Ahli, Musi,
Frigo and Schweigert Win PDRA World Finals at Richmond
PETERSBURG, VA (Oct. 25, 2015) -- The winner's list for the
all-eighth-mile Professional Drag Racers Association (PDRA)
season ender Oct. 24, at Virginia Motorsports Park (VMP)
displayed a distinct international flair as racers from the
United States, Dubai, Brazil, and Canada prevailed in the
pro classes for the Brian Olson Memorial PDRA World Finals
presented by Mel Bush Motorsports. Olson was the PDRA's
popular trackside announcer who unexpectedly passed away
early in August.
Dubai's Bader Ahli won the premier NAS Racing Pro Extreme
class, while Lizzy Musi from North Carolina took the Switzer
Dynamics Pro Nitrous event title, Sidnei Frigo of Sao Paulo,
Brazil, was the Precision Turbo Pro Boost winner, and
Canadian Terry Schweigert finished first in Drag 965 Pro
Extreme Motorcycle. Additionally, Ohio's Phil Esz won in
Toefco Pro Open Outlaw and a special appearance by the
Disomma Racing Engines Outlaw 10.5 class saw Mike Decker Jr.
take the trophy home to Baltimore.
In the PDRA sportsman ranks, Georgia golf cart dealer Ronnie
Davis capped off his MagnaFuel Top Sportsman championship
with a win at the season-ending race, Kathy Fisher got her
first PDRA win in Dart Machinery Top Dragster, and like
Davis, brother-and-sister duo Preston and Alexis Tanner
punctuated their new championships with wins in Huddleston
Performance Pro Jr. Dragster and Huddleston Top Jr.
Dragster, respectively.
PRO EXTREME
Starting from the number-six position on the Pro Extreme
qualifying list, NAS Racing's Badir Ahli was the only driver
in contention to deny points leader Jason Scruggs his first
season championship since 2008, but to do so not only would
Ahli have needed to win the race and set a new elapsed time
record along the way, Scruggs would've had to lose in the
opening round. When Scruggs, who scored five PDRA event wins
in 2015, got past a redlighting Danny Lowry in the opening
session, the championship mathematically became beyond reach
for Ahli.
"I want to congratulate Jason Scruggs and his team," Ahli
said. "It is disappointing for us, yes, but they deserve to
win after such a great season."
That still left the race win up for grabs, though, and Ahli
made his march toward the final through Johnny Cobb, Jose
Gonzales and Tommy D'Aprile to reach Brandon Snider of
Atmore, AL, there. Snider, who qualified number one with a
record-setting 3.51-seconds pass at 217.63 mph in his
Q80-backed '69 Camaro, defeated Lorenzo "Killer" Brooks,
Carl Stevens Jr. and Paul Mouhayet of Australia in the
preliminary rounds.
Significantly, in a holeshot loss to Snider, Stevens broke
the 230-mph barrier over the eighth mile, going 3.56 at
230.10 in his twin-turbocharged 2014 Camaro to set a new,
official PDRA speed record.
"My wife called me right after we ran, all confused because
she thought she saw I'd lost (on the PDRA's live, online
video feed), but my guys were all jumping around, hugging
each other on the starting line," Stevens said. "We did
lose, but to be honest, it's a win for us right now. We
couldn't be happier. We'd run 229 earlier in the day, but
230 is a nice round number; it just sounds better."
In the final, Ahli's screw-blown '69 Camaro left with a
slight .009 advantage off the start and won going away
despite slowing considerably to a 3.66 at 205.79 mph. In the
right lane, Snider's similar ride left hard, but carried the
front wheels in the air past half track, where he had to
lift in order to avoid crossing the center line into Ahli's
lane.
"It felt good at first, but then it started drifting left
and you can't steer if the front tires aren't on the
ground," Snider observed after posting a 3.75 at 173.25-mph
pass. "We wanted to win, of course, but still not a bad way
to end the year. Number-one qualifier, set a new ET record,
got a runner-up, and the car's all in one piece. We'll take
that."
PRO NITROUS
Heading into the final PDRA event of the year, two-time
defending NHRA Pro Mod champion Rickie Smith held a sizable
points lead over Tommy Franklin, the lone Pro Nitrous
competitor who could deny Smith his third major series title
in three years. To win, though, Franklin needed to win the
race and set a new ET record with his Pat Musi-powered '69
Camaro, while Smith would have to suffer an unlikely DNQ or
at minimum, a rare first-round loss.
Remarkably, in Friday night's second qualifying session,
Franklin ran an unprecedented 3.71-flat at 201.10 mph to
secure the pole and establish the first leg of a new record.
Then, during the third and final qualifying session on
Saturday morning before eliminations began, Smith was bumped
down the list of 16 qualifiers until sitting in the final
qualified position, with plenty of capable cars behind him
ready to oust him from the mix.
When his turn came to take the track, however, "Tricky
Rickie" responded with a solid 3.76 at 199.29 mph that
safely landed his own Musi-motored '69 Camaro in the seventh
starting spot.
The unthinkable happened in round one of racing, though,
when Pat Stoken strapped a .013 light on Smith, allowing his
.029 holeshot to make the difference in a 3.77 win over
Smith's quicker 3.74 effort.
Watching from the staging lanes, Franklin seized the
opportunity and backed up his qualifying run within the
required one percent for an official record with a 3.73 win
over John Camp.
"There's not much to say; I cut my usual light, the same as
I've been doing all year, and he (Stoken) took a chance and
it paid off," a clearly discouraged Smith said later. "It's
not over yet, though, it's just out of my hands now."
Smith didn't have to wait long to learn his fate. In round
two, Franklin left first on Jay Cox, but slowed to a 4.11 at
195.45 that was no match for Cox's 3.75 at 197.68 combo. "It
just wasn't meant to be, I guess," said Franklin, who also
finished second in the standings last year. "This class is
getting so tough, so quick and fast. We almost had our first
all-3.70s field here this weekend, the 16th-place car was a
3.80 with a two."
Meanwhile, Lizzy Musi started her Musi-powered 2015 Dart
from the fourth position and raced through Mike Castellana,
Chris Rini and Cox with authority, setting a new class speed
record of 204.01 mph along the way. In the final round she
faced number-two qualifier "Stevie Fast" Jackson and his '69
Camaro with Reher-Morrison horsepower under the hood after
Jackson made his way past Tim Savell, Stoken and Keith
Haney, who ran a career-best 3.74 in qualifying third.
Running in the right lane for the final, Musi moved first,
leaving with a .013 holeshot and never looking back, running
3.72 at 203.55 mph to Jackson's wheel-standing 3.76 at
200.89 mph.
"You know, I still feel like I'm pretty new out here
compared to most of the other guys," Musi said after scoring
her first win of the year and just the second of her Pro
Nitrous career. "I have to thank my dad and Rickie Smith for
helping to sort out our new car for me, too. And we added
Patrick Barnhill and let me tell you, he knows a thing or
two about getting one of these things to hook up. I'm very
lucky to have the people I have surrounding me."
PRO BOOST
Pro Boost featured the tightest championship chase of all
the PDRA pro classes with first-place Kevin Rivenbark
holding a slim 80-points advantage--less than one round's
worth--over Kevin Fiscus heading into the PDRA World Finals.
Rivenbark was aiming to make it two Pro Boost titles in a
row for GALOT Racing after Todd Tutterow, who returned to
Pro Extreme for 2015, won for GALOT last year.
Rivenbark gained maximum qualifying points when he put his
roots-blown 2015 Corvette in first place with a 3.79 at
194.74, marking the first pass in the 3.70s by a
supercharged-motor combination in the class, though in round
one of eliminations Rivenbark's teammate John Strickland, as
well as Ric Fleck, would join the club.
Fiscus, who qualified his twin-turbo'd 2012 Mustang seventh,
did his job in round one of racing, winning with a 3.83 run
over Doug Winters in the second pair of Pro Boost entries
down the track and temporarily taking over the points lead.
Then came Rivenbark in the final pair of the session when
the unimaginable happened and he went red by -.030 off the
start to waste a 3.80 pass at 194.91 that would've easily
delivered the win--and a return of the points lead--against
a 3.89 at 190.54 by Larry Higgenbotham in his blown '57
Chevy.
"I think that was a big advantage for me to go ahead of
him," the new Pro Boost champion said. "I was honestly
feeling more relaxed than I usually do before E1, but I
think the pressure got to him."
In the race, an unlikely winner emerged from 15th place on
the qualifying list as Brazil's Sidnei Frigo won all four
rounds of racing with a holeshot in each. He opened with a
.032 light leading to a 3.86 at 206.76 pass in his
twin-turbocharged '15 Corvette against a puzzling .507
reaction by Strickland that negated his record 3.790 pass at
194.58 mph.
Next up was Fiscus, who Frigo beat by .021 off the line,
which translated to a five-thousandths of a second margin of
victory 3.84 seconds and 660 feet later. In the semis Frigo
faced Fleck and left with a .045 reaction time to Fleck's
.084, which gave him an eight-thousandths advantage after
going 3.85 to the finish line.
Waiting for Frigo in the final was Jeremy Ray, who drove his
supercharged '15 Corvette to wins over Tylor Miller, Paolo
Giust and Anthony Disomma in the early rounds.
Once more when the lights flashed green for the Pro Boost
final, Frigo left first, this time with an excellent .008
light to Ray's .064, allowing his 3.88 at 205.98 to defeat
the 3.82 at 193.10 by just four thousandths of a second.
"This is just my second PDRA race," the ex-Top Fuel driver
said. "It was an exciting day."
PRO EXTREME
MOTORCYCLE
With the 2015 championship already clinched by defending
class champ Eric McKinney when the PDRA World Finals began,
what Pro Extreme Motorcycle lacked in points-chasing drama,
it made up for in on-track action.
McKinney's crew chief, Ashley Owens, secured the number-one
start in the all-Suzuki class with a 4.00-seconds ride at
176.33 mph, with Chuck Wilburn, winner of the previous PDRA
race early last month in North Carolina, second and followed
by Travis Davis and eventual event winner Terry Schweigert.
McKinney's 4.06 at 176.72 qualifying pass put him on the
list in seventh place.
Schweigert made a solo pass in round one after Ronnie
Smith's bike broke, then took down Burke Foster in round two
before outrunning young gun Chris Garner-Jones in the semis
to set up the final against Wilburn, who made it there
through Richard Gadson, Dave Norris and Davis, who didn't
get to run after arriving late to the lanes for the semis.
Wilburn posted a .090 reaction in the final and Schweigert
had a .096 leave, and made up for it with a solid and
consistent 4.03 pass at 173.52 mph to beat Wilburn's 4.10 at
174.03 combination.
"Neither one of us had a particularly good light--for some
reason I was having a little trouble with my reaction times
here this weekend--but I know we left pretty close together,
but after that I really didn't see him or hear him. I was
drifting a little over toward the center line, too, so I was
concentrating on that and just on getting to the far end,"
Schweigert said. "This was my second win this year and it
feels so good to end the season like this."
PRO OPEN
OUTLAW
Despite winning three of the five Pro Open Outlaw races
contested within nine PDRA events this year--including the
PDRA World Finals--Phil Esz still finished runner-up to Jody
Stroud in points.
"We had an oil leak and got shut off in round one at
Rockingham and that really cost us," Esz said after
defeating Stroud by eighth-thousandths of a second in the
final round at VMP. "We'll be back next year, though."
In the biggest turnout for the class all season, 11 cars
made qualifying attempts and Paul Molnar led an eight-car
field into eliminations with a straight-off-the-trailer
3.607 at 204.26-mph pass in his '04 Spitzer dragster. Stroud
qualified third with Bryan Keller sandwiched between him and
Molnar, with Esz completing the top half of the field.
In eliminations, Esz set low ET and top speed for the meet
and a potential new ET record with a 3.604 at 204.76 win
over Andrew Johnson in round one while Stroud easily handled
Eddie Careccia with a 3.68 on the opposite side of the
ladder. Round two, the semis, saw Esz run 3.74 to get by
Robert Frigon, but he lost lane choice for the final to a
3.65 solo run by Stroud after Keller's car broke.
In the final, Stroud left with a sizable .032 starting line
advantage, but his 3.67 at 200.17 fell short by seven
thousandths of Esz's 3.63 at 201.91 that also served as an
official back-up for the ET record.
Later, Esz revealed that with the help of Top Sportsman
racer Mick Snyder he'd made a hasty transmission change
between the semis and final round. He also thanked GALOT
Racing and Rick Hickman for their help and dedicated the win
to the memory of his father, Mike, whose birthday was the
same day as the PDRA race.
OUTLAW 10.5
Three rounds of qualifying and three steps up to the top as
Mike Decker Jr. went from third to second to first overall
in just the second appearance of Outlaw 10.5 with the PDRA
this season with a 3.985-seconds blast at 193.82 mph in
Saturday's final session before eliminations began.
Once there Decker drove his supercharged '02 Camaro around
Joel Wensley, John Bartunek and Frank Pompilio to reach the
turbocharged 2000 Camaro of Canadian Nick Agostino in the
final. Agostino put Scott Kline, Joe Newsham and Mo Hall on
the trailer in the preliminaries.
Neither driver cut a good light in the final, with Decker
waiting .115 and Agostino .138 before leaving. From there,
Decker put together a 3.98 at 192.47-mph winning combination
against 4.00 at 204.82 by Agostino.
Decker credited Chuck Ulsch for helping with the car's
set-up for the final and said his team changed engines
between qualifying and racing on Saturday.
TOP
SPORTSMAN
When Ronnie Davis arrived at Virginia Motorsports Park he
had his eye firmly fixed upon the prize: the 2015 PDRA Top
Sportsman championship. The Georgia-based golf cart dealer
came with enough points to win so long as he qualified and
won just one round of racing. Failing that, defending class
champ Dan Ferguson would've had to win the race and set a
record to overtake Davis.
After Davis slotted into 10th in the 16-car field with a
4.04 pass at 178.19 mph in his nitrous-boosted '63 Corvette,
Ferguson ran 3.99 at exactly 183 mph to occupy the last of a
record six three-second passes atop the PDRA Top Sportsman
qualifying sheet.
The championship chase ended quickly, though, once
eliminations began as Ferguson's borrowed '63 Vette shook
hard off the launch in round one and he coasted across the
finish line for his final 5.76 seconds as 2014 champion.
"My goal has always been to win the championship in whatever
series I race in," Davis explained after defeating Chuck
Mohn in round one. "I've won in NHRA, in IHRA, I missed in
ADRL when it was around, but I'm real happy to get it done
in PDRA now. I love this type of racing."
With the championship secured, Davis set his sights on
winning the PDRA World Finals, beating Rachel Edwards in
round two and John Benoit in the semis. Opposite him, Don
Klooster drove his own nitrous-fed '63 Corvette to wins over
Cheyenne Stanley, Mark Malcutt and Randy Perkinson.
"Don's a good friend and we really wanted to meet in the
final, get the two Corvettes out there and just go for it
together," Davis said. "I was really happy to see that work
out." It worked out on the track for him, too, as Davis left
with a .024 light, then ran 4.07 at 170.21 against a 4.04
dial in to take the win over a .071/4.02/181.30 package on a
4.00 dial by Klooster.
"This feels like an important win to me," Davis said of his
third PDRA race title this year. "This is the way you want
to win a championship."
TOP DRAGSTER
With two round wins at the PDRA World Finals, Derrik Sholar
came close to overtaking Justin Melton's points lead in Top
Dragster, but a dead-on-the-dial, first-round win for Melton
(3.99 at 172.21 on a 3.99 dial in) over Cody Moore was just
enough to ensure the title went home to Gleason, TN.
Meanwhile, in only her third PDRA appearance, Kathy Fisher
made it all the way to victory lane at Virginia Motorsports
Park after qualifying fifth in Top Dragster and making her
way past Jantzen Melton, George Marks, Lauren Freer and
Eddie Syrek in the final round. After taking out Bob
Sheridan Jr. in round one, Syrek had the distinction of
ousting both championship contenders from eliminations with
wins over Melton and Sholar in rounds two and three,
respectively.
In the all-Procharger final, Syrek launched with a .085
reaction time, but broke and stopped on the track, while
Fisher left with a .049 light and ran just one-thousandth of
a second above her 3.96 dial in to take the win at 172.96
mph.
"The season is ending so completely different from how it
started for us and I couldn't be happier," Fisher said,
though she did have an anxious moment just as the final
round was about to start. "We went to fire it up and she
just wouldn't start. It would fire up a little bit, but just
would not keep running. Eddie had already started his car
but he shut it off to wait for us and I can't thank him
enough for that."
The PDRA will honor its 2015 champions with a banquet and
awards presentation during the annual Performance Racing
Industry (PRI) trade show in Indianapolis.
ABOUT THE PDRA
With offices in Pittsboro, North Carolina, and Saltillo,
Mississippi, the Professional Drag Racers Association is the
top sanctioning body in the United States for the sport of
eighth-mile drag racing. The PDRA’s professional categories
include Pro Open Outlaw, Pro Extreme Motorcycle, Pro Boost,
Pro Nitrous and Pro Extreme, the quickest doorslammer class
in drag racing. The 2015 PDRA schedule consists of nine
national events. For more information on the PDRA, visit
www.PDRA660.com.
VIEW FULL EVENT RACE RESULTS
FULL EVENT PHOTO GALLERY by RaceWorks.com coming very
soon...