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TORRENCE RIDES WAVE OF MOMENTUM
Four-Time World Champ Looks to Extend Point Lead at DENSO Nationals
SONOMA, Calif. – Back in the point lead after delivering a milestone 200th NHRA tour victory to Team Toyota in last week’s Flav-R-Pac Nationals at Seattle, a re-invigorated Steve Torrence sends his CAPCO Contractors dragster after the Top Fuel championship this week in the 35th DENSO Sonoma Nationals at Sonoma Raceway.
Team CAPCO at the DENSO Sonoma Nationals
STEVE TORRENCE
Total appearances: 12
Final rounds: 2
Victories: 2 (2017, 2021)
No. 1 qualifier: 1 (2016)
Won-Lost record: 18-10
Quickest time: 3.671 seconds, July 29, 2016
Fastest speed: 331.77 mph, July 25, 2021
Track records – 3.662 seconds by Brittany Force, July 24, 2022; 337.75 mph by Brittany Force, July 24, 2022.
Mission Foods/US 2Fast/2Tasty Challenge: Steve Torrence versus Shawn Langdon; Doug Kalitta versus Clay Millican, Saturday, at conclusion of first Top Fuel qualifying session.
STEVE TORRENCE
Total appearances: 12
Final rounds: 2
Victories: 2 (2017, 2021)
No. 1 qualifier: 1 (2016)
Won-Lost record: 18-10
Quickest time: 3.671 seconds, July 29, 2016
Fastest speed: 331.77 mph, July 25, 2021
Track records – 3.662 seconds by Brittany Force, July 24, 2022; 337.75 mph by Brittany Force, July 24, 2022.
Mission Foods/US 2Fast/2Tasty Challenge: Steve Torrence versus Shawn Langdon; Doug Kalitta versus Clay Millican, Saturday, at conclusion of first Top Fuel qualifying session.
The four-time World Champion hadn’t won a Camping World tour event in almost 10 months before he chopped down Josh Hart, reigning series champion Brittany Force, former champ Shawn Langdon and aspiring champ Doug Kalitta last week in a race he hadn’t won since 2012.
“Sometimes, you just need to take a step back and acknowledge how blessed you are to be able to do what you do with great partners like Toyota, Red Line Oil and MAC Tools and these bad-to-the-bone ‘CAPCO boys’,” Torrence said, “but I’d be lying if I told you (the winless streak) hasn’t been stressful. To drive one of these things successfully, you have to be confident and that’s hard to do when things aren’t going great.
“It’s not like we were lost,” he said. “These CAPCO boys have given me a competitive car all year, but we just couldn’t seem to put everything together at the same time – until Seattle.”
In fact, they not only put everything together once, but twice with Torrence becoming just the fourth driver this season to win a Mission Foods/US 2Fast/2Tasty Challenge and tour event on the same weekend. It’s a performance he’ll try to replicate this week in California wine country.
Even though he hasn’t been dominant like he was in 2018 and 2021 when he won 11 times, the 40-year-old Texan has remained at or near the top of the driver standings all season long. In fact, he’s been no worse than second and has led the points after more events than the driver who has grabbed most of the headlines – four-time event winner Justin Ashley.
Nevertheless, the 53-time tour winner is quick to repeat what he’s said all year long, and that is that the only time it’s important to lead the points is in November – at the end of the In-N-Out Finals at Pomona, Calif.
“I've been in these situations on both sides of the spectrum,” Torrence said, “where you dominate the first two thirds of the season and then falter in the last six (as he did in 2017) or you go into the last six and win them all (as he historically did the following year). Right or wrong, it all comes down to how you perform in the Countdown.”
Meanwhile, he and his CAPCO boys will try to win a couple more races and fine tune a combination that obviously is working.
“I don't think (the car) is as good as it can be, but it's definitely moving in the right direction,” said the only driver to have won NHRA series championships in both the Top Fuel and Top Alcohol divisions. “We just need to continue moving things forward, but I think right now we have a really good race car.”
Two qualifying runs on both Friday and Saturday will set the field for Sunday’s single elimination finals beginning at 12:30 p.m., Texas time. Friday qualifying sessions are scheduled for 7 and 10 p.m., Texas time; Saturday sessions are 3 and 6.
Photo by Mark Rebilas
Left Photo: Crew chiefs Richard Hogan, left, and Bobby Lagana Jr. put Steve Torrence and his CAPCO Contractors Top Fuel dragster in the winners' circle last week at Seattle. They'll try to do it again this week when the Camping World tour moves to California wine country for the DENSO Sonoma Nationals
Right photo: Steve Torrence will drive his CAPCO Contractors Top Fuel dragster in pursuit of a second straight victory this week when the Camping World tour moves to Sonoma, Calif., for the DENSO Sonoma Nationals.
Steve Torrence, left, shares a moment with rival Brittany Force on the eve of this week's 35th DENSO Sonoma Nationals. Force is the defending champion; Torrence won the previous year in his CAPCO Contractors Top Fuel Toyota.
On TV (subject to change)
Qualifying highlights, 12 noon-1:30 pm, ET, Saturday on FS1
Qualifying Wrap-Up, 2:30-4 pm, ET, Sunday on FS1.
Eliminations, 4-7 pm, ET, Sunday on FOX broadcast network.
About Toyota
Toyota (NYSE:TM), creator of the Prius hybrid and the Mirai fuel cell vehicle, is committed to building vehicles for the way people live through our Toyota and Lexus brands, and directly employs more than 63,000 people in North America (more than 49,000 of them in the U.S.).Over the past 65 years, Toyota has assembled nearly 45 million cars and trucks in North America at the company’s 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, the company’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles.
Through our more than 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.), Toyota sold more than 2.4 million cars and trucks (more than 2.1 million in the U.S.) in 2022, of which, nearly one quarter were electrified vehicles (full battery, hybrid, plug-in hybrid and fuel cell).