TORRENCE GOES FOR HISTORY (1 Viewer)

TORRENCE RACING FOR THE TITLE
Point Leader Can Make Drag Racing History at The Strip at LVMS

LAS VEGAS, Nev. – Their season of retribution almost complete, Steve Torrence and the “Capco Boys” race for a piece of straight-line history this week when the NHRA Mello Yello tour moves to The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the 18th renewal of the Toyota Nationals.

Torrence, the 35-year-old Texan who beat cancer, survived a heart attack and rejected the premise that an independent couldn’t win a championship in the NHRA’s “mega-team era,” will roll his Capco Contractors Top Fuel dragster to the starting line for
Friday’s first qualifying session with that “unachievable” title very much in sight.

“To be honest, we don’t change anything,” Torrence said of his approach to an event in which he could clinch the $500,000 championship and put behind him the crushing disappointment he experienced one year ago when he saw the title slip away on the final day of the season.

“We just need to stay focused, try to qualify well and go some rounds,” said the man who has led the Top Fuel points for 21 of 22 races this season and for 31 of the last 36 tour events. “We’ve gotten to where (we are by) staying extremely focused, taking it one race, one round at a time.”

That laser focus has carried Torrence and his team to the very brink of history. A couple of round wins on Sunday and the Kilgore College graduate not only would become the first independent to win the title since the NHRA adopted the current playoff format in 2007 but the first driver ever to win NHRA championships in both the Fuel and Alcohol divisions.

Nevertheless, there could be an even bigger bounty. With a win on Sunday, Torrence would become the first driver to win five races in a single Countdown and would become just the seventh pro driver, regardless of discipline, to win double-digit events in a single season.

Torrence, who won the NHRA Top Alcohol Dragster world championship in 2005, gives all the credit for that success to his crew of “outlaws and misfits.”

“It’s remarkable to sit back and just watch,” he said of a team led by crew chief Richard Hogan and right-hand man Bobby Lagana Jr. “What they’re able to do, time and time again, is impressive. The guys are just tough. They work hard to keep this thing going. It’s a passion and what they love to do.

“Everybody sets out to be a winner and a champion,” Torrence continued, “but it’s difficult to get there. It takes a lot of determination and these guys put in the work. If they get knocked down, they just stand back up.”

Of course, despite his protestations, Torrence is at the heart of the team’s success as driver (.040 reaction times in the last three rounds on the way to winning two weeks ago at Charlotte, N.C., for instance), organizer and, whenever necessary, motivator.

“It helps that (we’ve) been in the situation before,” he said. “(This week) we still have to do the same thing. Your job doesn’t change (and) if you look at it that way, it makes it easier. You need to enjoy the moment (and) I’m having so much fun (because) at the end of the day I’m driving a Top Fuel dragster and racing for a championship. Not many people get that opportunity and I am thankful for it. I’m thankful to the Lord, thankful to my parents and thankful to all these Capco boys.

“We’re going to follow the same script this week and race as hard as we know how to every run,” said the 25-time pro winner. “Then, whatever happens, happens.”

Countdown to the 2018 Championship
Nov. 11, 2018 54th Auto Club Finals Pomona, Calif.

2019 Mello Yello tour
Feb. 10, 2019 58th Lucas Oil Winternationals Pomona, Calif.
Feb. 24, 2019 34th NHRA Arizona Nationals Phoenix, Ariz.

2018 NHRA MELLO YELLO POINTS
TOP FUEL (After four of six races in the Countdown to the Championship)

1. Steve Torrence, Kilgore, Texas, Capco Contractors dragster 2592
2. Clay Millican, Drummonds, Tenn., Parts Plus dragster 2423
3. Tony Schumacher, Lakeway, Texas, U.S. Army dragster 2382
4. Leah Pritchett, Danville, Ind., Papa John’s dragster 2297
5. Antron Brown, Pittsboro, Ind., Matco Tools dragster 2253
6. Brittany Force, Yorba Linda, Calif., Advance/Monster dragster 2243
7. Mike Salinas, San Jose, Calif., Scrappers Racing dragster 2228
8. Doug Kalitta, Saline, Mich., Mac Tools dragster 2225
9. Terry McMillen, Elkhart, Ind., Amalie Oil dragster 2221
10. Scott Palmer, Cassville, Mo., Cat Spot dragster 2149



STEVE at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway

Last year at the Toyota Nationals: After qualifying second, Steve beat Terry Haddock but lost in the second round to Shawn Langdon.
Last spring at the Denso 4Wide Nationals: As the No. 5 qualifier, Steve advanced to the final quad where he outpaced Tony Schumacher, Doug Kalitta and Antron Brown.
Starts/Final Rounds/Wins/No. 1 Qualifier: 18/2/2/2 (10/1/1/0 in Toyota Nationals)
Steve’s quickest time at The Strip: 3.694 seconds, Oct. 27, 2017
Steve’s fastest speed at The Strip: 330.15 mph, Oct. 27, 2017.
Steve’s won-lost record at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway: 19-16 (10-9 in the Toyota Nationals)
Steve’s best moment(s) at The Strip: In 2016, after qualifying sixth, Steve got his first win in the Toyota Nationals by beating Richie Crampton, Doug Kalitta, Leah Prtichett and J.R. Todd; earlier this year, as the No. 5 qualifier, Steve won the first Las Vegas event contested in the four-wide format (see above).
Track records: – 3.673 seconds by Tony Schumacher, Oct. 27, 2017; 332.67 mph by Shawn Langdon, Oct. 30, 2015.
 
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