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The 2006 version of the Summit SuperSeries is taking on a new format, one that is sure to catch the attention of all IHRA member track competitors. In 2006, each of the track’s Performance Rating (P.R.) champions will race each other to determine the “Elite 8” field of Box and No Box finalists for the World Championship race. The groundbreaking program will continue to use the 30 round P.R. ranking system, but instead of having to have one of the top 6 scores in the nation as was the case in 2005; a racer will simply have to be the P.R. champion at their home track in order to race for the championship this year. Each track P.R. Champion will race each other at the Summit Team Finals in their respective division. The champion of the race will have earned their way into the 8 car field of finalists that will again race for the Summit World Championship during the IHRA World Finals in Rockingham, North Carolina on October 20-22, 2006. The World Championship race will be held during Sunday’s final eliminations during the professional session. The race will also be filmed by Speed Channel and seen when the IHRA World Finals airs on Speed in the fall. There have also been provisions made for divisions that run the Summit Team Finals after the World Finals is over, and for tracks that are geographically unable to attend a team final to ensure that no one is excluded from the program. The program highlights are as follows:
“Racers really liked competing against each other in Rockingham, during the pro rounds and on TV. It was a once in a lifetime shot for them” said IHRA President Aaron Polburn. “We spent this past season working on a way to give all racers much better odds of making the Elite 8 in Rockingham. There was concern that the level of competition at all tracks was not the same. Some racers didn’t think they had a shot because no one could have a 29-2 record at their track. Basically you had an 8 in 3,000 chance at being the Summit world champion in 2005. With the program now being raced for at the track level, a racer simply cares about the competition at his home track and being crowned the P.R. champion at his track. Now the odds are extremely favorable to all IHRA racers regardless of track. The Summit World Championship is in the competitor’s control from the first round at his home track through the final round at Rockingham. This does not reward the racer who has a great day at the Summit Team Finals. One or two good races do not make a champion. A world champion should have consistently good performance on a weekly basis and that is what we have been able to accomplish. This program was revolutionary when it first debuted in 2002. It has undergone some changes to improve the process along the way. No one has ever had a program like this before, so we needed to fine tune it. With the help of our track operators that run the program and Summit Racing Equipment, we have been able to come up with the best version to date” said Polburn. The 2006 Summit Super Series begins February 1st. Competitors must sign up for their IHRA home track points and renew their IHRA membership and competition number before Summit SuperSeries points will be counted. For more information contact the IHRA participating track near you or Donna Harper at IHRA headquarters at dharper@ihra.com. |
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