
NHRA TOP FUEL LOSES ANOTHER FULL-TIME TEAM DUE TO SPONSORSHIP | Competition Plus
Jasmine Salinas will not compete in the next few NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series events, including the American Rebel Light NHRA Four-Wide Nationals

Yep. More short fields.Until the clown down is eliminated, no need for a team to make the full season.
My understanding was that Mike prefered to go his own way and not have sponsors dictate his team?wonder if there's another storyline going on here that us keyboard CC's will never hear about?
What it would take to reduce the cost is where the problem lies. The racers make a valid point - if you reduce blower OD, blower size, smaller fuel pumps, etc it'll only cost a black land farm to convert everything but it'll only be a matter of time before they figure out how to get the performance (and the expense) right back where it is now. 1000' racing was supposed to reduce expense and reduce speeds along with the safety benefits and now they're running 340mph and parts attrition hasn't been reduced one dime. They're not interested in neutering power to the point they're running nostalgia combinations, a class that's not exactly overwhelmed with sponsors, either. And with all the tariff-this and tariff-that still in flux, lots of companies are taking a wait-and-see attitude until everything shakes out.Until the NHRA starts getting serious about reducing the cost of fuel racing, sponsors will be hard to get and to keep. Every other run results in one or both cars exploding an engine and the costs, especially for the F/Cs are huge. And now the rear ends are coming apart. In this economy sponsors just can't continue to fund these cars. The teams are asking for more money each year and the sponsors are questioning whether it is worth it. And then there is that 4-wide crap where no one can read the sponsor's name on the cars. So where's the ROE for the sponsor?
after they went to 1000' they asked Coil if it would save parts. He said they'd just figure out how to blow them up sooner.What it would take to reduce the cost is where the problem lies. The racers make a valid point - if you reduce blower OD, blower size, smaller fuel pumps, etc it'll only cost a black land farm to convert everything but it'll only be a matter of time before they figure out how to get the performance (and the expense) right back where it is now. 1000' racing was supposed to reduce expense and reduce speeds along with the safety benefits and now they're running 340mph and parts attrition hasn't been reduced one dime. They're not interested in neutering power to the point they're running nostalgia combinations, a class that's not exactly overwhelmed with sponsors, either. And with all the tariff-this and tariff-that still in flux, lots of companies are taking a wait-and-see attitude until everything shakes out.
It'd be nice for NHRA to up the prize money so some more 'little teams' could come out and play but beyond that, competitive supercharged nitro racing is always going to be a sport for the well-healed going forward. Just no other way around it. I'm sure Salinas has a good business but what does it cost to campaign a TF car on the level he does? 3-5 million $$ a season? How much ROI does he get from racing a car sponsored by a San Francisco scrap business in Gainesville, Florida? Epping, New Hampshire? Not much, I would think, and after a while TF racing gets expensive when the funding comes from the Ass National Bank. All that car is to Salinas other than the personal pleasure of racing it is a big tax writeoff and that only goes so far.
Someone once said the best way to campaign a top fuel dragster for $1 million a season is to start with $5 million. No one knows this better than Mike Salinas and now it's down to "either we find a primary sponsor or we go back to being spectators."
For the?Until the NHRA starts getting serious about reducing the cost of fuel racing, sponsors will be hard to get and to keep. Every other run results in one or both cars exploding an engine and the costs, especially for the F/Cs are huge. And now the rear ends are coming apart. In this economy sponsors just can't continue to fund these cars. The teams are asking for more money each year and the sponsors are questioning whether it is worth it. And then there is that 4-wide crap where no one can read the sponsor's name on the cars. So where's the ROE for the sponsor?
I agree with you until you get to the last sentence, Ken. Rich people, poor people and everyone in between all expect to get some sort of return on their investment. The return just isn't always quantifiable in dollars and cents.Based on my experience no matter how much money you have writing a check and getting nothing back gets old. Every "rich" person I have dealt with is rich for a reason, there has to be some sort of return to them. All money spent is an investment to make money and if it doesn't it is eliminated.