Drag Illustrated Issue 111, July 2016 | Page 87

STATE OF DRAG PHOTO: NATE VAN WAGNEN ★★★★★ it’s out of control – no way to reel that in. You’re going to see radial cars going 220mph on the eighth-mile this year. I think the speeds are fine. Most of the guys that are racing now are good at what they do and I respect them. When you’re driving one of these things, you just have to have your mind about you. Where do you stand on the level of safety in drag racing in 2016? The sport has, obviously, come a tremendous way since the early days. Where would you like to see improvements or increased focus as we move forward? AJ: Well, it’s kind of difficult to project what might happen. Even though NHRA’s done a really good job of being proactive on things, there’s always something out there that might happen where you have to be reactive, but I think our record speaks for itself. It’s very safe. As many cars go up and down the drag race on a weekend or even in a year, the injuries that have resulted are very minimal. So, overall, the sport is really, really safe. Of course, anything that comes up – we’re the first ones to address it. RC: Overall, it’s great and it’s come a long way, thankfully. It would be an injustice not to learn from the bad accidents that we’ve seen and the deaths we’ve had. Alan Johnson’s younger brother Blaine is a great example. I grew up with both of those guys. I was close to Blaine, and I watched it happened – standing behind the car when he took off. Thank God, we learned from that tragedy, July 2016 TAKING A HARD LOOK The father-son team of Mitchell and Jason Scruggs played a vital role in saving professional eighthmile doorslammer racing when they co-founded the Professional Drag Racers Association (PDRA) in 2013. As the series closes out a rocky third season, Scruggs and PDRA officials are looking to improve car counts and fan attendance. as we have with many others, and I think that’s the key – to not let these things be overlooked or to let these thing come in vain. I was there when Eric Medlen’s accident happened, and while that was a weird, strange, perfect storm situation that “I feel safer driving a Pro Extreme car than I do out on the highway with some of these guys,” Scruggs claims. took Eric from us, but we learned a lot from it. I was sitting in my car the other day, looking at all the things that have changed over the years and I had to take a second and, literally, thank Eric for it. I know it saved John Force’s life – I’m sure of it. So, anyway, those big accidents – you have to believe we’re learning from them. One thing that irritates me when people talk about going back to the quarter-mile is Scott Kalitta’s incident, and you don’t want to bring that card out, but sometimes I want to grab somebody by their neck and remind them of why exactly we race to 1,000-foot. I know Scott’s death saved a lot of lives in the years following. You look back at my explosion a few years ago in Pomona – my helmet, all scared up and marked up, sits on my son’s nightstand. It knocked me out. The car was rolling straight, almost to a stop, didn’t hit anything, and didn’t go off the track. The ‘chutes came out on their own, the fuel went off, and everything that guys were complaining about when NHRA came out with all these safety mandates with the shutoff devices and electronics worked to perfection, and if they hadn’t I probably wouldn’t have been hurt real bad, if not killed. But, man, overall, we go 330mph and we’re safer than any other motorsport, and we go 100mph faster than most of them. LP: At the moment, driving four different cars this season in 12 races has made me particularly pay attention to how I fit in the car, my safety gear DragIllustrated.com | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | 87