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NHRA update: Virginia joins schedule, top teams make lineup changes

NHRA has replaced Englishtown with Virginia Motorsports Park, John Force Racing has rearranged its engineering lineup, Leah Pritchett joins the Army, and Pro Stock teams have gained a new facility. Anne Proffit reports.

Antron Brown

Antron Brown

NHRA

Brittany Force
Robert Hight
Top Fuel winner Leah Pritchett
Brittany Force
Greg Anderson
Leah Pritchett
Jack Beckman
Tony Schumacher
Jason Line
Greg Anderson
Greg Anderson
Bo Butner
Jack Beckman
Leah Pritchett pilots the Papa John's TF dragster past Tony Schumacher, Feb. 12

NHRA’s loss of Old Bridge Township Raceway Park, site of 48 Summernationals in the NHRA’s Mello Yello Drag Racing Series created quite the hole. The sanctioning body had several offers to help maintain a 24-race schedule, deciding to race at Virginia Motorsports Park (VMP), where it last competed in 2009. VMP will take over the June 8-10 slot, completing the schedule.

“We’re excited to return to Virginia Motorsports Park under its new ownership,” said Glen Cromwell, NHRA’s president. “The VMP team is eager to host our drivers, sponsors and fans.”

Tommy Franklin, together with family members purchased the track recently, installing general manager Allen Carpenter to help bring the circuit back to NHRA specs, including a complete refurbishment of the track surface.

“We are thrilled to get the opportunity to host an event in the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series,” Franklin said. “We want to have the fastest track in the series and make this a premier destination for drivers and fans alike. It’s going to be a fantastic event.”

Tickets will go on sale for NHRA Virginia Nationals in March.

JFR reshuffles brain-trust, Pritchett joins U.S. Army team

At the home of reigning Top Fuel (Brittany Force) and Funny Car (Robert Hight) champions, John Force Racing has made a few adjustments to its crew chief lineups. While the champions’ staffs remain mostly intact with Brian Husen crew chief for Brittany Force, he gains the notable assistance of Ronnie Thompson and the continuing help from Alan Johnson.

Hight’s brain trust of Jimmy Prock and Chris Cunningham remains unchanged while Brian Corradi, who co-tuned Antron Brown to three Top Fuel titles at Don Schumacher Racing, returns to his Funny Car roots to work with Daniel Hood, tuning Courtney Force’s Funny Car.

“The timing just worked out,” Corradi said. “Danny and I have a long history both on the track and with our families. I’m excited to get back to Funny Car.”

Meanwhile, John Force has welcomed tuners Jon Schaffer and Jason McCulloch back to the fold.

“We have a lot of talent top to bottom with our crew chiefs,” said Force, the team’s owner. “Now we are all going to work together, just like we always have, to put all four of these hot rods in as many winner’s circles as possible.”

At Don Schumacher Racing, the biggest change is the addition of Top Fuel standout Leah Pritchett to the U.S. Army team of Tony Schumacher (eight championships) and three-time dragster titleholder Antron Brown. Schumacher has partnered with the U.S. Army since the 2000 U.S. Nationals; Brown’s affiliation began in 2003 when he was riding a Suzuki Pro Stock Motorcycle for DSR and the U.S. Army.

Pritchett, a four-time winner (in six final rounds) in her first full season at DSR, will race a Mopar/U.S. Army dragster for the 24-race NHRA season.

She said: “This is a tremendous opportunity for us, to represent the soldiers who serve and enable us to do what we love. Tony and Antron have had an insurmountable impact on my life and I am humbled and honored to join them in representing the U.S. Army.”

During the 2017 season, Pritchett, who finished fifth in the final standings, set national elapsed time records twice (at Phoenix in February and at Brainerd in August).

The man working to help Pro Stock teams

Not every Pro Stock team has the personnel to properly prepare and test their setups, and now that the series has gone to silhouette racing for the factory hot rod class, outsider preparation can assist the weekend warriors. To that end, former Gray Motorsports tuner Jason Elkes launched Modern Racing as a preparation facility for Pro Stock teams.

Elkes, whose new venture is located in Mooresville, NC, is a championship-winning tuner and motorsports electronics expert. To advance his new enterprise, he hired Todd Bevis, a 35-year veteran of the sport. Levis has worked at Jerry Haas Race Cars and with Cagnazzi Racing, where he built and tuned Pro Stock chassis for Erica Enders-Stevens, Dave Connolly and Jeg Coughlin Jr.

“I met Todd when I was working as the crew chief at Gray Motorsports,” Elkes acknowledged. “Gray and Cagnazzi merged and Todd was the head of Cagnazzi’s chassis shop. Right away we were a great fit, so I jumped at the opportunity to bring Todd in-house at Modern Racing to provide a full range of chassis and fabrication services.”

Most teams in NHRA’s Top Fuel, Funny Car and Pro Stock classes are en route to Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park for pre-season testing later this week, with the 24-race championship trail beginning February 8-11 on the Auto Club Raceway at Pomona, CA.

 

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