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NHRA: Bazemore #1 on Friday in Seattle

29 July 2000


For the second time in as many races, Whit Bazemore and the Kendall Motor 
Oil/Matco Tools Camaro Z28 Racing Team broke the elapsed time track record in 
qualifying for an NHRA national event.  In this instance, it came during 
Friday's evening session for the Prolong Super Lubricants Northwest 
Nationals.   Running in the right lane, Bazemore blasted down the Seattle 
International Raceway in 4.875 seconds with a top speed of 306. 81 mph, 
easily eclipsing the previous mark of 4.941 seconds set by archrival John 
Force two years ago. What made Bazemore's achievement even more remarkable is 
that no other Funny Car competitor came within seven hundredths of a second 
of his time.  Despite this impressive performance, Bazemore explained that 
his run could have been even better. 

"To get that result is obviously a tremendous effort by the Kendall/Matco 
Camaro team.  But that run was far from perfect for a number of reasons.  
First, in the late afternoon here, the sun comes right into your face.  With 
the way these cars are, you can't see very well out the front under those 
conditions, making it very hard to pick out the groove, the wall or the 
cones.  In addition, this is a very challenging track, particularly in the 
right lane, which makes it very important to stay in the groove, which as I 
explained, I couldn't really see. So naturally, you also have to be a little 
lucky.

"Under these circumstances, I believe you have to have a pre-conceived idea 
of how your run is going to unfold, which is precisely what I did.  I drove 
it to the right a little bit until I realized we were too far over and maybe 
out of the groove, so I brought it back to the left.  At that point, it hit 
the bumps, which unloaded the suspension,  moving it farther to the left than 
I wanted, so I had to once again bring it back into the groove.  Of course, 
all this happens in 4.8 seconds and then you're at the finish line.

"I expected some of the obvious teams such as Force and Toliver to get closer 
to us than they did.  However, you can never count those guys out.  Tomorrow 
is a different day, and if there is cloud cover as often seems to happen when 
we're here in Seattle, that '.87 could be in jeopardy.  But the way we see 
it, if someone else can improve on that mark, so can we."