A real Thrill ride, plus more flyin' Hawaiian
Eddie Hill won the 1988 Supernationals in front of his home-state fans in Houston, and while it certainly wasn't easy, it was very thrilling. |
What if Bobby Thompson had run out of baseball bats before clobbering the home run that let "The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant!"? What if Franco Harris' jar of stickum was empty before "The Immaculate Reception"? What if Mike Eruzione was still on the bench looking for tape for his hockey stick instead of on the ice to score the decisive goal against the Soviet Union in Team USA's 1980 Olympics "Miracle On Ice"?
And what if Earl Whiting hadn't been there for Eddie "the Thrill" Hill at the 1988 Supernationals?
Okay, maybe that's stretching things a bit, but if "the likable logger" hadn’t loaned Hill a supercharger to continue at the event, Hill never would have staged one of the all-time great comebacks that was topped by one of the all-time great runs in Top Fuel history.
Two days from now, I'll be winging eastward again, this time on a relatively short hop to Houston, leaving again at 6 a.m. and flying into the pink morning of the rising sun en route to Houston Raceway Park and the O'Reilly NHRAÌýSpring Nationals presented by Pennzoil, returning to the scene of that historic race for the first time in more than 15 years, and I'm really looking forward to it.
I'll never forget my first trip there, at the end of the 1988 season for that inaugural Supernationals. In Thursday qualifying, Gene Snow assured himself – and the event – a place in NHRA history when he zoomed to a 4.997-second clocking, the first sub-five-second pass at an NHRA event; Hill, of course, had run the sport's first (and only other) four-second pass at an IHRA event in April. But, much like Mike Snively had run the first five-second pass at the 1972 Supernationals yet did not win the event, a similar fate befell "the Snowman." At that 1972 event, Snively ran 5.97 but lost in the semifinals, and Don Moody eventually went quicker with a 5.91 and won the race; in 1988, Hill played the role of Moody and twice bettered Snow's historic time with a 4.990 in the semifinals and then a jaw-dropping 4.936 in the final, in which he beat Joe Amato.
(Above)ÌýThis was about as far as Hill got on three consecutive runs during qualifying after banging the blower on all three. (Below left)ÌýOut of blowers, Hill and crew chief "Fuzzy" Carter put their heads together, and, showing they still had a sense of humor, Carter even tried to get creative with one of Hill's old-school blowers (below right), but the team was rescued by its racing pals. | ||
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But, as noted earlier, Hill's histrionics almost didn’t happen at all. On three straight qualifying passes, Hill's Super Shops/Pennzoil dragster bombed the supercharger shortly after launching. Total under-power time: nine-tenths of a second. The team, nearing the end of a less-than-successful season, was ready to toss in the towel Saturday and head home without even making the final qualifying pass.
Here's how I summed up the situation in my National DRAGSTER coverage: "Bewitched by a midseason slump, bothered by the remnants of the flu, and bewildered by a series of baffling mechanical maladies, Hill … was out of parts, almost out of money, and completely out of answers."
Hill was a little more succinct but no less poetic in a press release that afternoon announcing the team's reluctant withdrawal from the event: "We got to the end of the money before we got to the end of the season."
The press release had no sooner been distributed at the event when the community that is drag racing rode to the rescue. Teams flocked to the popular pilot's pit with offers of parts and help. Mallory's Brian Clark -- working with Hill's red-bearded teddy bear of a crew chief, the ever-likable and sorely missed "Fuzzy" Carter -- traced the problem to an improperly grounded coil. Whiting loaned the team a supercharger; others offered valves and other spares.
Late in the final qualifying session, facing a 5.281 bump spot, the wily Texan, tuning on the basis of less than a second of data, punched his way into the show with a 5.036 to the thrill of the partial Texas crowd. In the cruelest of twists, it was Whiting whom he bumped from the field.
The .03 had earned the man they call "the Thrill" the No. 3 spot, and he followed with runs of 5.046 and 5.059 in the first two rounds to beat Dennis Forcelle and Darrell Gwynn.
(Above) This semifinalÌýbattle of the sport's only four-second racers ended early when Snow's dragster lifted the front tires and smoked the rears. Hill made his first NHRA four-second run but wasn't done yet. (Below) In the final round, Hill broke their backs and put an exclamation point on his win with a jaw-dropping 4.93 after Joe Amato smoked the tires. |
Hill and Snow squared off in the semifinals, where Snow's white and black dragster looked more as if it belonged on the launchpad at nearby Johnson Space Center, launching into a spectacular, tire-smoking wheelie that he rode for several hundred feet before shutting down and watching Hill not only win the round but also steal his low e.t. with a 4.990.
Hill's 4.990 was recorded six months to the day from his barrier-breaking Motorplex run, for which Snow also was in the other lane. Weird, huh?
Final-round opponent Amato and crew chief Tim Richards knew they were in trouble. They had run just 5.13 and 5.18 in the first two rounds, and their semifinal 5.07 conquest of Connie Kalitta had been on the verge of smoking the tires. "I don’t know that we can [try to] run a four without smoking the tires," Amato admitted dejectedly before the final, and he was right. Amato's red TRW machine smoked the hoops at the green, and he watched history unfold beyond his wind screen.
Hill's yellow charger went nuclear with a 4.936-second blast at 283.10 to emphatically seal the victory. Even his crew on the starting line seemed stunned when the number popped up on the scoreboard, and Carter whipped his red hat from his head and flung it into the air. The place went nuts.
The run was so good that it was too quick to be backed up by the earlier 4.99, which became the new record, but that didn’t bother Hill and company, who, like all of us, were drenched minutes later by a long overdue storm in the parched region.
"We even broke the drought, didn't we?" joked Hill.
Although Hill ended up being the star of the show, plenty of other things made that first Supernationals super. I remember that when the race's name had been announced, a lot of us veteranos were kind of sadly shaking our heads that the hallowed Supernationals name was being recycled. After all, to many of us, it conjured up images of otherworldly performances – such as the first Top Fuel five -- at Ontario Motor Speedway in the early 1970s, and to assume that another event was worthy of sharing that name was a bit of a stretch.
(Above)ÌýGene Snow pulled the chutes at the conclusion of his 4.99-second qualifying pass Thursday; it was the first four-second run at an NHRA national event. (Below) Pro Stock racer Frank Sanchez also earned a slice of history as the first driver in his class to run in the 7.2-second zone. |
HRP was brand new then, having opened that summer and holding its first NHRA meet a month earlier, the Division 4 season-ending points meet, so no one quite knew what to expect, but it took us just one outing to discover that the national event had been appropriately named.
Snow's four was the early clue that we might be in for something special. To put it all into context, Snow was at the vanguard of the move toward a high-gear-only driveline that today is standard.
Ever-innovative Jim Head put it out there for everyone to see when he ran direct drive in his Funny Car in Memphis in early May, and Snow had converted his dragster before the next event, the Cajun Nationals. By year's end, the handwriting was on the wall, and nearlyÌýeveryone n both classes was using the setup.ÌýSnow had just missed NHRA's first five at the U.S. Nationals, where he ran 5.006, but didn't miss in Houston.
But Snow was not the only star of qualifying in Houston as New York-based Pro Stock racer Frank Sanchez enjoyed perhaps the finest moment of his short career Friday when he became the first 91°µÍø Pro Stock driver to break into the 7.2-second zone with a 7.294, which was low e.t. and a new national e.t. record for, oh, about a minute or so. One pair later, Bob Glidden powered his new Motorcraft Ford Probe to a 7.277. Glidden's run led what was the quickest Pro Stock field ever assembled, bookended by Frank laconio's 7.374. Glidden went on to win the race and lock up his ninth season championship with two races still to go.
The Funny Cars were part of the performance fray, too, as Ed "the Ace" McCulloch powered the Miller High Life/Larry Minor Olds Cutlass to the quickest run in class history, 5.252. Don Prudhomme, who had just installed a high-gear-only combo in the Skoal Bandit Trans Am, ran low e.t. of eliminations at 5.308, just a few ticks off his standing record of 5.305. Neither of them won, though; that honor went to Mike Dunn, who drove Joe Pisano's Cutlass past Bruce Larson in the final, 5.40 to 5.57. Dunn won the season's next race, too, the Fallnationals in Phoenix.
A tip o' the Insider cap to reader Stan Beauchemin, who held on to the Sports section from his copy of the Monday, Feb. 3, 1969, edition of my beloved Los Angeles Times that featured a massive four-shot photo sequence on the topic of last Friday's Insider column about Larry Reyes, including his never-forgotten top-end flight in Roland Leong's brand-new Hawaiian Dodge Charger Funny Car.
As you can see below, the sequence, by Times photographer Don Cormier, got really, really, REALLY prominent play on the front page of the Sports section. I had never seen these photos or this angle of the crash.
"I was at this race and watched as the Hawaiian took flight," said Beauchemin. "The next day, the L.A. Times Sports section had this four-picture spread on the front page.ÌýI cut it out back then 40 years ago, and as I write this note, I am looking at it like it was yesterday.ÌýSome things you just don’t forget no matter how long ago it happened. It has been stored 40 years and looks like it was just printed. I was at the Winternationals as part of a crew on a Funny Car you might remember called the Canuck, owned and driven by my roommate, Dale Armstrong."
If you've ever tried to scan a newspaper, you know that it can be a tricky proposition due to the nature of newspaper photography (newspaper photos are comprised of dozens of tiny dots of various size and spacing that simulate the actual image), so, in the interest of fair reporting, I've cleaned up Stan's scans a bit with a variety of filters in Photoshop to give you a more clear look at it.
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Just as I was wrapping up this column, I had one of those "Oh, yeah!" moments. I was thinking about how sometimes it seems that our racing only gets the front page when something spectacular of this nature occurs and was wondering quietly to myself when the last time we probably got that much of a front page of the L.A. Times Sports section.
Well, in one of those serendipitous moments of synergy, I knew exactly when it was because it involved two of the popular people featured in this column: Eddie Hill and me. Okay, well, it involved popular racer Hill and a lucky photographer (me) who just happened to have his camera trained on Hill's yellow dragster just four months after his Houston heroics when Hill rolled up to the line for a qualifying pass Friday at the 1989 Winternationals. We all know what happened next – a front wing mount failed, tipping it – and the car – skyward in one of the most spectacular blowovers ever seen.
I wasn't the only photographer to catch it – James Drew was at ground level and made a pretty spiffy poster out of his – nor even had the best photos (I lost the best shot – the car straight-up vertical – as it passed behind a spectator's head), but I was the closest to a darkroom and the first to get it into the hands of the L.A. Times.
The late great Leslie Lovett and I rushed over to our Glendora Bat Cave and, with me standing by anxiously wondering if I'd got the shot, processed the black and white film. "You got it," he smiled to me, and the blood finally rushed back into my face. I got it, and so did the Times.
The photos, accompanied by a story by the late Shav Glick, ran in Saturday morning's edition, and I was totally unprepared to unfold the paper that morning and see the entire center section of the front page filled with my photos. The center photo alone measures more than 9 inches high by more than 7 inches wide.
My Saturday was definitely better than Hill's.
Okay, that's it for today. I'll write from Houston Friday, which, if I'm lucky, will come on the heels of an exciting Thursday detour that will make for some interesting viewing, even if it's not all about drag racing.
As always, thanks for reading and for your contributions to this column.