Drag Illustrated Issue 132, May 2018 | Page 30

Dirt SWEET 16 forgotten, either, especially since his blast of 3.642 at 216.20 in the Andrew Alepa-owned C7 Cor- vette qualified him No. 2. It was a remarkable run from Pharris, even if his weekend ended with some surprising tire shake against Haney in the second round. Still, you couldn’t help but enjoy the performances all weekend from Pharris in that striking maroon Corvette. HANCOCK GETS IT DONE Jamie Hancock provided another feel-good moment of the weekend, becoming the first nitrous-powered radial car to reach the 3.60s when he went 3.68. Remarkably enough, it was also the quickest pass ever for Hancock’s Firebird, as Hancock and his father continue to hold their own against teams with far bigger budgets. In the midst of Micke’s first record-breaking run on Thursday, Frank Soldridge was having a pass he wishes he could have back. He crashed violently into the left wall, barrel-rolling several times. Though pretty beat up, he escaped any serious injury. class as they look for any and every advantage for increased performance and consistency. LOHNES, SEBRING KEEP IT ENTERTAINING Huge kudos to the wildly enjoyable perfor- mances from announcers Brian Lohnes and Lee Sebring over the weekend. It’s a real challenge to keep the excitement and conversation going at a single-category race, but Lohnes and Sebring more than pulled it off. From their hysterical outfits – the Dumb & Dumber look was stupen- dous – to their interesting back-and-forth, the duo knocked it out of the park, another big reason why the weekend was such a success. MOST UNUSAL ENGINE COMBINATION The wild combo award goes to Marty Stinnett, who made a career-best pass with the small- block-Chevy-powered combo in his Mustang. Stinnett also recovered from scuffing the wall on the first pass of the weekend, returning to qualify 12th with a 3.758. THE MASTER OF D.I.Y. CONSISTENCY THE NAME OF THE GAME FOR GIUST Paolo Giust wasn’t the quickest, qualifying 13th, but he rode consistency all the way to the semi- finals. Running his Jim Salemi-tuned, 5-speed Liberty-equipped first-gen Camaro “Black Betty,” the Canadian was impressive doing things his way. The car had awesome starts, and ran smoothly from A to B and before being finally ousted by Micke in the semifinals. EXTREME MEASURES SOLDRIDGE THANKFULLY WALKS AWAY Can we count this as wacky or will it prove to be innovative? Bryan Markiewicz brought some la te-model, circle track technology to the drag- strip, using some moon-style wheel covers for his ’69 Chevy Camaro. The concept tested well in the wind tunnel and Markiewicz followed with a respectable showing on the track, qualifying ninth with a 3.740. If nothing else, it shows some impressive forward-thinking by the drivers in this MILLER MAKES MIRACULOUS APPEARANCE No, Jeff Miller didn’t qualify in the top 16, but just making it to the event was a feat in itself. Just a week after crashing into the wall during a test session at Carolina Dragway, Miller was in Valdosta, racing the Bumblebee to a career-best 3.81. How it happened made Miller one of the biggest success stories of the weekend, as the team worked around the clock to get the car back together, with Nick Stephens making a 2,000- mile round trip for a front cap. To then run a career-best number just 17 hours after the car was ready, you couldn’t help but have a smile on your face. This was one more definite feel-good moment in a weekend filled with them. DI DI DI DI DI DI DI 30 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com I DI s s DI u e DI 1 3 2 Without Jeff Naiser, maybe we wouldn’t have seen Jamie Hancock going in the 3.60s this week- end. Naiser, the ultimate do-it-yourselfer, builds his own engines and always represents himself well, running a 3.722 on Thursday, proving the 3.60s in a nitrous car were possible. With X275 standout Kenny Hubbard offering assistance, Naiser was solid, no surprise for anyone who has watched him compete over the years in a multitude of classes.