Photos courtesy of David Smith
At the 4-Wide Nationals at zMax Dragway,
five-time Top Alcohol Dragster world champ Bill Reichert earned his first
national event title of the season and Dan Pomponio maintained his torrid pace
in Top Alcohol Funny Car.
Reichert took the Top Alcohol Dragster
final by default when rookie Rishi Kanick, competing his first national event
and second race ever, left before the Tree came on. Kanick rolled in as soon as
Reichert pre-staged, and when Reichert lit the staged beam, Kanick took off and
received no e.t.
"I knew he red-lighted and I knew
it was over, but it never occurred to me to shut off," said Reichert, who
got close enough to the centerline to kick up a cloud of dust but kept the car on
his side of the track for a 5.30 win. "It moved over once, then really
moved over a second time, but the first thing you think in a situation like
that is 'lane choice.' Then you realize it's the final and there is no next
round, but by then the finish line is coming up and you just stay in it."
Reichert also won the semifinals at the
line, defeating Gatornationals winner Rich McPhillips on a slight holeshot, 5.42
to 5.41. He qualified his Rislone dragster just eighth in the field with a 5.41
but erased Matthew Cummings in the first round with a much better 5.29 and
Randy Meyer in the second round with what to that point was low e.t. of the
meet, 5.25.
One pair later, Chris Demke edged reigning
world champ Jim Whiteley on a holeshot in a matchup of the top two drivers of 2012,
5.26 to 5.21. Whiteley's run, one of the quickest in blown-alcohol history, held
up for low e.t. but left him two-thousandths of a second short at the finish
line. Kanick, driving the ex-Sidnei Frigo Trinidad & Tobago dragster tuned
by Anthony Dicero, reached his first career final with upset wins over
many-time national event winners John Finke, Marty Thacker, and Demke.
In Top Alcohol Funny Car, Pomponio upped
his win-loss record for the season to 14-0 and padded his national points lead
with a final-round decision over Dale Brand, 5.56 to a backpedaling 5.81. It
was Pomponio's fourth straight pass in the 5.50s, fourth straight at more than
260 mph, and fourth straight initiated by a good reaction time.
"I've been drag racing since the
late 1960s, early 1970s, and believe it or not, I attribute a lot of what's
happening now to all the years I ran Super Gas," said Pomponio, who now
leads the national standings by more than 100 points over Shane Westerfield. "I
was running Super Gas when it first started, around 1980, and a lot of the things
that mattered back then still apply today: focus, concentrate, and don't let
anything take you away from what you're trying to do. My son Dan is doing a
great job tuning the car, everybody on the team is doing their jobs perfectly,
and it's just working."
The highlight had to be his second-round
win over Frank Manzo, who invalidated a 5.51 with an aggravatingly close -.003
foul. Pomponio was right there with a .013 light and a career-best 5.54 and ran
his lifetime record against Manzo in national event competition to 2-0. He beat
Tony Bogolo in round one and Ray Drew, who enjoyed one of the best outings of
his career, in the semifinals.
Brand qualified his Goalsetter Monte
Carlo No. 2 with a 5.53 and clocked a 5.52 against Bill Naves in round one, a
backpedaling 5.86 against Cassie Simonton in round two, and a 5.63 against Canadian
Paul Noakes, who crossed the centerline in the semi's. Noakes reached at least
the semifinals in national competition for the third time in a row with a quarterfinal
win over U.S. Nationals winner Chris Foster, who ran a career-best 5.476 for
the No. 1 qualifying spot and an identical 5.476 in the first round.
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