厕所强奸

厕所强奸 - National Hot Rod Association

A pair of near misses

The 厕所强奸 Carolina Nationals had plenty of 厕所强奸 Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series sportsman racing drama, including near doubles by John Labbous Jr. and Todd Ewing and an epic Comp final between championship contenders.
20 Sep 2017
Kevin McKenna, 厕所强奸 National Dragster Senior Editor
The Sports Report
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bones2.jpgI spend a fair amount of time in this column discussing and dissecting doubles since it seems like someone in the 厕所强奸 Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series wins two classes, or at least comes very close to it, at almost every event. The reality is that a national event double is still a rare commodity. In more than 60 years, the feat has only been achieved 38 times by 24 different drivers. At last weekend鈥檚 厕所强奸 Carolina Nationals, two drivers nearly doubled, but in the end, each of them had to settle for a split.

Not surprisingly, John Labbous Jr., was one of the drivers in line for a double after driving to the final rounds in both Super Comp and Super Gas. That is an impressive feat in itself, but it becomes even more remarkable when one remembers that Labbous scored his first career听double at zMax Dragway in April, when he won in both Super Comp and Super Gas. Five months later, Labbous hasn鈥檛 lost a bit of momentum. He once again drove to the final in Super Comp and Super Gas. He won the Super Comp title easily when Amanda Boicesco encountered some sort of an issue, possibly a malfunctioning throttle stop, and ran 7.97, nearly a second under the index. Labbous then raced Dean Mathauser for the Super Gas title and suffered his first loss in a close听9.882 to 9.895 double breakout. All told, Labbous compiled an amazing 23-1 record in elimination rounds at zMax Dragway during the 2017 season, but it鈥檚 the one loss that he鈥檒l remember most.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be the guy who complains after winning a race; that鈥檚 not my style, but I鈥檇 like to have that one [Super Gas final] back,鈥 Labbous said. 鈥淚 knew that it was faster out and I knew that I was probably not going to take the finish line and be safe, but I did it anyway. Losing a race is one thing, but losing when you have a plan and don鈥檛 execute it; that鈥檚 what bothers me the most. Credit to [Mathauser], he did a nice job, but that was a winnable round.

鈥淭his also didn鈥檛 do much to help my final-round record,鈥 said Labbous, who is now 6-8 in national event finals. 鈥淚 was hoping to get that to at least the .500 mark, but that will have to wait now. I don鈥檛 want to be the guy who gets to the final and can鈥檛 get the job done.鈥

bones3.jpgLabbous has had a monster season that now includes nine wins and three runner-up finishes spread across both classes. Although the zMax event did not count for points, Labbous remains the national points leader in Super Comp and Super Gas, although he鈥檚 far from guaranteed to win either of them. In Super Comp, four-time champion Gary Stinnett is just 15听points back, but Stinnett can only claim points at one more national event. In order to overtake Labbous, he must reach the final round. Austin Williams is also in the mix with several events left to claim.

Division 6 racer Chris Cannon has won four Lucas Oil Series events this season and is in a position to challenge Labbous for the Super Gas title. Having attended just two national events, Cannon has four more shots to improve his score. He鈥檚 likely to attend the last three races in Dallas, Las Vegas, and Pomona.

鈥淲e鈥檒l see,鈥 he said cautiously. 鈥淚鈥檓 done earning points, so all I can do now is block. If I鈥檓 still in the running for this, I鈥檒l go out west. It鈥檚 great to be the leader, but I鈥檓 not about to get too excited about it. I might not win either of them.鈥

bones4.jpgWhile Labbous was busy nearly running the table in the Super classes, Todd 鈥淏ones鈥 Ewing was doing the same in Top Dragster and Top Sportsman. Ewing entered the Charlotte race with six national event wins, five in Super Comp and another in Super Stock. He drove his six-second Camaro to the Top Sportsman final, where he broke out by a thousandth of a second against past Division 3 champ Jerry Albert. For his part, Albert did a great job with a .024 light and a perfect 6.890 on his 6.89 dial.

Ewing later won the Top Dragster title when he beat Barry Brown in the final. After a perfect .000 light in the semifinals, Ewing, who was driving a dragster owned by Top Fuel champ Shawn Langdon, used a .008 to stop Brown. After numerous delays, the Top Dragster and Top Sportsman finals were the last two runs of the day.

鈥淚 was a little mad after I lost the Top Sportsman final,鈥 Ewing said. 鈥淚 knew it was quicker out there and I didn鈥檛 kill enough. He ran right on the dial but I still had a hundredth of a second to work with. I took eleven [thousandths] down there and I needed to take ten or less. I鈥檓 just glad I got it done in the dragster."听

The best of the rest: The battle for the 2017 Lucas Oil Comp championship figures to be a two-horse race between former champions David Rampy and Frank Aragona Jr. and they met in the zMax final. Aragona managed to hold on for his fifth win of the season after driving his E/DA to a (-.532) 7.388 to beat Rampy鈥檚 slowing (-.376) 7.354. Despite the loss, Rampy remains the points leader, although Aragona has closed to within 12 points with a national and a divisional event left to claim. Rampy, who already has听five wins on the season in Comp, has two divisional races left to improve his score.

bones5a.jpgFirst-time finalist Nick Chiles accomplished a previously unheard-of feat when he handed former world champ Byron Worner his first loss in a Super Stock final. Worner, previously 5-0 with the money on the line, lost the double-breakout battle when he ran .012-second under his dial. Chiles was just .008听under his dial behind the wheel of his SS/BS Cobalt. In the semifinal round, Chiles was perfect on the starting line with a .000 light in his heads-up SS/BS battle against John DiBartolomeo鈥檚 Camaro. Chiles had a second .000 light in his third-round win over Epping champ Marty Rinehart.

There was also a first-time winner in Stock after Kenneth Stott drove past Mickey Whaley in an all-Camaro final. Stott grabbed a three-hundredths advantage at the start and held on to win with an 11.673 on his 11.66 dial. Whaley, seeking his sixth national event title, broke out by two-thousandths with a 10.688. Stott had a tough draw in the semifinals when he raced against reigning national champ Jeff Strickland while Whaley also had his work cut out for him against four-time national event champ Adam Davis.