
Topeka.
That's the one where he beat Cory on a holeshot in the final round and it was
just one of many displays of how the
Team
Schumacher cars raced each other in 2010..Some drivers, like Larry, Tony
and
Jack Beckman in the Funny Car
class, are not as concerned with their numbers on (or off) the starting line as
much as they are in what they do with their cars on the track and how many
times they turn on the win light. That "left first" stat or even the holeshot
numbers can be skewed based on how a driver stages and how the car reacts. But

Lagana vs Dixon in round two at Las Vegas 2.
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like I said before, give me a driver who makes no mistakes on the track and
I'll proudly give up being the one who left first every time....
Dominick Lagana's run to the final
round in Las Vegas has to get consideration as one of the best Top Fuel stories
of the year, especially when you consider who he beat to make the final round.
In case you forgot, it was
Clay Millican
in round one, Larry Dixon in round two and
Antron
Brown in round three. I haven't seen anything yet to indicate how many races
the brothers will be attending next year but I hope it's more than the eight
that they went to in 2010. That's a good team and a great family and they were
a nice addition to the Top Fuel class this year.

Hagan's 4.011 pass at Maple Grove
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There were also some great runs, moments, upsets and
surprises in the Funny Car class in 2010. Among them would have to be
Matt Hagan's 4.011 pass at
Maple Grove, or his four
qualifying runs at the Grove, the ones where he went 4.14, 4.01, 4.08 and 4.04.
Not bad, is it? Hagan had a great race in
Pennsylvania and he did everything but win
the event. Matt made the historic pass during qualifying and it stood as low
elapsed time of the event as well as the quickest Funny Car run of the season.
Did you know that only
Robert Hight's 4.005 in
Richmond in 2008 was
quicker than Matt's run in
Reading?
Even with that run Matt, as I said, didn't
win the race,
Cruz Pedregon

Pedregon vs. Hagan in the Reading final.
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did...In the "Comeback of the Year" department I put both John Force and Cruz
on my list. John just for the sheer determination to overcome the obstacles
that he faced, and Cruz because he had a very good year, or more correctly a good
second half of the year. Like I said in an earlier column, Cruz may have been
the only driver in a fuel class who hated to see the season come to an end..For
his part John had a "career year" in 2010. Sure he has had years with more wins
and with more final rounds but I doubt that he ever had a year that was as
emotional as this one was. To win the Winternationals and then go on and win
the championship was, literally, a dream come true for John and his team. Throw
in the fact that he won both
Pomona
races and the inaugural 4-wide event in
North
Carolina and it really couldn't get much better for

Ron Capps, John Force Ashley Force Hood and Matt Hagan
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John, could it? Oh yeah, he also got to race his daughter in the final round at
Indy, a round that Ashley won. Now that I think of it maybe it could have been
a little better for John, although if he has to lose, losing to Ashley would be
his first choice..Even though he didn't have a good year, and by his standards
that would be an understatement, Robert Hight did have a couple of shining
moments, and the numbers he put up would be considered a great year by most
drivers, but not Robert. Let's face it, when you're the defending series champ
you want to be competitive at every race, but we all know that's tough to do on
a regular basis. After all, there were even races where John wasn't
competitive. Nonetheless, Robert still won four races and that's better than
almost every other driver in the class. Plus he won three straight at
St. Louis,
Atlanta and
Topeka and that's very
impressive.
Did you know that
Robert was the only Funny Car driver to win three consecutive races in 2010? In
fact, only John and
Tim Wilkerson
won two straight, so that makes Robert's accomplishment look even better. Robert's

Hight vs. Arend in Topeka final.
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win in
Topeka
also fell into that "sweep" category, you know, where you set all of the
performance marks and win the race.
Did
you know that in his career Robert has swept three events, with
Dallas last year and
Denver
in 2005 being the other two? Still, as I mentioned, I'm sure Robert didn't
enjoy the season as much as he would have liked, but he'll be back with a vengeance
in 2011....Taking nothing away from Robert and his team, the fact that he didn't
repeat as champion shouldn't come as a real surprise.
Did you know that it's been since the 2001 and 2002 seasons
that we have had a driver win the Funny Car championship in consecutive years?
And how about this?
Mark Oswald won
the Funny Car championship in 1984 and then in 1985 he not only didn't repeat,
he didn't win a race, make a final round, qualify number one or make the top
ten in points. And I'm sure he's glad that I pointed that out. My point being
that it isn't easy to win the championship once let alone do it in back-to-back
years. It's only fair here to report that Mark did win almost sixty percent of
all his races in his career and that he was always considered one of the best
drivers in either fuel class.
Did you
know that Mark ran almost 500 rounds of fuel competition and only lost
ten times on a holeshot? Ten, in almost 500 rounds. I rest my case.

Diehl at Las Vegas 2.
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There were a lot of wild rides in 2010 in the fuel classes,
most of them coming in the Funny Car category. Among them were a plethora of
runs by
Jeff Diehl, a few by
Tony Pedregon and one or two by Matt
Hagan. Matt's wild ride in Charlotte, the one where both he and Jeff blew their
bodies off on the same run, has to go down as one of the more spectacular runs
of the year. And the fact that Matt was able to come back and make the finals
on Sunday was a real credit to him and his team. After a great 2010 season, the
Die Hard crew has to be looking
forward to the start of the new year..
Jim
Head got a lot of attention when he banged the wall in
Norwalk. I guess that is especially worth
noting because Jim doesn't do that a lot. Of course the banter back and forth
between Jim and
Warren Johnson about
which car is easier to drive, a Funny Car or a Pro Stocker, also sparked a lot
of interest in 2010. Johnny Gray, who has driven them both, says without a
doubt that a Pro Stock car is a lot tougher to driver than a Funny Car. And you
don't even want to know Johnny's feeling about driving a Top Fuel car.
Next week I'll take a look at some of the highlights of the
Pro Stock season, both cars and motorcycles. In the meantime, have a great
holiday a Merry Christmas and drive safely.


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