Tue, 26 Dec 2006, 11:47 AM

The One that Didn't Get Away
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By Bob Frey Photo copyright 2006 Auto Imagery, Inc.

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Randy Wilkes
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Randy Wilkes is the 2006 NHRA Lucas Oil Stock Eliminator World Champion. It wasn't easy, but the
forty year old from Zanesville, Ohio finally secured the title on the last day of the season when
his closest competitors, Tibor Kadar and James Paul came up just a little short. While it's great
to win, Randy knows how the other guys feel, since he's been close before, not in racing, but in
another sport. "I used to do a lot of tournament fishing," Randy said. "In fact, I won the regional
championship a few years ago and I got a gold card to get in all the tournaments free the next
year. That's a lot of fun but there's a lot of luck involved, too and it's tough to lose when a big
one gets away." And while Randy thoroughly enjoyed fishing, and still does, his first love is drag
racing. "I started going with my dad a long time ago," he said. "Dad was racing when he was about
sixteen and it's been in our family ever since." Today both Randy and his older brother, Joey, race
and more often than not they can be found going deep into eliminations.

Randy Wilkes
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Running out of the very tough Division 3 area, Randy had his best season by far in 2006. "I think I
finished sixth or seventh in the division once," he said. "But this year everything worked out
good." Yes it did and it all started out with his big win at the national event in Bristol, a race
that put him in the top twenty in the national points and that's when he started to think that he
had a chance at doing something special. "We've (my brother and I) raced for a long time and it was
exciting to think about a championship." As the year progressed and he added a runner-up at the
Division 2 race in Atlanta, Randy's dreams of a national championship started to come into focus.
"I had never been out to Las Vegas or Pomona but I knew that I had to go. So Mike and I loaded the
car up and headed west." Mike, by the way, is Mike Means, the rather imposing figure who
accompanies Randy to almost every race. "He's been around for years and he used to race with my
dad. He works for the county so he is able to accrue days off to come with me to the races. He does
everything at the track and I couldn't do it without him." Rumor has it that Michael also spends
some time moonlighting as a bouncer at a local establishment. "All he has to do is start coming
your way and people run," Randy said. "He is a big guy but he's the nicest guy in the world." When
they were in Vegas at the Division 7 race, Randy met one of his challengers for the first time. "I
had never met Tibor before Vegas," he said. "I walked in the staging lanes and I saw Peter (Biondo)
talking with this young guy. I walked over and Peter smiled and stepped in between us and said, 'In
this corner, Randy Wilkes. And in this corner, Tibor Kadar. Now go to your corners and when you
hear the bell, come out fighting.' It was pretty cool and it broke some of the tension." The
tension was plentiful in Pomona where Tibor needed to win four rounds to secure the championship,
and when he lost in the fourth round it was all over. "I was at the end of the track and my stomach
was in knots. It was so great to finally win it and get it over with."

Joey vs. Randy
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Not to be lost in all the excitement about his championship is the fact that Randy's brother, Joey,
is also a pretty good racer and he spends time between racing his Stock and Super Stock car. "My
dad actually bought a '68 hemi-'Cuda when they were new," Randy said. "He didn't keep that one but
we do have a hemi car that my brother runs. He had a pretty good year with it, too." That "good
year" consisted of a pair of final rounds in the highly touted Hemi Shootouts, one at the
Sportsnationals in Columbus and the other at the ultra-competitive Dutch Classic at Maple Grove.
Brother Joey also won Stock Eliminator at the Columbus national event. Like most brothers, Randy
and Joey are very competitive and it's interesting to note that not once but twice they finished
with the exact same points total on the NHRA national tour. Joey does get to drive the hemi car,
something that he hasn't shared with his younger sibling yet and that doesn't seem to bother Randy.
"That's a fun car to race," Randy said. "But it's Joey's and I'll let him drive it. I never have
driven it and I'm happy with my car." His car is a 2001 Pontiac Firebird with a 346 cubic inch
engine. With help from engine builder Todd Quinn at Platinum Engines, it performed flawlessly most
of the season. "The Bristol race was indicative of how well the car can run. It was right on all
weekend and it pretty much ran that way most of the year." His Bristol win included a Perfectly
Strange Award for running right on his dial-in and a spectacular final round package that included
a .005 reaction time and 10.55 run on a dial of 10.54. "The car is one of the real reasons that I
won this year," Randy said.

Wilkes and crew celebrate win.
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While Randy was exposed to racing at an early age, and even though he raced for a number of years,
he took off a few years when his daughter, Raeann was born. "Like anything, if you want to do well
you have to put a lot of time and effort into it. When Raeann was born I decided to spend some more
time with the family." His family also consists of daughter Bailey (11) and his very supportive
wife, Cori. "As much as I like racing, with the girls I get to spend a lot of time at basketball
games, dance recitals and gymnastics. Nothing's better than watching the girls in their
activities." And when he isn't watching the girls in one activity or another, Randy earns his
living making cabinets. "We do a lot of antique restoration and reproductions," he said. "It's an
art that I learned from my grandfather who is still active in the business at 85 years old." The
family also owns a used car lot in their home town of Zanesville, Ohio, where they sell "basically
anything the customer wants." Let's see, fisherman, drag racer and cabinet maker, you don't see
that combination often in this sport do you?

Wilkes with one of his Wallys.
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Randy Wilkes is the perfect example of how consistency pays off. Other than his Bristol victory he
didn't win another race this year, but he did go deep into eliminations at a lot of races. The
runner-up at the D-2 race and six rounds at the Las Vegas event all added up to the first national
championship in the Wilkes' family history. Now he'll freshen the car up over the off-season and
then go to Florida to open up 2007. "I'll go to the Bradenton, Orlando and Gainesville division
races as well as hitting the Gatornationals," he said. "After those four races and being very early
into the season I should know if I have a shot at defending my title." If he drives the way he did
this year and if the car continues to perform well, too, Randy could put a lot of points on the
board early and make it tough for anyone to take his title away next year. "I still have the smile
on my face and this is something that I'll remember forever. They had a party for me at one of the
clubs in town and I was really surprised to see all the racers who showed up. It meant a lot to
me." And so does his 2006 Lucas Oil World Championship, the one that didn't get away.
In addition to his dad, his brother and Mike Means, Randy would like to thank his wife, Cori, for
all of her support as well as Dave Redman, the entire Nicewanger family, everyone at Jeg's who
helped him out, Bill and Valerie Thomas and all of his fellow Division 3 racers. "It's going to be
quite a banquet this year with four national champions. It should be a lot of fun."
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