MECHANICSVILLE, Md. — The Professional Drag Racers Association (PDRA) crowned a pair of first-time winners Saturday night at the PDRA North-South Shootout. Pro Extreme driver Wesley B. Jones and Andy McCoy Race Cars Pro Boost competitor Tylor Miller claimed their first PDRA wins at Maryland International Raceway. Also scoring wins in the pro classes were Jay Cox in Switzer Dynamics Pro Nitrous presented by MoTeC, Cary Goforth in Extreme Pro Stock and Travis Davis in Drag 965 Pro Extreme Motorcycle.
In the PDRAโs sportsman classes, Randy Perkinson won Magnafuel Top Sportsman and Jerry Langley won Lucas Oil Top Dragster. Campers Inn RV Pro Junior Dragster was won by No. 14 qualifier Bailie Zepp, who ran 7.925 on a 7.90 dial-in to defeat AJ Jenkins. MegaCorp Top Junior Dragster No. 2 qualifier Josh Pribble Jr. ran 8.017 on a 7.99 dial-in to win over Gayge Farrell. The Edelbrock Bracket Bash win went to Rising Sun, Marylandโs Tim Heaps.

Jones (far lane_over) Leggett
PRO EXTREME
Supercharged Pro Mod racing veteran Wesley B. Jones had to face off against some of the most formidable competitors in Pro Extreme to earn his first PDRA event victory. First, Jones drove his Batman-themed โ41 Willys to a 3.609-second pass at 213 mph to defeat teammate and past world champion Jason Scruggs. He improved to a 3.598 at 214.66 in the semifinals over Josรฉ Gonzales. He used a holeshot advantage and 3.601 at 212.46 to overcome the 3.551 at 217.25 laid down by No. 1 qualfiier Terry Leggett and his Leggett Logging & Trucking โ71 Mustang.
โThis feels pretty darn good,โ Jones admitted. โIโve been racing Pro Extreme for three or four years and Pro Mod racing for at least 15 years. Iโve won some other races, but to win one of these PDRA races is pretty impressive. It still hasnโt sunk in that Iโve won yet. Iโm used to coming to the winnerโs circle with Jason (Scruggs), and now itโs the other way around.
โTo beat Terry on a holeshot means a lot to me as a driver. I knew he ran a .55 and his car was just bad to the bone all day. Iโve struggled to get my car going down the racetrack and running good since I wrecked it last April. Today, it was just stuck on that .59-60 number. We tried to make it go faster in the final; I donโt know why it didnโt. But we got the win and thatโs what matters.โ

Cox (far lane) over Franklin
PRO NITROUS
No. 1 qualifier Jay Cox came to Maryland to prove a point, and his barrage of 3.6-second passes from qualifying through eliminations certainly made a statement. While it wasnโt his quickest pass of the evening, Coxโs 3.681 at 200.86 was enough to defeat defending Pro Nitrous world champion Tommy Franklinโs 3.691 at 202.42 in the final round.
โTommy is a good racer and I figured heโd run a .67 or .68, so I wanted to match him and let the race go to whoever had the better light,โ Cox said. โWe made a change to make it go straight and we actually backed it down. I wanted the (et) record for (engine builder) Charlie Buck, but we did what we had to do to win and get the points.โ
Cox started eliminations with a 3.698 at 200.17 on a bye run. His 3.677 at 201.55 over Jim Laurita in the second round was one-thousandth of a second off the Pro Nitrous et record. Cox slowed to a 3.716 at 180.48 on another bye run in the semifinals before ramping up his RJ Race Cars-built Clements Mechanical โ69 Camaro for the final round against the Pat Musi-powered โJungle Ratโ โ69 Camaro of Franklin.
โI havenโt always done so well at this track, so I wanted to come out here and dominate. Weโve been low of every single round except the semifinals, but I went 3.71 lifting at 330-feet. I went out there on E3 and that thing was on a .66 run, it just went left. I couldnโt get it to go straight and I didnโt want to give it away. That means a lot to me to go low. Pat and Lizzy (Musi) and Tommy (Franklin) by far have some strong cars, and for us to be able to go out there and outrun them speaks volumes. I talk a lot of junk, but I have a lot of respect for those guys. Itโs going to be a dogfight until the end of the year,โ Cox said.

Miller (near lane) ove Tutterow
PRO BOOST
When it came to Pro Boost competition, it wasnโt possible to find two cars paired closer in performance than No. 1 qualifier Tylor Miller and No. 2 qualifier Ty Tutterow. The two young Pro Boost stars met up in the final round for what was sure to be an epic battle. The win went to Miller at the starting line, though, as Tutterow left just a tick too soon. Miller recorded a career-best 3.70 at 197.91, while Tutterowโs 3.702 at 200.41 was negated by the red light.
โIt was definitely a wild night for us,โ Miller said. โThis was the result of a lot of long nights working until 3 a.m., maintenancing everything so it was perfect for the race. My first light today was terrible. I just kept going shallow because I went red at Darlington and didnโt want to do that again. I just kept nailing the tree harder and harder, chewing it down 10 numbers at a time. I assumed Ty would be on top of it, so I wanted to cut at least a .020 light and thatโs what I did.โ
Miller, 27, and Tutterow, 22, were nearly even through eliminations. When Miller ran 3.775 on a first-round bye run, Tutterow ran 3.779 over Jeremy Ray. Millerโs Pee Dee Fleet โ69 Chevelle posted a 3.726 over Ric Fleck second round; Tutterowโs GALOT Motorsports โ69 Camaro went 3.724 over Casey Stemper. The pressure-packed final round was set up when Tutterow improved to a 3.717 over Josรฉ Gonzales and Miller ran 3.72 over Brandon Snider in the semifinals.
โI work really well under pressure,โ Miller said. โIt seems like the more pressure you put on me, the better I do. Pressure doesnโt bother me. My biggest technique is to not think about the car next to me. I try to block out the other side of the track, focus on my lights, wait for the tree to drop and do my thing without worrying about what the other car is doing.โ

Goforth (near lane) over Eman
EXTREME PRO STOCK
Past PDRA Extreme Pro Stock champion Cary Goforth earned his first event win of the season when he defeated No. 1 qualifier Trevor Eman in a remarkably close final round. Eman in his http://Aruba.com โ11 Mustang left the starting line first, but Goforthโs Deanโs Casing Service/Dewayne Higgins Trucking โ15 Camaro charged ahead to win by just five inches, 4.053 at 177.95 to Emanโs 4.06 at 177.84.
โWe had a lot of fast racers here this weekend,โ Goforth said. โEspecially in the semifinals, you got down to probably the four quickest cars here based on qualifying. I knew when we went into the finals to run Trevor that we had our work cut out for us. I knew we had to be good on all stages. We probably werenโt as good as we shouldโve been. I pulled a couple gears early and that cost us a little bit. Thatโs just being a greedy racer. Weโre happy with the win, donโt get me wrong; we just couldโve been better.โ
Goforth qualified in the two spot and ran 4.287 to beat John DeFlorian first round, then improved to a 4.033 on a bye run and a 4.028 over John Montecalvo in the semifinals. The Holdenville, Okla.-based driver leaves Maryland with the Extreme Pro Stock points lead.
โI think we found our bug weโve been chasing. Hopefully, we can carry on this momentum through the rest of the year. We still have a lot of tough guys behind us, so we just canโt let up,โ Goforth added.

Davis (far lane) over McKinney
PRO EXTREME MOTORCYCLE
Pro Extreme Motorcycle finalists Travis Davis and Eric McKinney made PDRA history when they recorded the first side-by-side 3-second pass in the two-wheel category. Davis was ahead from start to finish in the 3.987-to-3.995 final round, both at 176 mph.
โMcKinney and I are real good friends,โ said Davis, who won his third consecutive race. โWeโve been talking about how nice it would be to run 3s side-by-side. Itโs hard enough to run that number, but getting two bikes to do it side-by-side is something else. Luckily I was on the winning end of it this time.โ
Davis slowed from his third-place qualifying effort in his 4.143 first-round win over Rob Garcia, then improved to a 4.046 to defeat Burke Forster. The Douglas, GA-resident dipped into the 3-second range with a 3.994 over No. 2 qualifier Chris Garner-Jones in the semifinals. Davisโ 3.987 at 176.26 in the final round was just one-thousandth of a second away from the official et record.
โWhen it was hot today we struggled some, but the numbers came back when the cool Maryland air set in,โ Davis said. โWe just have to find a good tune-up for the hot weather now. Iโm just glad to get the win. Thanks to my wife Brandy and my son Brayden, Walt Timblin, and Perryโs Performance.โ

Perkinson (far lane) over Albert
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Langley (far lane) over Cooke
TOP SPORTSMAN/TOP DRAGSTER
The Top Sportsman Elite 16 final round came down to two of the quickest cars on the property. Virginians Randy Perkinson and Billy Albert squared off, with Perkinson leaving the starting line first and posting a 3.924 on a 3.92 dial-in in his Buck-powered โ16 Camaro. Albert, who built the motor in his Stan Nance-owned โ17 Camaro, ran a 4.099 on a 4.09 dial-in for the runner-up finish. Before reaching the final round, Perkinson defeated Tim Lawrence, Tim Molnar and Bruce Thrift.
With a massive field of Top Sportsman entries, a Quick 32 field was added to accommodate the additional cars. The Quick 32 win went to Mike Koontz, who drove his โ00 Chevy S10 pickup to a 4.728 on a 4.73 dial-in over Ronnie Proctorโs breakout 4.355 on a 4.36 dial-in.
Mechanicsvilleโs own Jerry Langley drove his Race Tech-built dragster to the Top Dragster final round win over touring regular Matt Cooke. Using a narrow holeshot advantage, Langley ran a 4.628 on his 4.62 dial-in to defeat Cookeโs 4.104 on a 4.01 dial-in. Cooke was chasing his second consecutive win on the PDRA tour. Langley defeated Camrie Caruso, Travis Laster, and Jason Kirby before facing Cooke.
The 2017 PDRA Tour resumes next month at the inaugural PDRA Mid-America Indy Showdown, July 13-15, at Lucas Oil Raceway at Indianapolis in Brownsburg, Ind.
Images via Roger Richards
