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TORRENCE’S DRIVE FOR FIVE IS STILL ALIVE
Team Capco Regaining Its Edge as Playoffs Begin at Pep Boys Nationals
READING, Pa. – Steve Torrence is tired of the questions; even more so the speculation. The four-time reigning NHRA Top Fuel champion’s answer to all the rhetoric about his supposed 2022 slump? “Let’s race!”
That’s what he and his Capco Contractors crew will do this weekend when they send their resurgent Top Fuel Toyota after a playoff-opening victory in the 37th Pep Boys Nationals at Maple Grove Raceway.
Steve at Maple Grove Raceway
Total appearances: 9
Final rounds: 2
Tour victories: 1 (2018)
No. 1 qualifier: 0
Won-Lost record: 11-8
Quickest time: 3.691 seconds, Oct. 2, 2016
Fastest speed: 330.88 mph, Sept. 14, 2018
Track records – 3.623 seconds by Brittany Force, Sept. 14, 2019; 335.57 mph by Brittany Force, Sept. 10, 2021.
Photos by Mark Rebilas
Steve Torrence, right, shares a moment with rival Brittany Force before the start of the NHRA Countdown to the Championship this week at Reading, Pa. Force was the last driver to win the championship before Torrence began a four-year run in the Capco Contractors Top Fuel dragster.
Total appearances: 9
Final rounds: 2
Tour victories: 1 (2018)
No. 1 qualifier: 0
Won-Lost record: 11-8
Quickest time: 3.691 seconds, Oct. 2, 2016
Fastest speed: 330.88 mph, Sept. 14, 2018
Track records – 3.623 seconds by Brittany Force, Sept. 14, 2019; 335.57 mph by Brittany Force, Sept. 10, 2021.
Photos by Mark Rebilas
Steve Torrence, right, shares a moment with rival Brittany Force before the start of the NHRA Countdown to the Championship this week at Reading, Pa. Force was the last driver to win the championship before Torrence began a four-year run in the Capco Contractors Top Fuel dragster.
Poised this year to become just the fourth pro driver in NHRA history to win as many as five straight titles, the 39-year-old Torrence will start from the unfamiliar, but certainly viable, No. 4 position, just over two rounds (50 points) off the lead enjoyed by regular season champion Brittany Force.
“That is definitely the car to beat,” Torrence said of Force’s Monster Energy Dragster. “They not only kicked our butts, but everybody else’s (in the regular season).”
Still, Torrence likes the way his Capco dragster has responded to the changes implemented this year by crew chiefs Richard Hogan and Bobby Lagana Jr., changes directed at closing a widening performance gap between himself and Force.
“No place I’d rather be than right here with these Capco Boys,” he said. “You know, everybody’s talking like we’re lost. We’re not lost. We haven’t been lost. We had a plan and, so far, it’s working. We haven’t been winning like we did the last few years, but we’ve never been worse than fourth (in points) this year.
“We’ve been competitive, just not dominant,” he said of a 2022 season in which he’s won just one Camping World tour event. “I don’t know if you can be dominant anymore. Look around. There are a lot of cars that could win this weekend.”
In point of fact, eight different Top Fuel drivers hoisted the trophy during the just-concluded regular season, none of whom were Doug Kalitta, Shawn Langdon, Clay Millican or Josh Hart, all previous multi-time tour winners.
“We didn't forget what we were doing,” Torrence said of a 14-race winless streak that ended in Brainerd, Minn. “You just gotta persevere and you gotta dance with the ones that brung ya. We’re still standing proud. We’ve put ourselves in the hunt and that’s all you can ask for. Now we have to go out there and perform.”
Although he’s won 52 tour events, 44 of them in the last six seasons, the talented Texan’s only victory at Maple Grove came in 2018 when he swept the six races in the Countdown on the way to becoming the first driver ever to win NHRA series championships in both Top Alcohol and Top Fuel.
However, while he has won only once, he’s celebrated twice, the second time in 2021 when dad Billy, who will sit out this weekend’s race, drove the second Capco Contractors dragster to a final round victory over Justin Ashley.
“The longer you’re on top, the harder it is to stay there and that’s our challenge this year,” Torrence said. “We’re trying to stay on top and win a fifth championship.”
At a Maple Grove Raceway under the new ownership of Kenny Koretsky, Torrence and his crew will have just three opportunities to get their car dialed in before the start of eliminations at 9:30 a.m., Texas time, on Sunday.
A single qualifying session at 4:45 p.m., Texas time, Friday will start the process with Saturday sessions at 12:15 and 3:45 p.m. to set the program.
Television coverage will include qualifying highlights on FS1 at 6 p.m., Texas time, on Friday and 10 a.m., Texas time, Sunday. Coverage will switch to the FOX broadcast network on Sunday afternoon with segments from 1-3 p.m. and 3:30 to 5:30 p.m., Texas time.
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About Capco Contractors Inc.:
Capco Contractors, Inc. is a family owned-and-operated construction company specializing in the oil and gas industries. A proud American company based in Texas with clients around the world, Capco was founded in 1995 by Billy Torrence and initially operated from a small office and one job-site trailer with a staff of only 12 employees. From those humble beginnings, Capco Contactors, Inc. has developed into a full-service pipeline company, capable of all aspects of pipeline work including site work, creation of compressor stations, mainline pipeline construction and pipeline integrity projects. It employs more than 200 people with main offices in Henderson, Texas.