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Coughlin has fourth world title in the crosshairs (NHRA/JEGS)

Coughlin has fourth world title in the  crosshairs

DELAWARE, Ohio (Oct. 18) -- The POWERade Drag  Racing Series is entering an 
unprecedented, pressure-packed stretch of two races  that ultimately will 
decide all four NHRA champions. The newly-implemented  Countdown to the 
Championship has pared the field of eligible racers to the top  eight and then the top 
four, who will now race for the title over the final two  events of the season 
in Las Vegas and Pomona, Calif.

With so much money  and prestige on the line over consecutive weekends, the 
feelings of stress and  anxiety have never been higher in 56 years of NHRA 
competition, which suits Pro  Stock driver Jeg Coughlin just fine. In 18 years of 
drag racing, the 37-year-old  Coughlin has won three world titles and 50 
national events. 

Over that  time Coughlin has developed a well-deserved reputation as one of 
the most  unflappable racers in the history of straight-line competition. That 
coolness  should serve him well in the days to come.

"I think it will all come down  to who performs the best over these last 
eight rounds of racing," Coughlin said.  "The pressure is on the drivers. I look 
at the four of us in this final group  and between us we've won 19 of the first 
21 races. That tells me our cars are  pretty doggone similar and we're all 
making about the same horsepower. The  difference could come down to which one 
of us performs flawlessly when the  helmets go on."

A fan poll on NHRA.com has Coughlin's teammate Dave  Connolly as the runaway 
favorite to win the 2007 title and with good reason.  Connolly has won eight 
races this year, including the last five in a  row.

"According to that poll we might as well call the engraver and put  him to 
work right now," Coughlin said. "Fortunately, we don't race each other on  the 
internet. I agree it's awfully hard to argue against Dave being the  favorite. 
He's got all the tools and he's on a great run at the moment. I also  look at 
Greg Anderson and see a guy that's been on a roll for five years. Allen  
Johnson also is there with something to prove.

"The thing is, with just  two races to decide the winner it can come down to 
something crazy happening. I  mean, look at the last race in Richmond. Greg 
pulls up to the line in Round 1  and his car breaks. Just like that he's done 
for the day. Stuff like that  happens and if it happens in the next two weeks, 
you're done. 

"It's  going to come down to Pomona and it will probably go right down to the 
final  round on Sunday. The Finals will have a giant exclamation point this 
year,  that's for sure."

Coughlin's three championships have come in a variety  of scenarios. His 
first, the 1992 Super Gas title, was earned under the intense  format of sportsman 
racing where competitors count points from both divisional  and national 
events and often must win five, six, or seven rounds on race day to  earn the 
trophy. His second in 2000, his first in Pro Stock, was a runaway as he  won six 
of the first seven races to start a wire-to-wire run that ended with 10  wins 
by the end of the year. His most recent, in 2002, was a mad scramble that  
featured Coughlin needing to claim eight of the last 12 events to win it  all.

Now he's trying to get it done again with the Countdown to the  Championship, 
which has placed a huge emphasis on making each of the first two  cutoffs 
just to have a chance at the championship.

"I've heard the  grumblings but I personally enjoy the format quite a bit," 
Coughlin said. "It's  certainly more of what the mass sports audience is used 
to seeing. Upsets do  happen in sports. The best college basketball team in the 
country can lose in  the first round of the NCAA tourney and be done just 
like that. It adds an  element of excitement we haven't always had at the end of 
the season, especially  in Pro Stock.

"We're third in the points right now, which is right where  we should be if 
you go off statistics. But we still had to fight to make the  final four. There 
was some pressure there to be sure.

"The bottom line is  this -- if you want to win the championship, you have to 
win races and beat the  guy in the other lane, especially at crucial times. 
That's the way it's always  been. If you can't handle the pressure or you don't 
like this format, then don't  race. Me personally, I'll take my chances. I 
want to win another  title."



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