When Mike Kosky posts that he was one of those who gave his vote to the existing Board back in the 80s he says it was “to do what they had to do to keep us racing.”
I’m not for a second suggesting that my memory of this is any better than Mike’s, and without meaning to offend him or anyone else who provided the Board with their proxy vote, I think we were all a helluva lot more naïve about the business side of drag racing than we are now.
Again admitting that this is my memory and mine alone, I’m pretty sure that the way NHRA worded the documentation that came with the proxy form left the reader with the impression that if we didn’t provide those proxies there might be dire results. Did they scare us into supporting them? Maybe, but who remembers the details at this point?
And Mel Smith is correct in suggesting the vote was voluntary. It absolutely was. But as I wrote in an earlier post on this subject – and it was even more so then – the vast majority of NHRA members (probably about 50,000 at the time) were far more concerned with lane choice, horsepower factoring, class indexes, entry fees, and avoiding being hassled by someone at a points meet than they were with how the organization was managed. Also remember that at that time Wally was viewed as a benevolent dictator, one who would watch over us and the sport we loved. So therefore, if Wally thought we should send in our proxies, we’d do it.
Regarding Bruce Edwards’s rant encompassing sponsorships and tires, his information on the former is inaccurate, and as to the latter, while we may not like it, Goodyear has paid for the privilege of being the sole supplier of tires for T/F, F/C and P/S. And let’s be real here. Without Goodyear’s involvement there is no drag racing on the top levels because if they bail out there’s probably not going to be another tire manufacturer eager to lose the millions of dollars Goodyear loses on drag racing tires every year. We need ‘em.
At the risk of losing my credibility as an NHRA-basher, Mr. Tichener states; “…where the board members have taken some shady steps to fully eliminate any member input is not a healthy or fair situation.” Please define those “shady steps.” Your comments would make it appear as if NHRA did something illegal. They didn’t. What they did do was take advantage of our naiveté.
Is Bruce Edwards ever right. He succinctly defines our “rights” as “members.” We have none.
However, Bruce, if you follow other forms of racing you know there’s the same kind of domination. In the Indy car racing there’s Penske, Ganassi, Andretti-Green and the also-rans. In NASCAR it’s Hendrick, Roush-Fenway and then the rest. Why would you think drag racing would be any different?
By the way “Fast” Tim Charlet wins the prize on Lampington’s, and he will receive something appropriate. Costly, too!
Jon Asher