Fiery Finish to LenMar Motorsports ADRL World Finals
V
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
American Drag Racing League
Contact: ADRL Communications
(404) 375-4895 or (636) 272-2375
www.ADRL.us <http://www.adrl.us/>
*Fiery Finish to LenMar Motorsports ADRL World Finals V*
ENNIS, TX (Oct. 24, 2009) — Alex Hossler of Canton, Illinois, won his
career-first National Guard ADRL Pro Extreme event in memorable fashion,
crossing the eighth-mile finish line at the Texas Motorplex with his
1970 Camaro on fire after posting a 3.73-seconds pass at 202.48 miles
per hour to beat Quain Stott in the final round of the LenMar
Motorsports ADRL World Finals V.
Also earning National Guard Minuteman trophies at the final event of the
National Guard ADRL’s year, but the first points-paying opportunity of
the 2010 season were new class champion Khalid Al-Balooshi in Pro
Nitrous, Extreme 10.5 racer Chuck Ulsch, Scott Gray, who also won his
first Pro Extreme Motorcycle championship earlier in the day, and Cary
Goforth with his first official Extreme Pro Stock win. Morgan Benfield
of Virginia Beach, Virginia also won her first Junior Minuteman in the
exhibition Pro Jr. Dragster class.
“How’s that for a spectacular finish?” Hossler asked upon climbing from
his car after stopping on the track where safety crews sprayed the
engine with a fire extinguisher. “It banged the blower right when we
crossed the line, but it lasted just long enough to get the job done.”
Hossler and Stott left almost simultaneously, but when a 3.75 at
205.57-mph pass flashed across Stott’s scoreboard, it translated to a
.021 margin of victory for Hossler, who hails from Canton, Illinois.
The Pro Nitrous final was close, too, but only because Al-Balooshi had
an off-the-pace .191 reaction time attached to a record-setting pass of
3.81 seconds at 196.42 mph that easily eclipsed the 3.98/184.88
combination assembled by veteran Charles Carpenter.
It marked Al-Balooshi’s career-first National Guard ADRL event title,
though earlier in the day, he also won the National Guard ADRL’s
championship-deciding Speedtech Battle for the Belts when Al-Anabi
Racing teammate Burton Auxier was disqualified from the final for
leaving .004 before the green light flashed.
“It is good for the Al-Anabi team,” said Al-Balooshi, who calls Doha,
Qatar, home. “Very exciting to win.”
The World Finals V Flowmaster Extreme 10.5 final offered a measure of
payback for Ulsch, who faced off against Spiro Pappas for the second
time in one day after Pappas stepped up to win the Pro Nitrous Speedtech
Battle for the Belts final. The Clarksville, Maryland-based driver
didn’t miss the opportunity, either, taking a holeshot win in his
supercharged ’68 Camaro over Pappas’ turbocharged 2009 Pontiac GXP entry.
Leaving with a .021 reaction to a .115 in the opposite lane, Ulsch put
together a 3.94 lap at 201.46 mph that beat out the 3.92 at 193.27 that
delivered Pappas a new elapsed time record, but a runner-up finish.
“That feels good! I’m glad I was able to do my job and help my teammates
get the win,” Ulsch declared. “I owed him that one!”
Like Balooshi, Pro Extreme Motorcycle winner Gray, from Ocala, Florida,
doubled up from his earlier Speedtech Battle for the Belts triumph,
running 4.21 at 170.67 mph aboard his ’08 Suzuki to down Lance Hines in
the World Finals V final.
“It still hasn’t really sunk in that it’s happened,” Gray said of his
two-timing win. “After winning the Belt I kind of relaxed because we had
accomplished what we came here to do, which was win the championship,
but maybe that’s what helped me win tonight, too. I wasn’t too uptight
about what was happening.”
The Extreme Pro Stock final came down to a classic Ford versus Chevy
match, with Goforth’s 2008 Cobalt coming out on top over the ’09 Mustang
of Scott Hintz in his National Guard ADRL debut. Goforth, from
Holdenville, Oklahoma, ran low ET of the meet for the class with a 4.06
win at 177.23 mph over 4.151 at 173.65 by Hintz.
“This feels so good,” Goforth said, hoisting the National Guard
Minuteman trophy high after his first official Extreme Pro Stock win,
though he did win last year at Rockingham, North Carolina, when the
class was in its introductory exhibition stage. “This is for my team,
for the guys on my team, who worked so hard to put me here today.”
Televised coverage of the Speedtech Battle for the Belts will air
Sunday, Nov. 8 at 3 p.m. Eastern on the Versus network, with coverage of
the LenMar Motorsports ADRL World Finals V to follow two weeks later on
Sunday, Nov. 22, also at 3 p.m. Eastern on the Versus television network.
PHOTO CUTLINES
ADRL_Ennis_PXfinal.jpg
Pro Extreme -- Alex Hossler (near lane), Chevy Camaro, 3.735, 202.48 def. Quain Stott, Chevy Corvette, 3.754/205.57.
ADRL_Ennis_PNfinal.jpg
Pro Nitrous -- Khalid Al-Balooshi (near lane), Chevy Camaro, 3.815, 196.42 def. Charles Carpenter, Chevy BelAir, 3.985/184.88.
ADRL_Ennis_XTFfinal.jpg
Extreme 10.5 -- Chuck Ulsch (far lane), Chevy Camaro, 3.949, 201.46 def. Spiro Pappas, Pontiac GXP, 3.920/193.27.
ADRL_Ennis_PXMfinal.jpg
Pro Extreme Motorcycle -- Scott Gray (near lane), Suzuki, 4.215, 170.67 def. Lance Hines, Suzuki, 5.782/93.21.
ADRL_Ennis_XPSfinal.jpg
Extreme Pro Stock -- Cary Goforth, Chevy Cobalt, 4.063, 177.23 def. Scott Hintz, Ford Mustang, 4.151/173.65.
ADRL_Ennis_PJDfinal.jpg
Pro Junior Dragster -- Morgan Benfield (far lane), Motivation, 8.008, 80.79 def. Timmy Clifton Jr., Strike Force, foul (early start).
ABOUT LENMAR MOTORSPORTS
LenMar Motorsports is a full-service race car chassis building and
finishing shop in Mansfield, Texas, with everything needed to complete a
new car from pipes to paint. For more information on LenMar Motorsports,
visit www.LenMarMotorsports.com.
ABOUT THE NATIONAL GUARD
The National Guard is the oldest component of the Armed Forces of the
United States and one of the nation’s longest enduring institutions. The
National Guard operates in all 50 states, three territories (Puerto
Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands) and the District of Columbia. For
more information on the National Guard, visit www.NationalGuard.com
<http://www.NationalGuard.com>.
ABOUT THE ADRL
Based in O’Fallon, Missouri, the American Drag Racing League is the
nation’s premier sanctioning body for the sport of eighth-mile drag
racing. The professional categories featured in the ADRL are Extreme Pro
Stock, Pro Extreme Motorcycle, Extreme 10.5, Pro Nitrous, and Pro
Extreme, the quickest doorslammer class in all of drag racing. The 2009
National Guard ADRL series consists of 10 national events run throughout
the United States. For more information on the ADRL, visit www.ADRL.us
<http://www.ADRL.us>.
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