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Crunching 2024's final Funny Car stats

Austin Prock was 2024's runaway Funny Car world champion and the driver who shattered the 340-mph barrier, but you may be surprised that he and his team didn't really dominate any performance stats, yet they were top three in most.
16 Jan 2025
Phil Burgess, NHRA National Dragster Editor
Feature
Crunching 2024's final Funny Car stats

Compared to stick and ball sports, motorsports stats have traditionally been very limited due to the nature of competition. For years, drag racing statskeepers would track wins and losses and average time, elapsed time, and speed averages, but that was about it.

For the last several years, Pete Richards and the NHRA Nitro Research Dept. have been meticulously recording and organizing a vast array of stats that help better tell the story of a racer’s season or even help us better understand how the results of classes as a whole play out and allow us to track various trends. His season-ending report spanned a whopping 191 pages and covered some pretty great stats that we and the NHRA on FOX team use on a regular basis to add some depth and detail to our reporting. You've already seen some of them in stories that Bian Lohnes and I have been doing this offseason.

Here's the first of four reviews of the final 2024 stats in the Pro classes, focusing on a few of the vital stats that help explain how the year went.

AVERAGE REACTION TIME

Ever since reaction times became an official NHRA stat in 1981, it has been one of the most interesting yet frustrating stats to track. Drivers either love 'em or loathe 'em for what they show/don't show, while crew chiefs seem to largely dislike them, especially when their driver tries to pad their stats because reaction time is affected by many factors, including (but not limited to) how deeply the driver rolls into the staging beams, the individual track's rollout length, and the car's tune-up.

LEAVING FIRST

Regardless of your reaction time, a driver's job, at minimum, is to leave ahead of his or her opponent. Of course, the greater the advantage, the better your chances of winning, but it all starts with that initial move. This stat pack also includes holeshot wins and losses and red-light starts.

SPEED INDEX

This is a measure of runs completed in both qualifying and eliminations, under full or near-full throttle. For Top Fuel, that's runs quicker than 4.100 and faster than 300 mph. This is a measure of crew chief success.

FUNNY CAR: REACTION-TIME AVERAGE LEADERS

DRIVERLEAVESAVG.

J..R. Todd

43

0.059

Austin Prock

65

0.062

Matt Hagan

51

0.068

Bob Tasca III

45

0.069

Paul Lee

28

0.072

Cruz Pedregon

27

0.073

Jack Beckman

24

0.073

Ron Capps

48

0.076

Daniel Wilkerson

36

0.077

Chad Green

31

0.078

John Force

25

0.081

Blake Alexander

39

0.093

Alexis DeJoria

30

0.100

Dave Richards

17

0.122

Buddy Hull

16

0.130

Observations: The season-long category average reaction time was .081, which shows you how great J.R. Todd and Austin ProckÌýwere than not just that number but the rest of the top 12. Now a hundredth of a second between Todd and third-place Matt Hagan might not seem like a lot, but there were plenty of races decided by that margin. Also worth noting that Prock's remained close to Todd despite having nearly half again (65 to 43) as many leaves to potentially have a stinker or two. One also has to wonder if guys like Dave Richards and Buddy Hull would have been better with more elimination-day laps to hone their reactions.

Funny Car: leaving first leaders

DRIVERROUNDSLEFT FIRST%HS WINHS LOSSFOULS

Todd

43

31

72.09

4

1

0

Prock

65

45

69.23

0

4

0

Hagan

51

30

58.82

5

2

1

Force

25

14

56.00

0

0

0

Tasca

45

25

55.56

3

0

0

Capps

48

26

54.17

0

3

2

Lee

28

15

53.57

2

0

0

Beckman

24

12

50.00

0

1

0

Green

31

15

48.39

1

1

1

Alexander

39

16

41.03

0

1

0

Pedregon

27

10

37.04

0

0

0

Wilkerson

36

12

33.33

2

2

0

DeJoria

30

9

30.00

1

0

0

Hull

16

3

18.75

0

1

0

Richards

17

2

11.76

0

0

0

Observations: Again, Todd's starting-line skills are evident regardless of the opponent as he left on nearly three-fourths of his opponents, and four times that paid off with holeshot wins. While Prock again was on his heels, four losses by holeshot is a bit of a tribute to his tuning father, Jimmy, who gave him a winning hot rod for more than just the 53 rounds he did win, but you also have to look at it another way: Drivers he faced knew that they had to take their shot against him if they wanted to have any chance to win against his better-performing car, and more than two-thirds of the time, they weren't able to. This box the R.T. average above shows that maybe we haven't been giving all the kudos to Hagan that we should have. He was third in both starting-line matrixes and had a class-high five holeshot wins.

Funny Car: Speed Index (wide-Open Throttle Runs)

DRIVERTOTAL RUNSWOT%

Force/Beckman combined

106

87

82.08

Beckman only

53

45

84.91

Prock

138

110

79.71

Force only

53

42

79.25

Hagan

125

79

63.20

Todd

116

68

58.62

Capps

119

69

57.98

Tasca

118

67

56.78

Wilkerson

108

59

54.63

Lee

86

46

53.49

Green

101

52

51.49

Alexander

103

52

50.49

DeJoria

99

47

47.47

Pedregon

95

45

47.37

Richards

84

19

22.62

Observations: Interesting dynamic here as John Force ran the first nine races of the season in the Peak Camaro and Jack Beckman the last eight following Force's June accident, so we combined the body of work, and the Peak team's car made it down the track more regularly than their championship teammate Prock. Oddly, Beckman and Force made the exact same number of runs, and Beckman only got it downtrack three more times than Force, showing that the team had a handle on the car regardless of who was driving.ÌýAgain, as it was with reaction-time average, Prock's crew had a lot more chances to not make it down the track (138 to 106), so the sample size is not quite the same but the drop-off to Hagan's next-best average is staggering (79Ìýto 63%).

Combo rankings

When you combine the three stats above (reaction time, left first, and wide-open throttle runs) and then add in the key component of average race-day eliminations e.t., it paints a very curious picture (drivers are presented in their points-finishing order):

DRIVERAVG. RTLEFT 1STWOTAVG. E.T.

Austin Prock

2

2

2

2

John Force/Jack Beckman

11/7

4/8

3/1

1/3

Ron Capps

8

6

6

6

Matt Hagan

3

3

4

4

Bob Tasca III

4

5

7

8

Blake Alexander

12

10

11

14

Daniel Wilkerson

9

12

8

10

J.R. Todd

1

1

5

7

Chad Green

10

9

10

12

Cruz Pedregon

6

11

13

5

Alexis DeJoria

13

13

12

11

Dave Richards

15

15

14

15

Paul Lee

5

7

9

9

Observations: Austin Prock shows that you don't need to lead any category to win the championship,Ìýbut when you're No. 2 in all of them, that's a pretty good path to success. You'd think that the Prock Rocket would have had the quickest average elapsed time, but he did not.ÌýIn his nine-race season, that occurred mostly in cooler climes. Force averaged 4.018, while Prock's season-long average was 4.075. Paul Lee is the obvious outlier here as he did not qualify for the Countdown and ended up 13th in points with an overall package that, had he run a whole season and been able to move up in the standings in the Countdown, his position could have been mid-Top 10.

And here are the leaders in some other important categories:

NO. 1 QUALIFIERS

Prock

15

Tasca

2

Hagan

2

Force

1

LOW E.T. OF EVENT

Prock

14

Hagan

2

Capps

1

Force

1

Tasca

1

Beckman

1

TOP SPEED OF EVENT

Tasca

9

Prock

6

Hagan

3

Capps

1

Lee

1

QUICKEST REACTION TIME OF EVENT

Tasca

4

Force

3

Todd

3

Hagan

2

Lee

2

Wilkerson

2

Green

2

HOLESHOT WINS (season)

Hagan

5

Todd

4

Tasca

3

DeJoria

2

Wilkerson

2

Ìý

Next up: Pro Stock