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Old 09-08-2009, 11:21 PM   #1
treessavoy
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Default Re: To: Austin Ford From: Bill Hawk

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Originally Posted by Ryan Horensky View Post
Tree Savoy....Apparently you do not know much about sportsman racing in stock eliminator in this era. I am friends with Bill Hawk, but have never had the opportunity to meet the Ford's due to our geographic location in the country. People try to save their combinations at every race. The horsepower system makes that even more difficult. For instance: my father runs a 68 Shelby in A/SA currently. If we go 1.15 under and do not attend another national event we can get horsepower on our combo, because there are no other 68 Shelbys racing in the entire country with our combination to dilute the average. Its pretty disheartening to have to put weight in your car because you made one fast run during the season at a big race and do not attend another race during normal conditions to run average ET's. Especially if you put up a huge run during extreme conditions, but do not have the opportunity to go that fast at any race during the course of the season. Bill had no other choice but to get the combo hit if he wanted to run A/SA. I can see why the Ford's may be upset by what happened, but I can also see Bill's perspective on the situation. I myself am finishing up graduate school like Austin and do not have the funding to travel to races the way I want to. I think this is just part of racing.....and disagreements come with it. Hopefully both parties can make up and still be friends after what has transpired. I'm not trying to play mediator....just trying to state to tree savoy that stock elimator is not balls to the wall first one to the finish line wins type of racing. I don't think it has ever been with the exception of class elimations and heads up races. Besides that we all have to put dials on our windows and go bracket racing 95% of the time

Ryan Horensky
1273 C/SA

Ryan,

Since I'm new to this sport, started in 1964, I'm glad you explained this style of non-racing to me.

All of this is bull s**t!

Drag racing is: run all out, get to the stripe first and it's always been that way. You "new wave" racers think it's all about protecting your HP. NO, it's about running as quick as you can and winning or losing.

When I first started racing it was off National records, you ran as hard as you could in order to re-set that record and you were proud to see your name in the magazine and paint "NHRA Record Holder" on your car.

How proud are you to say that you dumped a race because you were afraid of getting hp?

Real Drag Racers run hard to the finish line, the rest of you are just playing some game.

JimR
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Old 09-09-2009, 07:02 AM   #2
lstanford
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Default Re: To: Austin Ford From: Bill Hawk

It's to bad that people with a disagreement don't just call one another and settle the problem in private. I was always told that you don't wash your laundry in public. Politics and games have ruined drag racing for the majority of us.
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Old 09-09-2009, 08:51 AM   #3
Bart Kilraine
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Default Re: To: Austin Ford From: Bill Hawk

Balls to the wall,1st. to the strip would be great for stock eliminator,for the 7 or 8 cars that showed up !
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Old 09-09-2009, 09:54 AM   #4
Jeff Teuton
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Default Re: To: Austin Ford From: Bill Hawk

I have no dog in this hunt. My dogs ain't as good as either. I didn't read the whole string, so bare with me. NHRA considers the 428 with iron heads and aluminum heads as the same instead of two different engines as in the case of the 396 iron/aluminum engines. I think this is wrong and over the last year or maybe longer I have partitioned NHRA to treat the 428 and others and hopefully when (2057) Mopar gets a replacement head ( now that is my dog) that the combo would be treated the same as the Chevy and not the Fords. That is each combo is it's own engine family. If that were done, Charlie & company as well as Hawk & associates could do what they wanted and wouldn't have to type so much. That is the basic's of the problem; the details take to long without refreshment. But I have a new approach; Now that Ford is the car of choice of NHRA, maybe another letter.
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Old 09-09-2009, 02:44 PM   #5
Mike Carr
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Default Re: To: Austin Ford From: Bill Hawk

Quote:
Originally Posted by treessavoy View Post
Ryan,

Since I'm new to this sport, started in 1964, I'm glad you explained this style of non-racing to me.

All of this is bull s**t!

Drag racing is: run all out, get to the stripe first and it's always been that way. You "new wave" racers think it's all about protecting your HP. NO, it's about running as quick as you can and winning or losing.

When I first started racing it was off National records, you ran as hard as you could in order to re-set that record and you were proud to see your name in the magazine and paint "NHRA Record Holder" on your car.

How proud are you to say that you dumped a race because you were afraid of getting hp?

Real Drag Racers run hard to the finish line, the rest of you are just playing some game.

JimR
In addition to what Evan stated, I'll add this. Flat out racing is great, but sometimes you have to dump to protect. I'll use the following example, Jim. Say early in the year, you and I have a heads-up run in, say, A/SA. You have a fairly common car (I'll use a '64 Fury Max Wedge as an example). I have a car that is pretty rare (say a '64 or '65 Nascar single 4 Hemi). You and I run Class somewhere early in the year. We both run flat out, both running 10.0's., and you get the win. You have plenty of other cars in your Class to bring the average for your combination down. I don't So, for running flat out, I get hit with HP, you don't, and now I'm further behind. Which can hurt later in the year, especially when it comes time for Indy, trying to win Class or even qualifying. It's this scenario, why racers, when at 1000' they realize they aren't going to win, will dump to protect their HP. It's not just Stock and S/S. David Rampy has done the same thing in Comp with his A/EA Bantam over the years. If he knows he won't get there (or even if he think he will but knows he'll kill the Index if he does), he'll dump, save the Index, to give himself a better chance down the road at winning. After 70+ National Event wins, I'd say Rampy's idea is a pretty smart one. By the way, I've stated twice on here why running off Indexes or National Records will not work with the current system. Hope this helps explain the "games" us "younger generation" has to play.
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