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The other winners of the Snowbird Nationals were Daryl Stewart in Voss Wheelie Bars Pro Outlaw 632 presented by $hameless Racing, Manny Buginga in Pro 275 presented by FuelTech, Paul Gargus in Limited Drag Radial presented by Mickey Thompson Tires, DJ McCain in X275 presented by Precision Shaft Technologies, Jason Spina in Ultra Street presented by TRZ Motorsports, Charlie Farrar in 4.60 Bike, Tom Orr in 5.50 Index, J.T. Sheaffer in 6.50 Index, Austin Logan in 7.50 Index, James Cavanaugh in 7.90 Index Jr. Dragster, Cameron Rich in 8.90 Index Jr. Dragster, and Zandir Cook in 11.90 Index Jr. Dragster. "This just solidifies the fact that our hard work pays off and we are still really good at what we do, regardless of what our season may have looked like to some people," Salemi said. "There's been a lot of ups and downs this season, and it's always awesome to finish off on a high note like this." Salemi went into the weekend driving Eddie Whelan's screw-blown Al-Lee Installations "Sidepiece" '19 Camaro after driving the roots-blown "Purple Reign" '68 Firebird for the last half of the season. Salemi and her team, led by her husband, Jon, and brother-in-law Jim, tested well during the week, which led to some frustration when they qualified No. 17 in the 32-car M&M Transmission Outlaw Pro Mod presented by Carmack Engineering field.
Salemi paired up with two-time and defending PDRA Pro Nitrous world champion Jim Halsey in the opening round, using a 3.667 to knock out Halsey's 3.704. Another heavy hitter, PDRA Pro Boost championship runner-up and No. 1 qualifier Daniel Pharris, was waiting for Salemi in the second round. Salemi left the starting line first and held on with a 3.693 at 205.66 to finish ahead of Pharris and his 3.722. "Everybody here had a chance to win," Salemi said. "There was not one person in that 32-car field that didn't have a shot to win. Every round was the same as the one before. Daniel Pharris, when I had him second round, I got a little bit lucky on that one. He broke and that was maybe my luck turning around. We're all just as good as one another. If you let somebody's success in the past get in your head, I think you've lost already." Salemi combined another consistent, quick reaction time and a 3.686 at 205.13 to beat Kurt Steding's 3.649 on a holeshot in the third round. "Those [holeshot wins] are always the best," Salemi said. "Honestly, they make your team feel confident about you also. I've had some issues in this car with cutting lights. I think we've got it figured out. There's a few things I'd like to work on. But I know Kurt can be really good on the tree. He's beaten me on a holeshot before. I knew that was definitely one of the rounds that I needed to be up on the wheel." Confidence continued to build in the Salemi camp going into the semifinals, where Salemi stepped up to a 3.664 at 206.54 to knock out Kris Thorne and his 3.947. "You have to be on your game to be able to win a race like this," Salemi said. "Everybody on our team has to be on our game 100 percent or it doesn't work." In the final round, brothers Jon and Jim got even more aggressive on the tuneup. Salemi took advantage of the extra power, running a 3.65 at 206.83 to stop Quartuccio and his 3.692. "We really had a perfect day of racing," said Salemi, who thanked the team's sponsors, the G-Force Race Cars shop guys, and car owner Eddie Whelan. "Our crew worked flawlessly. We were missing Katey [Knight]. We weren't the fastest car on race day, but I did my job when I had to and the crew had my back when I was a little late. It was a perfect day all around." Salemi also shared her appreciation for the Bradenton Motorsports Park staff. "Thank you to Victor [Alvarez], Wade [Rich] and all of the staff at Bradenton for being so welcoming and working their butts off to put on such an awesome, safe race," she added. Quartuccio, who qualified No. 6 in his ProCharger-boosted "Serial Killer" '69 Camaro, consistently improved through eliminations up until the final round. He ran a 3.691 to defeat Robert Abbott in the opening round, a 3.684 over Terry Coyle in the second round, a 3.657 over Todd Tutterow in the third round, and a 3.653 alongside a red-lighting Mike Decker Jr. and his 3.631 in the semifinals.
With the 50th annual Snowbird Outlaw Nationals presented by Motion Raceworks in the books, the Bradenton Motorsports Park team will focus on the track's next major heads-up race, the U.S. Street Nationals presented by Diamond Pistons, Jan. 27-30, 2022.
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