Drag Illustrated Issue 149, October 2019 | Page 90
WORLD SERIES OF PRO MOD 2019
Missing from this year’s race were
a handful of WSOPM stars sidelined
by carnage in the weeks leading up
to the event. Marc Caruso, a fan-fa-
vorite in 2018’s WSOPM burnout
contest, went through a devastating
crash at the NHRA Thunder Valley
Nationals in Bristol, Tennessee, in
early June.
A couple weeks later, two-time
NHRA Pro Stock world champion
Erica Enders escaped a horrific fire
in her turbocharged Elite Motor-
sports Camaro at the NHRA Sum-
mit Nationals in Norwalk, Ohio.
Even Mike Bowman, the winner
of the inaugural WSOPM in 2017,
was still on the sidelines after a
crash at the St. Louis NHRA race
in September last year.
A mid-season rules package
change for NHRA Pro Mod com-
petitors led several other potential
WSOPM competitors to sit out the
race, leaving event promoter Wes
Buck with an 11-car field.
Even though he was five cars
short of his intended 16-car show,
Buck and the Bandimere Speedway
team forged forward. New faces like
nitro racing veteran Terry Haddock
and West Coast Pro Mod stars Ed
Thornton and Rick Snavely jumped
at the chance to be a part of the
race, as did Premier Street Car As-
sociation promoter Mel Roth and
his Xtreme Drag Radial racers.
Many more new faces joined the
show in the Top Dragster and Top
Sportsman classes, as the winner’s
purse was raised to $10,000 for
the MagnaFuel Pro Star 16 and
Quick Star 16 Shootouts present-
ed by Menholt Auto Group. A to-
tal of over 70 cars entered the two
shootouts for the chance to race for
never-before-seen payouts for the
fast bracket classes.
Finally, a slew of local racers
rounded out the program in Sunoco
King Street and the JR Race Cars
7.90 Shootout. These racers, who
race on a weekly basis at Bandimere
Speedway during the track’s popular
points races, had the opportunity to
race in front of over 10,000 specta-
tors while sharing the staging lanes
with some of the biggest names in
Pro Mod racing.
Each of the drivers and teams
participating in the World Series
of Pro Mod had a unique story to tell
about their WSOPM journey. Many
of them started with late nights and
long drives. Some ended in the first
round of eliminations. Others were
spoiled by parts failures. And one
was capped off by a trip to the bank
to deposit a check for $100,000.
While some of these stories will
remain relegated to late-night
bench racing sessions, the D rag
I llustrateD team worked to cap-
ture as many of them as possible
to print on the pages of the third
annual World Series of Pro Mod
Issue, our tribute to the people
who make the World Series of Pro
Mod such a one-of-a-kind drag
racing spectacle.
‘STEVIE FAST’ COMES THROUGH
One of the most common questions going into
the WSOPM weekend was, “Will ‘Stevie Fast’
Jackson be there?” The fan-favorite driver
answered Tuesday morning when he posted a
video of his team loading up and heading to
Denver. Jackson delivered long, smoky burnouts
and a track-record pass for blown Pro Mods
during his third annual visit to Thunder Mountain.
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I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com
Issue 149