Pro Mod is tougher than it appears...
The biggest lesson I've learned in the past few years of downtime is to fully appreciate how much it takes to build/race/maintain a racecar at this level of competition. The costs, the devotion, the hard work, and the risks are just mind-blowing. And it can all be gone in an instant.
Nowhere does logic pay off in this sport... you build a costly car that runs for mere seconds, you race for a purse that more often than not will never pay back the expenses, and even the most skilled driver gambles that a split second will not destroy all that hard work, or result in injury or worse.
This year at the NHRA Gateway race in St. Louis, a seasoned Fuel driver Melanie Troxel walked away from a crash in Raymond Commisso's 5.8-second Pro Modified entry, an incident she attributed to her "inexperience. I just didn't have enough laps." She went on to say "these cars are a handful," a sentiment that Rick Stivers would probably agree with given his own spectacular crash that same weekend in the Get Screened America Pro Mod Challenge at the O'Reilly NHRA Midwest Nationals.His 2006 Stratus hit the wall and flipped -- what Stivers described as "all hell [breaking] loose - literally." Both incidents illustrate that in a class of promods with tremendous power (Troxel's car put out 2,500 hp), crashes are often simply beyond the driver's control. Both Troxel and Stivers were wearing their seat belts and are lucky; their injuries could have and probably should have been severe.
Not surprisingly, the major factors in this class are the inherent danger, the expense of repairs, and how attractive these high class machines are to thieves. So what makes it worth all the risk?
The remark that I hear across the board is that Pro Mod is the most difficult class to navigate. The cars make a ton of power, and don't have near the downforce of their bigger nitro brothers. They are a handful to drive, but they are the fastest true doorslammers in existance. Several nitro drivers such as Mike Ashley, Scotty Cannon, Matt Hagan and others have gotten their starts in Pro Mod. And several nitro pilots have also learned much like Melanie how much these cars are underestimated.
With cars now reaching 250mph with ease, these cars continue to put on a wild, fun-filled show that remains unrecognized by NHRA as a professional class. It only takes a quick look to the stands during Pro Mod to see that it is a class the fans really enjoy, a point further proven by the ADRL's sell out successes outside NHRA confines. Speculation behind why the NHRA refuses to grant professional class status includes complications from the Pro Stock truck lawsuit, and competition to their own pro stock class, but when will the NHRA wise up and see what a fan pleaser it has in Pro Modified?










Good point. I would much rather watch a Pro-mod race run (1/4 mile) than watch top fuel run 1000 feet.
They are extremely dangerous. Last year we lost our friend and fellow racer Steve Engel from a Pro Mod crash at Indy. It's been hard on his wife and sons, but they themselves are back out there racing. My hubby and I bracket race at the same tracks they do.
Yes, Pro Mod racing is dangerous, but I would love to do it if given the chance. I think most racers would love to give it a try.
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8/06/2009 1:59 PM
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