Reviving a Drag Racing Legend
Mopar Motorsports
NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series
O¹Reilly Fall NHRA Nationals
Oct. 10-13, 2002
Texas Motorplex ‹ Ennis, Texas
NHRA Storylines
WEEKEND TELEVISION: (ALL TIMES EASTERN)
QUALIFYING: Sat., Oct. 12; 4:30-6:00 p.m.; ESPN2
ELIMINATIONS: Sun., Oct. 13; 6:30-9:00 p.m.; ESPN2
REPEAT: Tues., Oct. 15; 3:00-5:00 p.m.; ESPN2
Reviving a Drag Racing Legend
Mopar Taking Huge Strides
ENNIS, Texas (Oct. 9, 2002) -- Bob Frey¹s familiar voice echoed over the
Route 66 Raceway speakers. Like always, running down the 16 Pro Stock
qualifiers for the Sept. 29, Craftsman 75th Anniversary NHRA Nationals. But
what he was saying was not familiar.
³And starting third in the DBP Motorsports Dodge Neon R/T - Greg Stanfield,²
Frey boomed. ³The No. 2 qualifier is Allen Johnson with a Dodge Neon R/T;
and your No. 1 qualifier for Mopar, Hemi and Dodge is rookie Gene Wilson.²
Frey noted that Hemi-powered Dodge Neon R/T¹s had taken the top-three
qualifying positions. Add to that John Geyer¹s performance in the famous
ŒMotown Missile¹ Dodge Neon and you have four Hemi-powered vehicles in the
top half of the field. Historically speaking, it¹s a first for Dodge. In
July, six Dodge Neon R/T Pro Stockers grabbed one of 16 qualifying positions
available at Infineon Raceway (Sonoma, Calif.). Also a first for Dodge.
The winds of change blew through the ranks of Mopar at the beginning of the
2000 NHRA season. Without much fanfare, Darrell Alderman made the first
complete pass on the new 500-cubic-inch Pro Stock Hemi engine in the second
round of qualifying and posted a 6.990-second elapsed time at 196.87 mph.
Not an earth-shattering event, but a starting point nonetheless. Even though
Alderman¹s weekend best pass of 6.952 seconds was not enough to crack into
the field, it was the first block in the new Hemi foundation.
³Bringing back the Pro Stock Hemi engine was a big step for us,² said Brett
Fischer, DaimlerChrysler drag racing program manager. ³It got us back to our
roots, back to why Mopar was so popular in the first place. We owned drag
racing. With the new development of the Pro Stock Hemi we wanted to bring
back the legendary name and performance. We went from computer screen to a
national elapsed-time record in 16 months (Memphis, 2000). That was a pretty
stout statement for our company. That legacy is really important to Mopar
and to the Chrysler Group. It¹s something you can¹t buy with marketing, or
just snap your fingers and decide to go out and do it.
³This was built over a long period of time, and it¹s a jewel for our company
to have heritage like that,² Fischer continued. ³We¹re trying to get back to
where we were dominating the sport. It¹s something that our employees are
proud of. We haven¹t been winning here in Pro Stock, and in the fuel classes
for quite some time.²
The Pro Stock Dodge Neon R/T made it¹s well-documented debut during the 2001
Mopar Parts Mile-High Nationals at Bandimere Speedway in Morrison, Colo.
Alderman set the tone for that race as he grabbed the fourth-qualifying
position and quickest elapsed time of the fourth session. Despite losing in
the second round, a seed was planted. The Neon came of age the very next
weekend in Seattle as many speed records were broken and the first all-Mopar
final since 1995 took place.
³When we started the Neon project, which probably took a little longer than
all of us expected, it was done half old school and half new school in terms
of engineering technology,² Fischer noted. ³It started out as a hand-modeled
piece, which we optimized in the wind tunnel. We kept going back and forth
from the full-sized car and developed a pretty slick Pro Stock race car.
³The Neon is what I call a design study,² Fischer added. ³It¹s not an
optimal car. We hadn¹t built a new Pro Stock car in 10 years, and, in
racing, that¹s an eternity. So there are a lot of things that our internal
designers had not kept up on because they hadn¹t designed a Pro Stock car in
so long. Of course, with that being said, things aren¹t going to be
optimized. We really used it (Neon project) as an intermediate step between
the Avenger, we used to run, and the Stratus R/T, which we will be running
next season. The new Stratus will be a lot more efficient and a lot more
optimized for Pro Stock racing than the Neon is. Even though we did a
tremendous job with the Neon, when compared to the Avenger, you just can¹t
expect engineers, that haven¹t been involved in the sport for 10 years, to
go out and design a car that¹s going to be perfect; But it¹s still not
where we want it to be. It has put us on par with the other car
manufacturers, but in racing, or at least our philosophy has been, that you
want to leap frog the competition every chance that you get.²
The Dodge Neon project has had some large measures of success as seen by the
addition of new and more competitive Pro Stock teams. Drivers like Allen
Johnson, Thomas Lee, Greg Stanfield, John Geyer, Mike Corvo, Jr., and Vinny
Barone have all competed with a Dodge Neon R/T and Hemi power this season.
More change is on the way. Mopar engineers have spent the last year and a
half developing the next generation of Pro Stock racer. The new Dodge
Stratus R/T will be introduced to the public just prior to the
season-closing Winternationals at Pomona (Calif.) Raceway, Nov. 7-10.
³What we¹re doing with the Stratus R/T Pro Stock car is taking it a step
further,² Fischer said. ³We¹re doing it absolutely the correct way for a
large company to produce a new race car.²
Fischer also talked about what drag racing means to Mopar.
³Drag racing is very important to Mopar,² Fischer said. ³Drag racing is a
very unique sport. There are a lot of skill sets involved in going down a
quarter mile as quick as possible. It¹s something you can¹t find in Winston
Cup, truck, road racing or Formula One. There are a lot of areas you can
look at that actually help other motorsports because they don¹t focus on
those specific areas. You¹re basically trying to get a car form point A to
point B in the quickest time possible. So when you start breaking it down to
its components throughout the car, you¹re looking at drive line
efficiencies, fluid friction, bearing friction, and all of these very small
parts that can make a big difference because the field are so close. A
couple thousandths of a second can qualify an entire field these days. So if
you can find something in the car, some design or area that you thought
wasn¹t optimized, it could mean a hundredth of a second in a quarter mile.
It¹s a huge accomplishment when you find that.²
NHRA Storylines
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TWO FOR MORGAN? Mopar Parts Dodge Neon R/T driver Larry Morgan is gunning
for the second victory of his career at the Texas Motorplex. The Newark,
Ohio, resident beat Warren Johnson during the 1991 O¹Reilly Fall Nationals.
Morgan is also trying to win his second national event of the 2002 season as
he posted his first victory since 1994 over Greg Anderson at Infineon
Raceway in Sonoma, Calif., earlier this season.
MOVING ON UP. Mopar Pro Stock rookie Gene Wilson will try to capture his
10th, top half of the field qualifying effort of the season at Texas
Motorplex this weekend. The 2001 IHRA Pro Stock World Champion added another
trophy to his case when he collected his first-career NHRA Pro Stock No. 1
qualifier during the Sept. 29 Craftsman 75th Anniversary NHRA Nationals at
Route 66 Raceway in Joliet, Ill.