Photos courtesy of David Smith
At the wide-open Summit Racing Equipment
Nationals in Norwalk, Ohio, Dave Hirata broke through for his first national event
victory in 13 years and Kris Hool earned his second career title. Seven of the eight
semifinalists in Top Alcohol Dragster and Top Alcohol Funny Car – everyone but superstar
Frank Manzo – had combined for one national event win since the turn of the
century. Hirata, who last scored at the rain-delayed Englishtown race in
September 2000, won Top Alcohol Dragster with an 18-second pass when No. 1
qualifier Ray Martin red-lighted in the final, and Hool ran a consistent 5.65
to take out Fred Tigges in Top Alcohol Funny Car.
Hirata was the only Top Alcohol Dragster
driver still around for the semi's who'd ever won a national event before,
though by that point Martin clearly was the favorite. Martin, at the wheel of Hugh
Ridley's blown-alcohol dragster, had low e.t. of both qualifying sessions – matching
5.34s – and low e.t. of each of the first two rounds, back-to-back 5.39s
against Canadian Jeff Veale and 2011 event winner Marty Thacker. With his
second teen light in a row, Martin defeated ever-improving Robin Samsel on a
semifinal holeshot, 5.47 to 5.42.
Hirata qualified just 15th
but upset the most accomplished driver in the field, five-time world champ Bill
Reichert, in the first round Saturday afternoon, 5.56 to a tire-shaking 5.67.
He won all three rounds Sunday at the starting line, starting with Ken Perry in
round two on a holeshot and his only run all weekend that would have been quick
enough to advance, 5.46 to 5.42. To reach his first final since the 2007 U.S.
Nationals, Hirata won the other semifinal match with a 5.54 when rival Brandon
Booher red-lighted by the smallest detectable margin, .001 second, nullifying a
quicker 5.42.
Martin had another .01 light in the
final – unfortunately for him, it was a -.014, voiding his 5.50 and handing the
win to Hirata, who collected his first Wally since the 2000 season, when he won
three times (Atlanta, St. Louis, and Englishtown) and appeared in five finals.
Hool qualified No. 3, behind heavy
hitters Tony Bartone and Manzo, who tied for the top spot with 5.594s (Bartone
won the tiebreaker on speed, 262.33 mph to 259.91), and had by far the best car
all weekend. His final-round 5.65 actually was his slowest run of eliminations.
Every other one was between 5.61 and 5.64, highlighted by a 5.61 semifinal win
over Manzo, who was coming off low e.t. (5.57) in the previous round. Hool
opened eliminations with a 5.64 against John Bojec and took a come-from-behind
win over early season points leader Dan Pomponio in the quarterfinals, 5.62 to
5.71.
Tigges shut off to a 6.21 in the opening
round against 2009 Norwalk runner-up Chris Foster, who banged the blower, and
made his best run of the event, 5.65, in a second-round decision over Lance Van
Hauen, who had taken out Bartone in the first round when Bartone got over the
centerline.
Tigges idled downtrack on a semifinal
single when Paul Noakes was shut off at the line with an oil leak following a
between-rounds thrash. Both drivers had one previous final-round appearance,
both against Manzo. Tigges, whose other final came in a barrage of 5.50s at the
2011 U.S. Nationals, cut a .015 light in the final and was ahead by a full tenth
at the 60-foot mark but shook the tires and had to lift.
With the win, Hool, who was coming off
five consecutive first-round losses, leaped back into the top 10 with his
second career title and first since Brainerd in 2011. Martin is up to fourth in
the Top Alcohol Dragster standings and has been to at least two fewer races
than all three drivers ahead of him – Jim Whiteley, Chris Demke, and Rich
McPhillips.
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