Drag Illustrated Issue 132, May 2018 | Page 98

on his turbocharged entry for the semifinal as he recorded a 3.957 at 200.68 over Joe Newsham’s 4.347 at 136.52. Carinci was unopposed again in the final round when low qualifier Phil Sliskovic’s Camaro left early. Carinci streaked to a 3.965 at 200.38 to take the win. running a 4.208 on a 4.15 dial-in, while opponent Derrick Brown left the starting line before the tree activated. John Prime earned the Top Sportsman 32 victory over Huston Dial. The next stop on the 2018 PDRA Tour is the PDRA North-South Shootout at Maryland In- ternational Raceway, May 3-5. TOP DRAGSTER Sportsman racing hero Kevin Brannon drove his brand-new ProCharged ’18 Maddox dragster to a 3.785 on a 3.81 dial over Denver Maltba’s 3.808 on a 3.84 dial-in in a double breakout Elite Top Dragster final round. Josh Duggins was the win- ner in Top Dragster 32, scoring over Greg Slack in the final round. PRO JR DRAGSTER Anthony Suppers (near) defeated Noah Cornatzer TOP SPORTSMAN In Elite Top Sportsman, Donny Urban parked his ’06 Chevy Cobalt in the winner’s circle after TOP JR DRAGSTER A Q&A JAY COX By Nate Van Wagnen 98 PDRA660.com s a pe- rennial frontrun- ner in Switzer Dynamics Pro Ni- trous presented by MoTeC, Jay Cox was certainly a favorite to win the sea- son-opening East Coast Spring Na- tionals at GALOT Motorsports Park. Cox, who won the Southern Extreme Nationals to kick off the 2017 season, be- gan his 2018 season in a similar winning fashion with his hometown win at GALOT. Cox spoke with DRAG I LLUSTRATED after the race to talk about what the win did for his early championship hopes as he chases his first PDRA world title without a major sponsor. You ran strong at GALOT Motorsports Park’s Mad Mule race in March, then you won the PDRA sea- son-opener in April. How much does that mean to you to start the season like that? It means a lot to me, especially in my situation. I guess in any situation, when you come out and you run good, you’re happy, but when you don’t have a big, major sponsor behind you and you’re funding the deal with one full-time sponsor who helps out – Butner Construction, a win re- ally means a lot. The rest of it is coming out of the people giving me parts deals – Diamond Pistons, Mark Micke Transmission, GRP Rods and Total Seal Piston Rings – and coming out of mine and my pops’ pockets. When we can come out and run that strong and run right up front, it’s a lot of momentum for me and a lot of hope that maybe somebody will step up and want to get the door of the car for the rest of the year.  You’ve been in the thick of the season-ending champi- onship battle the last few years. How important is it to your championship chase to start the year with a win? I always start off well. It gives me a lot of momentum starting the season off well because it puts me in a good lead, puts me out front a little bit. My goal this year is to stay out front. I always have that one race that just bites me in the tail – a part breaks or something goes wrong. My goal is to eliminate that this year. Last year I broke a driveshaft at the first GALOT race in the second round – I had the whole field covered. That was the one race that cost me. To be out front is huge, but my main focus to win a championship is to eliminate that one race where something breaks and costs me in the points.  How does that mindset affect your approach going into the next race? To be honest, I’m not in a financial position to look past one race. My goal when I look at Maryland is I want to go in there and test on Thursday, get a good baseline for the track when it’s hot and when it’s cold. I can’t afford to put a lot of runs on this thing. I just have to take it round by round. I can’t look ahead to the next race. I gotta stay small because when you don’t have a lot of money and parts behind you, you can’t overlook the small things. The small things are key to winning a race or putting you in the position to go to the next race. When I roll in the gate, I gotta win. I gotta bring 5-6 thousand dollars home with me. The only place at the racetrack that pays that is first place, you know? Logan Westmoreland (far) defeated Chase Hancock