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NHRA Keeps Tracks Open to the Public

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It has been more than 50 years since Wally Parks formed the National Hot Rod Assn., its main premise to get hot rodders off the streets and into a controlled environment where they could indulge their “me against you” racing urges without endangering others.

The Glendora-based NHRA has grown into the world’s largest motorsports sanctioning body, with 80,000 members, 130 member tracks and a $50-million racing series, but it still holds true to its original plan of providing racing space for would-be street rodders.

Three NHRA sanctioned drag strips in Southern California--California Speedway in Fontana, Irwindale Speedway and Los Angeles County Raceway in Palmdale--have scheduled times for inexpensive street-legal “run what you brung” racing.

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“We had heard repeatedly about the increase in drag racing on our city streets and the dangers posed by this,” said Bill Miller, California Speedway president. “A number of recent traffic fatalities have been linked to illegal drag racing on city streets. We hope by giving people a designated time and place, we can get them off the streets.”

The three tracks offer a variety of conditions.

California Speedway has a quarter-mile strip with a low limit of 10 seconds elapsed time, which equates to about 135 mph in the fastest cars.

Irwindale is an eighth-mile, also with speed limits. LACR is a quarter-mile facility where cars range from clunkers seen on the freeways to jet dragsters that can hit 314 mph.

The LACR has what it calls “grudge racing” Wednesday and Friday nights. Irwindale has “test and tune nights” on Thursdays. Racing at Fontana is on specified weekends, all in the daytime. The next one is July 13-14.

“It’s surprising, and not something we planned, but American muscle cars seem to dominate on Saturdays, with mostly imports on Sunday,” said Dennis Bickmeier of the California Speedway staff. “We’ve been getting 350-400 cars a day and about 1,000 spectators.”

Street-legal racing, as prescribed by the NHRA, “features time trials and grudge racing only, which ensures each participant the opportunity for a maximum number of passes down the drag strip.”

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Some street-legal events require mufflers and tires approved by the Department of Transportation, whereas others permit open exhausts and/or drag slicks. All have strict safety rules. For instance, at Fontana and Palmdale, a helmet is mandatory if a vehicle is faster than 13.99 seconds for the quarter-mile, at Irwindale if under 8.6 seconds for the eighth-mile.

Costs are minimal, $20 to race and $10 to watch at Fontana and Irwindale, $15 to race and $5 to watch at Palmdale.

“We had a lot of skeptics when we announced our eighth-mile drag strip, people saying it would never work, but the response has been overwhelming,” said Doug Stokes, Irwindale spokesman. “The other night, there were 85 cars in line, waiting for their chance to run the 660 feet as fast as their car would go, and there were another 120 cars in the pits.

“You never know where the racers come from. Last Thursday, a woman in her 40s showed up with a new Saturn--still had the sticker on--and she made two runs. She said when she was a girl, her brothers raced at the old Irwindale track but they wouldn’t let her race so when she heard about our place, she came out, took two runs, and said she had satisfied her dream of drag racing.”

Once a month, on a Sunday, Irwindale holds a competition that is part of the Summit Racing Series, in which drivers in several classes accumulate points toward the national finals, Oct. 10-13, at the Top Gun Raceway in Fallon, Nev. Team Irwindale will be represented by 48 vehicles, four alternates and eight high school students in the Fallon runoffs.

The next Summit series racing is scheduled July 21.

The LACR has weekend racing for clubs or professionals through December. Many NHRA Powerade series competitors test on the Palmdale strip.

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The Irwindale and Palmdale tracks also have junior drag racing programs once a month for drivers from 8 to 17 in one-half scale dragsters.

Details: California Speedway, (909) 429-5200; Irwindale Speedway, (626) 358-1100; Los Angeles County Raceway, (661) 533-2224.

Back to Daytona

Last year at this time, Dale Earnhardt Jr., in his first return to the Daytona track where his father had been killed five months earlier, won the Pepsi 400, one of the most dramatic races in NASCAR Winston Cup history.

“The team will never forget last year’s win,” Earnhardt said. “We had so much on our minds, and to go out and win like we did was a great help to the whole team, and the entire DEI organization too.”

Michael Waltrip, his Dale Earnhardt Inc. teammate, finished second.

“We’re having a poor season right now, but it’s nothing like the nightmare we all went through last year,” Earnhardt said. “To win again [Saturday night] would launch us into the second half of the season, just like last year’s win did. And we’ll have a baseball-theme paint job again.”

Earnhardt’s No. 8 carried a special paint scheme celebrating baseball’s All-Star game last year. Budweiser, his sponsor and the official beer of Major League Baseball and NASCAR, as well, has decided to celebrate Tuesday’s game in the same way.

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The Pepsi 400 will be the first of 20 consecutive weekends of racing for Winston Cup teams.

Perris Auto Speedway

Dwarf cars, scaled down versions of 1930s and 1940s coupes, will run their U.S. Nationals tonight and Saturday night on Perris’ half-mile clay oval. Close to 150 of them are expected, with Jim Scribellito of El Cajon the defending champion. Also on the program will be lightning sprints, mini versions of the popular World of Outlaws winged sprint cars. Both the dwarfs and lightnings are powered by motorcycle engines.

Heats tonight will set the fields of Saturday night’s 20-lap championship events.

Track president Don Kazarian announced a record purse of $100,830 for the Budweiser-Temecula Valley Pipe and Supply-Barrett Homes Oval Nationals on Oct. 31-Nov. 1-2. The winner’s payout of $30,000 will be one of the largest in non-winged sprint car history. More than 90 cars are expected.

Irwindale Speedway

After playing to a turn-away crowd of more than 6,500 last week, the NASCAR super late models will return Saturday night for a 75-lap main event, plus shorter main events for late models, American race trucks and legend cars.

Saturday night will also mark the beginning of Irwindale’s “Christmas in July” celebration in which the track will collect toys donated to the L.A. County Fire Fighters and the L.A. County Department of Children and Family Services’ annual “Spark of Love” program. Every fan bringing a new, unwrapped toy of $15 value or more will receive a $5 gift certificate good for admission or use at the track’s concession booths.

Last Laps

Motorcycle road-racing champion Eddie Lawson and the late Dale Earnhardt are the latest inductees into the Motorsports Hall of Fame in Novi, Mich. Others selected in the hall’s 14th year include two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Gordon Johncock, drag racer Eddie Hill, road racer Brian Redman, and posthumously, engine builder Fred Offenhauser, racing pioneer Gaston Chevrolet and stunt pilot Paul Mantz.

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Ventura Raceway, Orange Show Speedway in San Bernardino and Costa Mesa Speedway will all be dark this weekend.

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(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)

This Week

*--* Winston Cup, Pepsi 400

*--*

When: Saturday (Channel 11, 4 p.m.).

Where: Daytona International Speedway (tri-oval, 2.5 miles, 31 degrees banking in turns); Daytona Beach, Fla.

Race distance: 400 miles, 160 laps.

2001 winner: Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Next race: Tropicana 400, July 14, Joliet, Ill.

*--* Busch Grand National, GNC Live Well/Stacker2 250

*--*

When: Today, race (FX, 5 p.m.).

Where: Daytona International Speedway.

Race distance: 250 miles, 100 laps.

2001 winner: Inaugural race.

Next race: Hills Brothers Coffee 300, July 13, Joliet, Ill.

*--* Craftsman Trucks, O’Reilly Auto Parts 250

*--*

When: Today, qualifying, 1 p.m.; Saturday, race (ESPN, 10 a.m.).

Where: Kansas Speedway (tri-oval, 1.5 miles, 15 degrees banking in turns); Kansas City, Kan.

Race distance: 250.5 miles, 167 laps.

2001 winner: Ricky Hendrick.

Next race: Kroger 225, July 13, Sparta, Ky.

*--* CART, Molson Indy

*--*

When: Today, qualifying, (Speed Channel, 11 a.m.); Saturday, qualifying (Speed Channel, 10:30 a.m.); Sunday, race (Ch. 2, 10:30 a.m.).

Where: Toronto street circuit (temporary road course, 1.755 miles, 13 turns).

Race distance: 166.725 miles, 95 laps.

2001 winner: Michael Andretti.

Next race: Marconi Grand Prix, July 14, Cleveland.

*--* Formula One, British Grand Prix

*--*

When: Saturday, qualifying (Speed Channel, 5 a.m.); Sunday, race (Speed Channel, 4:30 a.m.).

Where: Silverstone Circuit (road course, 3.196 miles, 14 turns); Silverstone, England.

Race distance: 191.76 miles, 60 laps.

2001 winner: Mika Hakkinen.

Next race: French Grand Prix, July 21, Magny-Cours.

*--* IRL, Ameristar Casino Indy 200

*--*

When: Saturday, qualifying, 1:30 p.m.; Sunday, race (Channel 7, 10 a.m.).

Where: Kansas Speedway (tri-oval 1.5 miles, 15 degrees banking in turns).

Race distance: 300 miles, 200 laps.

2001 winner: Eddie Cheever Jr.

Next race: Firestone Indy 200, July 20, Gladeville, Tenn.

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