NHRA NEWS: CARQUEST WINTERNATIONALS ADVANCE PACKAGE
CARQUEST AUTO PARTS NHRA WINTERNATIONALS FACT SHEET
WHAT: 47th annual CARQUEST Auto Parts NHRA Winternationals, the first
of 23 events in the $50 million NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series.
Professional competitors in three categories earn points leading to 2007
NHRA POWERade Series world championships. Sportsman competitors in six
categories earn points leading to 2007 NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series
world championships.
WHERE: Auto Club Raceway at Pomona, Pomona, Calif. Track is located off
I-10 at Fairplex Drive. Go north on Fairplex drive to the Fairplex.
WHEN: Thursday through Sunday, Feb. 8-11
PURSE: Cash and contingency awards of more than $2 million.
SCHEDULE:
THURSDAY, Feb. 8 - Sportsman qualifying and time trials begin at 8:15
a.m.
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFYING SESSION at 2 p.m.
FRIDAY, Feb. 9 - Sportsman qualifying and time trials begin at 8:15 a.m.
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFYING SESSION at 2 p.m.
SATURDAY, Feb. 10 - Sportsman eliminations begin at 8:15 a.m.
PROFESSIONAL QUALIFYING SESSIONS at noon and 3 p.m.
SUNDAY, Feb. 11 - Pre-race ceremonies, 10 a.m.
FINAL ELIMINATIONS begin at 11 a.m.
TELEVISION:
Saturday, Feb. 10, ESPN2 and ESPN2 HD will televise two hours of
qualifying highlights at 10 p.m. (ET).
Sunday, Feb. 11, ESPN2 and ESPN2 HD will telecast NHRA Race Day at 11
a.m. (ET)
Sunday, Feb. 11, ESPN2 and ESPN2 HD will televise three hours of final
eliminations at 8 p.m. (ET).
SATELLITE (Analog):
Friday, Feb. 9, 10-10:30 p.m. (ET), Galaxy 10R / Transponder 23K (
Downlink frequency: 12160 MHz, vertical)
Saturday, Feb. 10, 10-10:30 p.m. (ET), Galaxy 10R / Transponder 22K
(Downlink frequency: 12144 MHz, horizontal)
Sunday, Feb. 11, 11:30-Midnight (ET), Galaxy 10R / Transponder 23K (
Downlink frequency: 12160 MHz, vertical)
2006 EVENT WINNERS: Melanie Troxel, Top Fuel; Robert Hight, Funny Car;
Greg Anderson, Pro Stock.
TRACK RECORDS:
Top Fuel - 4.428 seconds by Tony Schumacher, Nov. '06; 334.65 mph by
Schumacher, Feb. '05.
Funny Car - 4.662 seconds by Jack Beckman, Nov. '06; 333.66 mph by
Beckman, Nov. '06.
Pro Stock - 6.634 seconds by Jason Line, Nov. '06; 208.68 mph by Line,
Nov. '06.
NATIONAL RECORDS:
Top Fuel - 4.428 seconds (Nov. '06, Pomona, Calif.) and 336.15 mph (May
'05, Columbus, Ohio) by Tony Schumacher.
Funny Car - 4.662 seconds and 333.66 mph (Nov. '06, Pomona, Calif.) by
Jack Beckman.
Pro Stock - 6.558 seconds and 209.75 mph (Oct. '06, Richmond, Va.) by
Jason Line.
TICKETS: For tickets call the NHRA, (800) 884-NHRA (6472). Tickets also
available at Ticketmaster or at nhra.com
GENERAL ADMISSION (includes pit pass) -Thursday: Adult, $22; Junior
(6-12 years), $10; Friday: Adult, $29; Junior (6-12 years), $10.
Saturday: Adult, $49; Junior (6-12 years), $10. Sunday: Adult, $50;
Junior (6-12 years) $12. Children (5 years-under), free with paying
adult in general admission and pit access areas each day.
RESERVED SEATS (includes pit pass) - Friday: Adult, $39; Junior (6-12
years), $20; Child (5 years-under), $10. Saturday: Adult, $59; Junior
(6-12 years), $22; Child (5 years and under), $12. Sunday: Adult, $62;
Junior (6-12 years), $24; Child (5 years and under), $14.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: NHRA Communications Dept., (626) 914-4761
NHRA Media Center Online: http://media.nhra.com
NHRA READY TO RAISE CURTAIN ON 2007 POWERADE SERIES SEASON
POMONA, Calif. - The NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series has
enjoyed enormous success over the past couple of years with the dramatic
points races of 2005 and 2006 and the emergence of charismatic stars
like Melanie Troxel and J.R. Todd, so it could hardly be blamed if it
closed ranks and played its hand conservatively.
But far from staying pat, the NHRA POWERade Series has just
navigated an exciting and certainly newsworthy offseason.
From the announcement that Ashley Force was turning pro - a story
that was deemed compelling enough to be featured prominently on the most
viewed front page on the internet (Yahoo) - to the much-talked about and
much-anticipated debut of the Countdown to the Championship playoff
system, the NHRA POWERade Series dominated headlines during a typically
dark period in auto racing. And these are merely two of the many
storylines that merit a closer look this season.
The curtain will officially rise Feb. 8-11 as the $50 million NHRA
POWERade Series embarks on its 2007 campaign with the season-opening
CARQUEST Auto Parts NHRA Winternationals at Auto Club Raceway at Pomona.
The event, one of the most anticipated season-openers in POWERade Series
history, will be televised by longtime NHRA partner ESPN2 with
qualifying scheduled for 10 p.m. ET on Saturday and final eliminations
scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. ET on Sunday.
"This has been such a crazy couple of weeks with the announcement
I was turning pro and all the media and being No. 1 on the Yahoo
search," said Ashley Force, who has had some distinct highs (a
career-best 4.72-second pass in testing on Jan. 23) and lows (a fiery
engine explosion Jan. 29 that she emerged safely from) in testing. "I'm
just so glad that NHRA has this relationship with ESPN so that new and
die-hard NHRA fans can follow my progress this season along with all of
the other great stories in the POWERade Series."
As much anticipation as there is for Ashley's debut in general,
the buzz is really focused on that first side-by-side race with her
father, 14-time POWERade Series world champion and NHRA icon John Force,
who will for the first time have the challenge of wearing the hat of
competitor against his daughter.
Up to now, John has shifted between the role of team owner, mentor
and father in bringing along his 24-year old daughter and he was 100
percent the latter when he witnessed her Castrol GTX/Auto Club Ford
Mustang erupt in flames during testing at Firebird International Raceway
in Phoenix Jan. 29.
"She had a nasty fire. She said, 'Dad, it exploded. I couldn't see
anything.' She said, 'I triggered my bottles,' but it blew her
windshield open. She got a little bit of smoke. She was gasping to
breathe and I felt so bad. It was scary for me," said John, who then
illustrated the genetic link between father and daughter. "But she was
like, 'How long do you think it will take to fix it?' She was like an
hour and a half later back in the staging lanes running again."
While it'd be easy to think Ashley has had the NHRA equivalent of
a silver spoon, she has paid her dues with more than a half decade of
experience in Super Comp and Top Alcohol dragsters leading up to her pro
debut this season and none other than four-time world champion Tony
Schumacher, who famously snatched the POWERade Top Fuel world
championship away from Doug Kalitta on the final run of the 2006 season,
said as much.
"She, in my opinion, probably paid more dues than most of the
people out there that have had a chance to drive a fuel car," said
Schumacher, who's seeking an NHRA record fourth straight POWERade Top
Fuel world championship this season. "She's been in Super Comp and
Alcohol for years and driven Funny Cars for a few years testing and
testing. That's pretty cool. Who has really gone through that much? So
by the time it's time for her (to make her pro debut ) in Pomona, to
step off the clutch, whoever is on the other side better respect the
fact that she may give them a whoopin'."
Joining Ashley in the crowded and incredibly competitive Funny Car
class is six-time POWERade world champion Kenny Bernstein, who at the
age of 62 is coming out of retirement. When you consider the four Funny
Cars of John Force Racing (John, Ashley, Eric Medlen and Robert Hight),
the three in the Don Schumacher stable (Ron Capps, Jack Beckman and Gary
Scelzi), the two Pedregons (Cruz and Tony), the two CSK cars (Del
Worsham and Jeff Arend) and Don "Snake" Prudhomme's Skoal entry driven
by Tommy Johnson Jr., it's fair to say this will be as cutthroat as it
gets when summer rolls around and there's 11-12 or more cars fighting
for the top eight spots in the Countdown.
The Countdown, in its simplest form, breaks the season down into
three distinct tiers: a 17-race "regular season" that reduces the field
of contending drivers to 8, a 4-race "first-round playoff" that reduces
the field of contending drivers to 4, and finally a 2-race
"championship" that identifies the 2007 POWERade Series world champions.
So as races 15, 16, and 17 approach, the game of musical chairs
around the eighth spot in the standings will become awfully intense.
Once the eight contenders are set after the 17th event, the top
eight drivers will have their points reset with the first place driver
being rewarded in the form of a 70-point - or nearly four-round -
advantage over the eighth-place driver. The top driver will be given
2,070 points and the other seven drivers will receive 10 fewer points
with eighth-place receiving 2,000.
The same game of musical chairs will begin again as these top
eight drivers in each class compete in four full-field races - events
18-21 on the POWERade Series schedule - with only the top four drivers
after this four-race "playoff" advancing to the championship round.
These top four drivers will again have their points reset - 3,030
to first, 3,020 to second, 3,010 to third and 3,000 to fourth - and
they'll compete against full fields in Las Vegas and Pomona on back to
back weekends in late October/early November to determine the 2007
POWERade Series world champions.
The favorite in Top Fuel would have to be Tony Schumacher, but
Brandon Bernstein, 2006 Auto Club Road to the Future winner J.R. Todd,
Melanie Troxel and newcomer to the class Whit Bazemore will certainly
have something to say about that.
In Pro Stock, it'd be hard to bet against either of the Summit
Racing Equipment Pontiac GTOs driven by three-time POWERade Series world
champion Greg Anderson and 2006 POWERade Series world champion Jason
Line. A number of Pro Stock drivers have shown flashes the past couple
of years, including Kurt Johnson and Dave Connolly, but none has shown
the consistency needed to overtake Anderson or Line.
SCHEDULE: Professional qualifying sessions are scheduled for 2
p.m. on Feb. 8 and Feb. 9, and Noon and 3 p.m. on Feb. 10. Pre-race
ceremonies will begin at 10 a.m. on Feb. 11, followed by the first round
of professional eliminations at 11 a.m.
TICKETS: For tickets, call the NHRA, at (800) 884-NHRA (6472).
Tickets also are available at Ticketmaster, ticketmaster.com, and
nhra.com
ON TV: On Saturday, Feb. 10, ESPN2 and ESPN2 HD will televise two
hours of qualifying at 10 p.m. (ET). On Sunday, Feb. 11, ESPN2 and ESPN2
HD will broadcast NHRA Race Day, a 30-minute pre-race show, at 11 a.m.
(ET) and televise three hours of eliminations at 8 p.m. (ET).
ON THE WEB: Quick access to NHRA media relations department press
releases, electronic images and other information is available on the
Internet at http://media.nhra.com.
2007 POWERADE COUNTDOWN TO THE CHAMPIONSHIP FACT SHEET
WHAT: The NHRA POWERade Series' new playoff system, announced in August
2006 and debuting in 2007.
WHEN: The Countdown is in play during the entire season, with three
distinct tiers in which the field of eligible drivers in each pro
category is reduced to eight, then four and finally one champion.
WHERE: The Countdown can be followed in person at any one of the 21 NHRA
POWERade Series tracks across the country, from Southern California to
New York and virtually everywhere in between. And all 23 races (Las
Vegas and Pomona host two events each) can be seen on ESPN2 and ESPN2
HD, which telecasts all of the NHRA POWERade Series races in high
definition to more than 91 million households.
HOW IT WORKS:
The Countdown is composed of three distinct tiers called the Countdown
to 8, the Countdown to 4 and the Countdown to 1.
* Countdown to 8 is essentially a 17-race "regular season" in which the
full-field of drivers in each pro category is reduced to eight who
remain eligible for the 2007 POWERade Series world championship. These
top eight drivers in each class will have their points adjusted in
10-point increments with 2,070 to first place and 2,000 to eighth place.
The "regular season" will begin at the CARQUEST Auto Parts
Winternationals Feb. 8-11 in Pomona and end at the Toyo Tires Nationals
Aug. 16-19 in Reading, Pa.
* Countdown to 4 is a four-race "first-round playoff" in which the field
of eight remaining drivers eligible for the championship is reduced to
four. These top four drivers in each class will have their points
adjusted so there are only 30 points separating first from fourth with
3,030 for first and 3,000 for eighth. The "first-round playoffs" will
begin at the Mac Tools U.S. Nationals Aug. 29-Sept. 3 in Indianapolis
and end at the Torco Racing Fuels Nationals Oct. 5-7 in Richmond, Va.
* Countdown to 1 is a two-race "championship" in which the field of four
remaining drivers eligible for the championship is reduced to 1, the
POWERade Series world champion. The two races to crown the champion are
the ACDelco Las Vegas Nationals Oct. 25-28 in Las Vegas and the Auto
Club Finals Nov. 1-4 in Pomona.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
* The Countdown to the Championship will allow more drivers than ever
before to legitimately compete for an NHRA POWERade Series world
championship.
* The final six events will include full fields in a traditional
elimination format.
* The average margin of victory over the past seven years (2000-06) in
the NHRA POWERade Series' three classes that run full 23-race schedules
has been: Top Fuel, 256.5; Funny Car, 221.3; and Pro Stock, 378.7.
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