Street Machine

GRUDGE KINGS

With a $50K purse on the line, the big hitters turned up and swung for the fences

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LET’S be honest – drag racing in Australia is in a tough spot at the moment. On one hand, premier events like the Winternati­onals are bigger than ever. Pro Slammer has massive fields and is highly competitiv­e, and this year saw the crowning of the first-ever female Top Fuel champion. And on the other, the sport is split between two sanctionin­g bodies, and some states desperatel­y need new or upgraded tracks.

The good news is that there are some forward-thinking promoters who are out to change the game, and when they are rewarded for their efforts with a successful event, it is – at the risk of sounding a little cliché – good for the sport.

Believe the hype – Grudge Kings 2018 at Sydney Dragway kicked arse. The stands were packed with 7000 punters who got their backsides trackside to watch 32 of the baddest pro street brawlers in Australia go at it. When there’s a record $50,000, winner-take-all purse on the line, a quality field is all but assured.

“It brought back the atmosphere that’s been lacking from drag racing lately,” said Grudge Kings frontman, Po Tung. “Apart from the 400 Thunder, it seems like most other forms of drag racing have been in decline, so it was great to put drag racing back on the map.”

The open-ended rules for Grudge Kings require competitor­s’ cars to have a steel roof and quarters and two swinging doors; everything else is free and easy. That meant that there was a truly impressive variety of cars – everything from nutso smalltyre rotaries to 481X-powered sedans, an impressive array of blown, turbo and nitrous V8s, and a couple of Jap six-pot

screamers for good measure. That, along with the requisite trash talk it brings, is an important part of the recipe for success at Grudge Kings.

“I think people want to see something different,” said Po. “A lot of traditiona­l drag racing in Australia hasn’t evolved in the past 10 or 15 years; it’s the same cars racing the same brackets. People want to see heads-up racing and the smack talking that goes along with it; the banter is probably 50 per cent of the formula, and that’s what you get when these top guys go head-to-head – turbo cars going against blown cars, rotaries and nitrous cars, imports versus V8s. When you match up these different sorts of cars, you create rivalry, and the punters love it.

“Being an import guy, when you go up against a V8 you’re so geed up, and it creates a different dimension around the racing.”

The format for the Grudge Kings racing is simple – it’s heads-up, eighth-mile, win light only, in an eliminatio­n format. The amber lights on the tree are blanked out, meaning you can’t anticipate the green. The idea is to replicate a street race as closely as possible in a safe and sanctioned environmen­t, and the last man standing ends up $50K richer.

The fast guys were the main drawcard at Grudge Kings, but the event had plenty else on offer. There were other classes of racing right down to dial-your-own, which unfortunat­ely resulted in an unusually high number of oil-downs and on-track incidents. But the track staff were on their game, and the fans stuck around regardless of the delays.

There was also a cracker of a show ’n’ shine, which was held

on the eastern side of the venue.

“We did well with show ’n’ shine entrants at our last event, with close to 100,” said Po. “I was expecting 150 this time around, and we ended up with 193 and ran out of room up the top; in the end we had to turn show cars away.

“The idea was that if you have a tough streeter or cruiser, come and park up the top on the eastern side of the track and watch the racing. By doing that you activate the far side of the dragway, which rarely gets used. We had a DJ set up and ran our BDP Babe Comp over there, too. We really tried to liven up that eastern hill and create a good vibe.”

While the delays on track meant no winners were declared in the lesser classes, the Grudge Kings class made for thrilling racing throughout the day, resulting in a mouth-watering match-up in the $50,000 final. Exemplifyi­ng the variety of entrants in the class, Jeremy ‘Jet’ Martin’s killer 481X-powered VB Commodore faced off against Bruno Matijasevi­c’s oh-so-cool Supercharg­ed Outlaws HG sedan in a classic turboversu­s-blower battle.

The atmosphere was intense, but the race ended up being a bit of a non-event, with Bruno too slow into stage, earning himself a red light and granting Jet a free kick for the giant, novelty-sized winner’s cheque made out for $50,000.

“I was pretty nervous on the Friday night because I’d

never done a big-money race, and my tuner Josh Ledford gave me a bit of a pep talk,” said Jet. “He asked me how many laps I’d done in the car, and pointed out that every round is just another lap, so that was the approach I took to racing. The final was a weird moment; I was so focused on the green light that as soon as I saw it I let my finger off, but I also saw the red, and a second or two later I realised I’d already won; we did it.

“It was just insane. The money is one thing, but it’s more the sense of pride. I’ve been going a long time with that car and my crew and family have too. All these years haven’t been a waste of time. My sponsor, Hunter Kitchen King, has given me the opportunit­y to take the car to the States for No Mercy, so that’s the next challenge. It’s been a big few months!”

Plans are already afoot for next year’s instalment of Grudge Kings; Po plans to build on the momentum and hopes to recruit a massive 64-car field to compete for an unpreceden­ted $100,000 purse!

“There’s already talk of engine changes and cars being shipped over from WA for next year, so it’ll be big!” he said.

Count us in!

WHEN YOU MATCH UP THESE DIFFERENT SORTS OF CARS, YOU CREATE RIVALRY, AND THE PUNTERS LOVE IT

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 ??  ?? 02: Few properly fast XY Falcons are as neat or as regularly street-driven as Bobi Mircevski’s. Built by Frank and the boys at Dandy Engines, it packs a 427ci small-block Ford Windsor similar to what’s in Frank’s own XW Falcon. After a few test hits and early shut-offs at Grudge Kings, Bobi eventually went through the beams for his first seven – a 7.84@175mph in full street trim on 275 radials01: All the cool kids are strapping bus turbos to their LS engines and running crazy times, but Tim Holmyard has taken the road less travelled. His VX runs a big-cube, tunnelramm­ed LS with a direct-port nitrous system, and dipped into the sevens for the first time the day before Grudge Kings with a very stout 7.87@173mph. Tim then bettered that with a stonking 7.79@175mph at the event
02: Few properly fast XY Falcons are as neat or as regularly street-driven as Bobi Mircevski’s. Built by Frank and the boys at Dandy Engines, it packs a 427ci small-block Ford Windsor similar to what’s in Frank’s own XW Falcon. After a few test hits and early shut-offs at Grudge Kings, Bobi eventually went through the beams for his first seven – a 7.84@175mph in full street trim on 275 radials01: All the cool kids are strapping bus turbos to their LS engines and running crazy times, but Tim Holmyard has taken the road less travelled. His VX runs a big-cube, tunnelramm­ed LS with a direct-port nitrous system, and dipped into the sevens for the first time the day before Grudge Kings with a very stout 7.87@173mph. Tim then bettered that with a stonking 7.79@175mph at the event

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