Drag Illustrated Issue 110, June 2016 | Page 26

Dirt Three Generations Strong I n the American melting pot, Louisiana natives add a unique flavor all their own. Language, food, the arts, and philosophies are felt and appreciated by visitors more so than understood. And when Louisianans take to drag racing they bring their heritage with them. Turns out, it can be a pretty successful combination when applied to the 1320. The Cummings family fleet can’t be missed each time it rolls into various NHRA events and big money bracket races across the country. Two large haulers carrying seven elite race cars, all emblazoned with the now-synonymous Moser Engineering logo, demand attention. The family is as much recognized by their longstanding ti es with industry companies as they are their winning records, both of which are impressive. It started when the family patriarch, Larry, was just a kid. “One Saturday night I went to a place that had dances and rock-n-roll bands of our era,” remembers the 69-year-old racer. “Some friends said, 26 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com ‘Those guys are going to race. Let’s go watch ‘em.’ I’ll never forget it. It was a ‘64 Chevelle and a ‘63 Ford that raced. When them things took off I couldn’t believe a car was that fast. They were burning rubber, squealing tires, and shifting gears. I told my buddy, ‘One day I’m going to get one of these cars. That’s what I’m going to do.’ I bought a ‘66 Chevelle Super Sport.” Larry modified the Chevelle until it wasn’t fit for the street any longer. By 1972, he was running a C modified Vega panel wagon. In ‘79 he made the switch to a dragster and began running C/ED and B/ED in NHRA. He turned to IHRA in the ‘90s when the organization debuted the 7.90 class. It was during his tenure following that series that both of his sons, Britt and Slate, began racing and racking up championships. It was also then that the Cummings developed a friendship with the Mosers. Moser Engineering, founded by Greg Moser in 1982, sponsored Pro Stock racer, Ron Miller and Greg’s son Rob, at the time. With Greg busy helping out where needed on the Pro Stock operation, the Cummings pitched in to help Rob and soon a friendship developed. In 2003, a tragic plane crash took the life of the company’s founder and his wife, Marianne. A few weeks after the fateful accident the Cummings family got a phone call wondering if they were interested in running NHRA. Unbeknownst to the Cummings, prior to the crash the company had already been talking about sponsoring the family race operation to run NHRA. “IHRA catered to sportsmen racers back then,” explains Britt, a former IHRA Quick Rod World Champion. “We liked how we were treated in IHRA, but the sportsman program was changing. So we told them yes we would like to run NHRA. The first race we went to under the Moser banner was the first ever Moser Shootout at Richmond, Virginia. Slate won it. “The Moser deal has grown,” he continued. “We were friends first. Then we were partners. Now we’re like family. But at the end of the day, it’s Issue 110 PHOTO: NHRA / NATIONAL DRAGSTER The Cummings family legacy keeps growing By Lisa Collier