Drag Illustrated Issue 154, March 2020 | Page 80

DRAG ILLUSTRATED ROUNDTABLE Tommy Youmans has always been a fan of the Pro 275 class, and has raced there from the outset. He welcomes the influx of new talent and fresh faces in the class. for moving classes. I think anyone that shows up for Pro 275 can win with the way the rules are. If there’s 30 cars in the class, there’s a lot of cars that can show up and win the race. Is this just the tip of the iceberg – especially when it comes to interest and participation – with where this class is headed? YOUMANS: I really think the class will continue to gain in popularity. It’s a really fun class. Do I think we’ll see .50s out of it? No, but who knows. I never thought you would see 3.50s in RvW, so you never know. Radial racing, it’s just unreal and the popularity is just amazing. It really cre- ates good competition. Everyone wants to keep going faster. Even if you hit a personal best, you just want to keep going faster. The competition just breeds that. GREEN: That little tire is just bad to the bone. I love it. The car works really well and it’s just an amazing deal to fall into. I think it’s only going to get bigger and better. I’ve talked to a lot of friends of mine and they would rather watch this class than anything else, so the fans are loving it. All the cars are really close and it’s just a really good class. Guys can show up and get in the field and make a nice run in the mid-3.80s, and if every- thing lined up go in the 3.70s. I see a lot of big things happening and I think people are going to keep coming to see that class. AGOSTINO: In order for a class to be successful, 80 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com the spectators need to like the class and the peo- ple racing in it need to feel like they can compete. I think you have that here. M C MANIOUS: I absolutely think it’s going to continue to grow. Once some guys get a handle on it. I think you’re going to see .60s in the best, killer conditions. Once they figure it out, with that power out the back door, I can almost guar- antee they’re going to be running with Pro Mods with this tiny little tire. That’s shocking. It’s a lot of no fear and technology, but the mile-per-hour shows the potential for sure. I mean, we’ve got a 400-inch small-block Ford. Who would have thought we could run 3.90s? There’s always been interest in this class, but it seems to be ascending all of a sudden after opening up the rules. What’s the reception you’ve heard from fans or other competitors of why they’ve taken to this class? M C MANIOUS: I just think a lot of people can relate to it. A lot of people have Camaros or Mus- tangs sitting in their driveway, so that’s where the excitement is. That’s what it’s all about. One of the most fun things is the guy who is a diehard Ford guy and comes up to our pits and asks what motor is in there. When I say it’s a small-block Ford, you just see their face light up. YOUMANS: Everybody that talks to us real- ly loves the class and they love the body style. They love the stock-appearing-style cars, and I think it’s going to continue to grow. Donald has put out more money and that helps, and the Sweet 16 is going to bring even more com- petition. More tracks are adding it, too, and that’s good to see. I think fans enjoy the cars going fast that look like that. Let’s face it, RvW took off when Stevie [Jackson] and DeWayne [Mills] were running those cars that appeared to be stock-style cars. Now RvW has more of the Pro Mod-style car, and our class is picking up all these stock-bodied-style cars and getting faster, and the fans love it. MICKE: I think it was a good call for us. I know a lot of guys weren’t racing. Us personally, we weren’t going to race this year. If the 275 didn’t come about, we weren’t going to race in 2020. It gave us a place to go. RvW is just badass, but unfortunately it’s just grown past a lot of the cars. I think this class is going to be a killer part of the show. If Radial vs. the World is radial racing’s Top Fuel, it’s almost like you needed to find a Fun- ny Car of radial racing to complement that, where the times are close but it’s a little dif- ferent racing or style of car. Can Pro 275 fill that void and provide that? M C MANIOUS: They definitely needed some- thing in between Limited Drag Radial and RvW. There was a huge void there and that void of 4.10s to 3.50s was huge. That’s a huge gap, and I think that’s why those stock-bodied cars in RvW – guys like Marty Stinnett and Tim Slavens – I Issue 154