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Pro Stock

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Erica Enders wins Pro Stock World Championship

November 19, 2019 //  by Horsepower & Heels

The stakes were high coming into the closing race of the NHRA season. It was down to the wire for Pro Stock driver, Erica Enders, battling to claim her third NHRA Pro Stock World Championship.

Gossip and drama in Qualifying

The suspense and drama began in qualifying. Enders, who has claimed three No. 1 qualifying spots in the countdown, and has qualified second at the last two races, would again earn the No. 2 position entering eliminations.

That’s where things get complicated. In what many viewed as a calculated move, rival Greg Anderson strategically placed himself at the bottom of the qualifying ladder in the No. 15 position, in hopes to send Enders home first round and give his Summit Racing teammates a chance at the Championship.

Not at all intimidated, Enders spoke at the top end following qualifying that she and Anderson have a long history of controversial encounters.

“That guy has hated losing to a girl since the day I first set foot out here and I plan to keep it that way,”

Erica Enders, via NHRA.com

Critical Round wins in Eliminations

Everyone was talking about the epic first round match up of the NHRA Finals at Auto Club Raceway at Pomona.

The tension could be felt throughout the crowd as the two foes pulled to the starting line. Both had previously won in Pomona, Enders in 2014 and Anderson six times previously.

They left the line with nearly identical reaction times – Erica with a 0.017 and Anderson a 0.016. Both thundered down the track side-by-side, but Enders would come up with the win light by a mere 16 inches.

In a career-defining round win, Erica defeated Greg Anderson with a 6.570 ET at 210.41 mph, to his losing 6.575 at 210.31 mph. The crowd and her team on the starting line went wild in celebration.

“It was the race of the year for me, so I couldn’t be more proud. I found it bit interesting (the qualifying games), but it is what it is. I’ve said it before that I would rather race someone like him first round. We went out there and they gave us all they had, and today it ended in our favor. It was a great drag race.”

Erica Enders

Securing the championship

With that monumental win behind her, she just had one more round win to clinch a third championship: the quarterfinal match up against Chris McGaha. McGaha is another rival of Enders, with an equally colorful history of past encounters as well.

But Enders got the last laugh, as she proved deadly on the tree enroute to a holeshot win. Her reaction time of 0.019 over McGaha’s 0.050 was enough to keep her Melling Performance/Elite Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro in front with a 6.597 at 209.69 mph to a losing 6.593 at 210.08 mph.

“Going against Chris in the second round, it’s two of my favorite guys to beat in the same day (in Anderson and McGaha), so I was just thrilled for our entire organization. What an honor.”

Erica Enders

After turning on the win light that made the championship official, Enders coasted around and lingered inside the car gathering herself for the ensuing celebration.

“This one means a lot because of the valleys we’ve been through. It was a challenge for us and I’m thrilled. It’s just an awesome feeling to be back on top, and it’s the reason why you never give up.”

Erica Enders

“Today ended up being a great day with us locking up our third championship and my teammate, Jeg Coughlin, winning the race and solidifying the second position. For everyone at Elite Motorsports to take home the top two positions in NHRA Pro Stock, it’s a huge thrill for us. We take a lot of pride in what we do and it paid off this year. I’m just really proud.”

Erica Enders “thrEEtime” Pro Stock Champion

It’s been the perfect storm of a championship chase for the Elite team led by crew chiefs Rick Jones and Mark Ingersoll. They entered the chase in fifth place, and really turned it up during the Countdown . Hoisting the championship cup was the culmination of all that immense amount of work. Enders becomes the lowest-seeded driver to win a championship in Pro Stock history.

Enders proved she is fire under pressure, winning St. Louis and Las Vegas during the playoffs, qualifying at the top of the field throughout and putting together a string of consistent performances.

The 2019 championship marks her third career NHRA Pro Stock title. She’s already adopted the new hashtag “thrEEtime champ” – a play on her initials. She previously won championships in 2014 and 2015. Enders joins Angelle Sampey and Shirley Muldowney as the only females in NHRA history to win three world titles.

She ends the year with her two countdown wins and five final round appearances, a total of 25 career victories. The Vegas win was the 150th overall wins for females in NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series history – and 51 final round appearances.

“To give your whole life to something, it’s been a really long road and it hasn’t been easy at all,” Enders said. “You persevere and you just never give up.

Erica Enders

Category: Featured, Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

Melling Performance joins Erica Enders

July 7, 2017 //  by Horsepower & Heels

melling performance Melling Performance, a longtime associate sponsor of Elite Motorsports and two-time NHRA Pro Stock world champion Erica Enders, signed on to become title sponsor of the 22-time national event winner for five national events, beginning with the 20th annual Route 66 NHRA Nationals in Chicago and continuing through the 63rd annual Chevrolet Performance U.S. Nationals in Indy.

Everyone at Melling Performance is excited about our association with Erica and Elite Motorsports,” Melling Performance CEO Mark Melling said. “After being at the races, I thought it would be great to see the Melling Performance Decal on the doors of Erica’s RED #9 racecar. It reminds me of the Bill Elliott days in NASCAR.   Melling has been launching a ton of new performance engine parts, and we are pumped to see our logo on the side of her RED Melling Performance/Elite Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro!”

The Melling Performance brand and logo will adorn the doors of Erica Enders’ racecar at the upcoming NHRA national events in Chicago, Denver, Sonoma, Seattle and Indianapolis.

“Looking over the landscape of Pro Stock, it’s really quite an accomplishment to bring a company the size and caliber of Melling into a title sponsorship role,” team owner Richard Freeman said. “It reflects well on the entire class, the NHRA and our friends at FOX as well. Exposure for our sport and more importantly our sponsors is growing and that’s important to the long-term economic vitality of our race team.”

melling performance

Enders has established herself as one of the top female racers in history.  Only Erica Enders, Shirley Muldowney and Angelle Sampey have won world championships in any of the top forms of motorsports and her two championships, 22 national event wins, 18 No. 1 qualifiers and admirable 242-161 race day record mark her career in elite company.

I’m so excited to have Melling Performance step up like this,” Enders said. “We recently toured their facility and I was completely blown away. They aren’t state-of-the-art, they are way beyond that. It is like something out of the future. I was so impressed with everything they showed us.  We’ve become friends with everyone at Melling and they have definitely become part of the Elite family over the past few years. I can’t wait to drive this Melling Performance/Elite Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro into the winner’s circle this weekend.”

Melling Performance is a leading manufacturer of oil pumps and other power train components. Serving the global automotive original equipment and aftermarket industries, Melling is noted for its strong engineering, product development and distribution capabilities. Melling Performance operates 10 facilities in North America.

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Sponsors, Women Racing

Holeshot win for Erica Enders in Seattle

August 9, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Holeshot win for Erica Enders in SeattleWhen the pressure is on, champions rise to the occasion.  A key holeshot win for Erica Enders in Seattle this weekend helped push the reigning NHRA Pro Stock World Champion into Countdown contention.

When Erica Enders and her Elite Motorsports/Mopar Dodge team needed to have a good performance in the opening round of the 29th annual Protect The Harvest.com NHRA Northwest Nationals presented by Lucas Oil on Sunday at Pacific Raceways, they got the job done.

Enders ripped off a .009-second reaction time against Alex Laughlin, winning a crucial round despite a slower elapsed time. And in beating Laughlin, who came into the race 10th in the points standings, Enders took over 10th, the final spot in the Countdown to the Championship.
“I said in my interview at the top end that it reminded me of the U.S. Nationals last year, racing Greg Anderson in the semifinals, where the winner of that round got to go into the Countdown in the No. 1 position,” Enders said. “If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a million times: Under pressure, we are awesome together.”
Enders’ pass was 6.581 seconds at 209.39 mph, but her .048-second advantage on the starting line was enough to hold off Laughlin’s 6.569 at 210.90 mph.
 “My guys gave me a good race car,” Enders said. “It wasn’t a great run. We feel like we could have definitely gone a .56 out there first round, and it was important to put a little bit of a spread on Alex. It’s not a big spread, but we will take what we can get at this point.”
Enders now unofficially leads Laughlin by nine points with two races before the Countdown.
Enders had another excellent reaction time in the second round, .031, and was in front of No. 14 qualifier Aaron Strong before she had engine issues. Strong had beaten No. 3 qualifier Greg Anderson in the first round.
“We got a break with Greg going out first round,” Enders said. “Performance-wise, we had him covered a little bit and shoulda, coulda, woulda gone to the semifinals at least today. Jeggie (Coughlin Jr.) and I had a chance to meet up in the semifinals. He had Bo (Butner) covered three-hundredths on the Tree, I had Aaron covered five and a half and everything went away.”

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

Improved performance for Erica Enders in Denver

July 25, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Improved performance for Erica Enders in DenverIt has been a difficult season thus far for the reigning NHRA Pro Stock World Champion.   But this weekend saw improved performance for Erica Enders in Denver that keeps the Elite driver optimistic for a turn around.  Qualifying second for the event is proof that her Dodge Dart is now a contender, despite a second round loss due to parts failure.

Enders earned the No. 2 qualified position for the 37th Annual NHRA Mopar Mile High Nationals with a  6.933 second pass at 198.03 mph.   Though it was a less than ideal run, with Enders out of the groove for parts of the run, it was her best qualifying effort to date this season.  The Elite team has struggled with their switch to Mopar this season, also contending with rule changes in the Pro Stock class and the drastic move to Fuel Induction.

“We’re certainly pleased with our performance gains this weekend,” Enders said. “It shows that our hard work is paying off. Having said that, we still have a long way to go.”
She beat Alan Prusiensky with one of the best passes in the first round, 6.970 seconds at 197.42 mph. That gave her lane choice against Allen Johnson for the second round, but Johnson’s good fortune in Denver continued.
The two friends and rivals got off the line almost identically, but Johnson sped to the win with a pass of 7.000 seconds at 196.53 mph while Enders lost elapsed time from her first pass and ended up with a run of 7.026 seconds at 195.62 mph.
“We had a parts failure that round,” Enders said. “We should have been able to go out there and run a .98 absolutely no problem because we took where the failure in the run happened and did a run completer from there. We were actually on a better run than Greg (Anderson) in that round and he went a .99.
Though she lost in the second round after an unfortunate parts failure slowed her pass, the improved performance for Erica Enders in Denver means her Dodge Dart is now a contender.
“I think we would have been a solid to low .98. Should have, would have, could have, but it would definitely have been enough to beat AJ. This is just his lucky track.”
Johnson ended up racing to his 10th consecutive final round here, beating Vincent Nobile in the final.   Enders, meanwhile, looks forward to continuing the Western Swing next weekend in Sonoma, Calif.
“We’ll load up and go to Sonoma definitely with our heads held high because of the gains made here,” Enders said. “I’m looking forward to racing at sea level again, or closer to sea level, and kicking ass in Sonoma.”

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

Enders partners with Dutch Boy Paints

June 24, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Enders partners with Dutch Boy PaintsNHRA Pro Stock World Champion Erica Enders partners with Dutch Boy Paints and Menards for the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series event this weekend at Summit Racing Equipment Motorsports Park.

Enders will drive the Elite Motorsports prepared Dutch Boy/Menards Dodge Dart at the 10th annual Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals in Norwalk, Ohio.
“I’m honored to drive the Dodge Dart this weekend with such a recognizable brand on the door and the hood of our car,” Enders said. “I’m glad they’re giving us an opportunity to show them what we can do for them.”
To help kick off the partnership, Enders made an appearance at the Menards store in Sandusky, Ohio, on Wednesday. Menards has more than 280 home-improvement stores throughout the Midwest and is known as the low-price leader. The company has backed motorsports for many years, in the IndyCar Series, NASCAR, and ARCA.
Dutch Boy Paints, available at Menards stores, continues to be an industry leader in delivering innovative and high-quality products and packaging solutions.
Enders became the first woman to win the Pro Stock championship in 2014, earning the title in the final round of the final race. She repeated in 2015, winning nine times and setting NHRA records along the way. She is the only driver in NHRA history to win three consecutive final rounds on holeshots.
Enders and her Elite team partnered with Dodge to field the new Elite Motorsports/Mopar Dodge Dart for the 2016 season.

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

Semi final 4-Wide finish for Enders

April 25, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Erica Enders 4-wide
Photo: Geiger Media

The results may not be obvious, but Pro Stock driver Erica Enders and her Elite Motorsports/Mopar Dodge team continue to make progress in the 2016 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series season.  A semi final 4-Wide finish for Enders at the 7th Annual NHRA 4-Wide Nationals presented by Lowes on Sunday moved her up the standings in championship points to the No. 7 position.

The two-time Pro Stock world champion switched manufacturers for 2016, and combined with some NHRA-mandated rules changes, the Elite team has been playing catch-up through five races.  Enders keeps battling and her team keeps improving.
We learned a lot this weekend,” Enders said. “We completely used this race as a test session for us. I’m glad we were able to learn some stuff, and we certainly made a move in the right direction. The things we figured out this week we’ll apply to Houston.  Our rigs were supposed to go directly to Houston, but they’re going to go back to the shop and we’re going to work on our race cars and try to do our best to win in our hometown next week.”
Enders has won the last two races at Royal Purple Raceway, site of the Pro Stock race next weekend.   She heads there with some momentum. Enders finished second in her quad in the first round, making a pass of 6.630 seconds at 209.88 mph and trailing only teammate Drew Skillman.
First round was a much better run for us,” Enders said. “But by no means was it a great run. That was encouraging.”
 Enders then drilled her three competitors on the Christmas Tree in the semifinals with a .024-second reaction time. Had she matched her first-round elapsed time, Enders would have made it to the final, but the Dodge Dart shook the tires and she had to lift.
With her first-round light of .027, Enders remains one of the top drivers in the class at the starting line.
To me, that part’s easy,” Enders said. “That’s my job, to be focused. I really pride myself on my driving techniques. I try to perform as perfectly as possible every time. There are a lot of extra distractions here at this event, and I feel like we’re the best in the world. We proved it two years in a row, and we’re just going to keep getting better.”

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

In the Clutch with Tinzy Aronson

April 20, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

In the Clutch with Tinzy Aronson

From spectator to specialist, Tinzy Aronson has had her head down for over a decade working hard to earn her accolades as one of the brightest and dedicated clutch specialists in drag racing.   One part of an inseparable racing power-couple, her greatest strengths were tested one year ago in the wake of a tragic accident that severely injured her husband – leaving Tinzy to rise up and take on the heavy lifting in his recovery, their business livelihood, and their daily lives.

The Beginning

Tinzy Aronson grew up in Montgomery, Texas, a small town 40 miles north of Houston.   She and her father often attended the races as spectators, checking out the action at Royal Purple Raceway in Baytown, TX.    It was at one such outing in November of 2005 that Tinzy would meet Cale Aronson: a young, up and coming second generation racer from Missouri.  Cale was there with his Outlaw 10.5 Mustang racing in the Clash of the Titans program, and the pair very quickly hit it off.

They began dating, and naturally, Tinzy would accompany Cale to many races, watching and becoming more familiar with the Outlaw 10.5 racing scene.  The two were inseparable, and as they grew together as a couple, so did Tinzy’s desire to be more involved in the team.

Cale loved that I was interested in racing, but he was very adamant that if I wanted to be involved, that I needed to dig in and learn everything.  There was no half-assing it.”

He would advise Tinzy to look to Shannon Glidden, long time right hand of Bill Glidden and one of the most capable crewmembers in all of motorsports, as inspirational role model.   Watching Shannon and Billy work together as a flawless unit at the races, Shannon’s confidence and grace working on a record-setting and highly competitive car were the benchmarks by which Tinzy modeled her own career aspirations and goals.

Learning the Ropes

Buried in the clutch for Tinzy AronsonTinzy began learning and working on the clutch at the Aronson Motorsport shop in 2006.  Cale and his father, Chuck, would spend hours in preparation for upcoming races, and Tinzy was beside them, taking it all in and tediously learning the ropes behind what the family did in their racing program.

Her first track experience came helping turn the motor over in the Outlaw 10.5 Mustang while Cale made adjustments to the clutch.   Slowly, as she gained experience and confidence in her skills, Tinzy would begin taking on more mechanical responsibilities.   The team sold the Outlaw 10.5 car, purchasing a Pro Stock Escort in 2008 for a jump to the Pro Stock world.

By then, Cale was staying so busy with trying to work on the clutch, reviewing the data, and making tuning calls, that things became really frantic in the pits.   I started taking over the mechanical side of the clutch maintenance and other duties on the car  to help him be able to focus more on tuning and reading the data.”

Setting the wheelie bar heightWhen they debuted Cale’s 2010 Pro Stock Mustang, Tinzy – now Cale’s right hand and fiancée (he popped the question in October 2007) was acting Car Chief on the car.   The two worked well together, while Cale made the tuning calls, Tinzy would handle the clutch and other maintenance, and Cale’s dad would focus on the engine and transmission maintenance.   Soon, people around the pits were really taking notice of Tinzy’s skill in the clutch, earning her the nickname “Clutch Girl” and recognition from track announcers as one of the hardest working, proficient clutch specialists in the business.  She is typically found in the pits covered in clutch dust and buried in the clutch can, stirring up a bit of unexpected attention from fans and fellow racers alike that marveled at the woman working behind the firewall.  The attention has come as a surprise to the very humble car chief, who doesn’t really understand what the fuss is about.

I think, if anything [being a woman car chief] gets you more attention than you deserve.   They see me working out there, and the announcers are making references to me as the “best clutch person on the property”, and I just don’t think I do anything special to deserve that kind of attention.”

The racing community and fans have all been very supportive and encouraging of her career, and really the only negative she has encountered are some comments on message boards based on her looks and photos.  For Tinzy, the most challenging part of her motorsports career has been balancing the constant demands of a close, family team.

When things aren’t going well at the track, it can be very tense in the pit.  I’ve had to learn to walk away and regroup.”

Tinzy Aronson is an international for-hire clutch specialist.But that family dynamic is also one of the most rewarding parts of her career as well.   Cale and Tinzy, who married in 2013, work alongside one another as race partners and soulmates.  They are always on the same page, working toward a common goal that often needs no words or explanation.   

Traveling together overseas, we work so well together.  Cale does the tuning, and I handle the mechanical side of things.  We fully trust in and compliment each other – he makes the calls, and I’m his eyes and ears and everything just goes smoothly.”

The Day Everything Changed

Tinzy Aronson and Cale AronsonFor most all racing couples, there is an acute awareness buried in the back of your mind of the dangers involved seeing your loved one going down the track.   But almost one year ago, on April 25th, 2015 at the IHRA Nationals in West Palm Beach, Florida, Tinzy would realize that sinking fear as she watched Cale’s routine pass in his 2010 Pro Stock Mustang veer out of control, sending him violently into the wall and sliding down the track on its lid.   Her heart sank as panic quickly set in for her soulmate, who had come to rest past the finishline, still on his roof..

On the starting line, I am always video recording the runs, so I don’t get to watch Cale’s passes the way others see them.  My head was focused down on the video camera screen, and I looked up when the car made the turn into the wall.”

Instantly, Tinzy and Chuck ran directly for the golf cart to take off down the track towards the wreck.   But track officials quickly jumped in and blocked them, not allowing them to be near the scene or the rescue efforts underway to get Cale out of the car.

I didn’t know it at the time, but Cale was alert and conscious through the whole crash, and  knew immediately what had happened to him.  He asked the first responders to not allow me or his dad down there until they had him out of the car.   And that is exactly what the track officials were doing by blocking us from going to him.”

Tinzy in the lanesThe waiting was agonizing for Tinzy and Chuck, standing by helplessly to hear word of his condition.   A flurry of medical and track personnel were painstakingly attending to him, but every second passing was an excruciating eternity for Tinzy, who could hear the rescue effort communications on the radio.

It felt like an eternity waiting… I could hear them talking on the radios, but no one was answering me.   Flashbacks of Bert Jackson’s wreck were racing through my mind… I didn’t know if he was dead or alive down there and every second was agonizing.”  

Finally, when they had extracted Cale from the car and immobilized him carefully onto the stretcher, Tinzy was rushed to his side.   

A thousand things were going through my mind, I didn’t know what to expect when I got down there.  He’s on the stretcher, no scratches, not bleeding… I was so relieved to see his face, to hear him.”   Tinzy said when she finally saw him.

She, of course, couldn’t see the extent of his injuries at first glance.  

I vaguely remember someone asking if he could feel his legs.   He said no, but I was still in shock and didn’t realize what was going on.  The track officials are telling me that they had called the life flight helicopter, and I couldn’t comprehend why or understand that his neck was actually broken.”

Cale was flown to St. Mary’s Hospital in Palm Beach.  He had a compression fracture of his C5 vertebrae and had damaged C6, his spinal cord was swollen and bruised slightly.  He underwent surgery 3 days later to repair the fractured vertebrae, but doctors had no answers for his long term prognosis.   He had some very light sensations indicating early connectivity in his toes and feet, but no signal function as he could not move his body below the chest.   

That’s when the drag racing community reached out with critical help for Tinzy and Cale.   Jerry Gwynn, whose son, Darrell suffered a spinal cord injury in a Top Fuel crash 25 years before, connected Tinzy to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami.  Jackson Memorial is one of the leading spinal cord injury facilities in the country, whose work in research and development on paralysis cases and spinal cord injuries have been ground-breaking, and Tinzy made the decision to have Cale moved to Miami as soon as he was physically able to be transported.   

Spinal cord injuries are a fairly rare, specialized area of medicine.   When I asked about prognosis (at St. Mary’s), no answers were available.   If you are ever in a situation with spinal cord injury, find the best neurologist, and get there.   We were blessed that his accident happened 60 miles from one of the best care centers in the country.   I am so thankful to the Gwynn Family, and the Miami Project for leading the way in research and development for Cale’s care and recovery.  They have been truly amazing.”

Later analysis showed that Cale had struck the wall with 8Gs of force on impact, before the car rotated, slamming onto its roof, and sliding down the track.   Fully conscious during the entire crash, Cale said his HANS and other safety equipment did its job on the initial impact with the wall.  But it was the secondary impact of the car slamming onto its roof that critically injured the veteran racer.

When the car hit the wall, Cale said he was jolted sideways in the seat, and as it rotated, it came down on the roof with another 2.5Gs of force.  That force, combined with Cale’s own body weight, and the angle at which he came down inside the cage’s driver encapsulation exerted over 600 lbs of compression pressure on his neck, leaving a 2” crack in his helmet.  Seat belts are designed to keep you from being thrown forward or out of the car, but they aren’t designed to keep you from going UP.”

The Return Road

Tinzy Aronson never left Cale's sideThe recovery process, aka “The Return Road” –  has been slow and painfully frustrating at times, both for Cale AND Tinzy.   After over a month of care in Miami, the most difficult times came when they returned home and had to adjust to a very different life with the injury.   Rebuilding nerve pathways can be excruciatingly painful, and Cale’s limited mobility made regular day-to-day activities a challenge.

Coming home from the hospital is the hardest part of this entire experience.  With him not being able to move, and how much is affected by the central nervous system working, our first day home was terrible.  I had no idea how we were going to get through this, but we figured it out.  And as he has continued progressing, we were able to learn to manage the daily stuff into a new kind of normal.”

This left Tinzy to care for Cale, helping him to navigate daily activities and assume all the other tasks that Cale was no longer able to attend to on his own.   Household chores, therapy visits, and managing to keep them afloat while Cale was down fell onto Tinzy’s shoulders.

Picking up the added workloadTinzy’s role isn’t limited to just the Aronson Motorsports household/program either.   She is also a driving factor for the couple’s several business ventures:  Hot Rod Power Source, where they sell complete turn-key Ford crate engine programs and kits that convert to them, and Black Magic Clutches where they offer clutch development, setup and tuning all around the world.   While still in the hospital, Tinzy and Cale were still having to operate these businesses via email.  He was lying in the hospital bed, while doctors monitored his condition, and Tinzy was there in the clutch of tragedy around them, still conducting business despite it all.   The stress was extremely trying for Tinzy, who buckled down and bore the weight of the answering emails, fulfilling orders and all of the other tasks that Cale wasn’t able to handle in his injured state.    Doctors were amazed at their determination and dedication to the sport.   Tinzy also has her own line of unique gifts and accessories called Clutch Girl Gear, though it has taken a back seat temporarily after the accident.  

Now that things are starting to settle down some, with Cale making more and more progress in his mobility, the couple’s attention has turned back to the Pro Stock car and really understanding what happened to cause his injuries.  He has carefully climbed back in the car, belted in with his helmet on to see what they could do to prevent his spinal cord injury in the future, and they are now working with DJ Safety on new seat belt design that would secure drivers better in the event of a roll-over impact..   

In the wake of Cale’s accident and Barrett Lyle – I think we ALL need to be taking a look a safety equipment, not just from the standpoint of what is mandated, but sitting in the car and really looking around and evaluating your environment and equipment.  Address potential issues and find ways to help reduce the risks of injury.”

As these cars continue to go faster and faster, safety has to be paramount in the minds of racers and crew. But after seeing your loved one involved and injured in something as serious as Cale’s accident, the worry and fear increases.   Cale, who initially said he wouldn’t be racing again, now is working hard on recovery and plans to return to driving as soon as his doctors will allow it.  Racing friends have even begun donating parts to rebuild the damage to Cale’s Pro Stock.    But for Tinzy, that day will be a tough one filled with mixed emotions.

It makes me incredibly nervous (for Cale to race again), but racing is so very important to him and his love in life, and driving again is a monster that he wants to beat.”

Moving Forward

TTinzy Aronson working on the clutchinzy’s own future goals include learning more about the tuning side of things, to be able to read the total picture and fine tune the car herself.    The Horsepower & Heels 2015 Crew Woman of the Year hopes that someday, she will be able to inspire others much like Shannon served as her role model.   She adds these words of advice:

Take in and learn everything you can. Absorb everything around you.  Ask questions and be open to learning from others.   When you do get some knowledge under your belt, don’t get overly confident and think you know it all.   And don’t develope a chip on your shoulder about being a woman in the sport, work hard and earn respect that way.”

As for Cale and Tinzy, who now have been inseparable for over a decade, the question often arises – will there be a future crew member to carry on the family motorsports legacy?   The couple, known for their affinity for all things “Minion”, have yet to have their own little minion running around the pits.

Tinzy laughed, “John Kaase asks us all the time, he is looking for his 3rd generation customer.”  

We just will have to wait and see….  

Category: Featured, Pit FeaturesTag: Crew, Drag Racing, IHRA, Pro Stock, Tinzy Aronson, Women in Motorsports, Women Racing

Narrow first round loss for Enders

March 21, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Narrow first round loss for Erica EndersTwo-time reigning NHRA Pro Stock World Champion, Erica Enders has had a rough start to her 2016 season.    The 47th annual Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals ended in another narrow first round loss for Enders, ultimately losing by a hundredth of a second, her third straight first-round loss this year.

We’re getting so close to where we want to be, and we knew making the switch to Mopar would take some adjustments, but it’s still frustrating when you lose a drag race,” Enders said, “especially when you consider all of the success we’ve had the last two seasons.”
  Enders went door-handle-to-door-handle with good friend and fellow competitor Allen Johnson in the opening round of eliminations, running a losing 6.639 at 208.65 mph to his 6.634 at 208.97 mph.
 I could see ‘Brutus’ (Johnson) out of the corner of my eye the whole way down,” Enders said. “That’s one big advantage we have without the hood scoop any more — you can see everything. I just did my thing and tried to be perfect going through the gears, but we came up a fender short.”
Johnson left with a miniscule .006-second head start but was able to hold off Enders’ Elite Motorsports/Mopar Dodge Dart as the two streaked down Gainesville Raceway. The margin of victory at top speed was estimated to be about four feet.
I keep saying it but we’ve only had these Hemi motors for a month, so it’s new to all of us, but when Jake Hairston and Nick Ferri tell me there are big things to come, I believe them. The more and more runs we make and the more dyno time those two have, the better it will be.”
EricaEnders_PitEnders and her Elite team have been wrestling with an entire new program – a new car, new NHRA mandated changes to EFI, no hood scoops, shorter wheelie bars, and the typical learning curve associated with that drastic of change.
 I know we’ll be alright and the guys are upbeat and telling me not to get down, but I suppose I’ve gotten a little spoiled. At the same time, I know we have the best team, the best crew guys, the best tuners, the best engine builders in the world under this awning, so there’s no doubt we’ll be back to our winning ways very soon. We just have to be patient.”

 The next stop on the NHRA tour is the 17th annual Denso Spark Plugs NHRA Nationals, April 1-3, at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, although Enders thinks she’ll be in the seat before that race begins.

 I’d imagine the guys will want to test some more,” Enders said. “It’s easy for us to go to Keith Haney’s track in Tulsa (Okla.) because it’s close to the race shop and that track is so good it’s just like anything we see on the national tour. We’ll probably hit it hard when the truck gets back to Oklahoma.”

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

Slow start for Erica Enders in Pomona

February 15, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Slow start for Erica Enders in Pomona
Photo: Geiger Media

Slow start for Erica Enders in Pomona

After a slow start for Erica Enders in Pomona, the two-time Pro Stock World Champion didn’t love her 2016 Valentine’s Day so much.  Enders lost in the first round of the 56th Annual Circle K NHRA Winternationals, the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series season opener.   The champ shook the tires at the hit and almost immediately had to abort the run in her Elite Motorsports/Mopar Dodge Dart.

Enders could only watch as Elite teammate Jeg Coughlin Jr. sailed on to the victory, but she is far from distraught. Class-revolutionizing changes in the off-season by the NHRA including  a manufacturer switch to Dodge and an NHRA-mandated change to fuel-injected engines limited to 10,500 rpm — completely changed the Pro Stock program for 2016.    The Elite team is starting from scratch on their program, and Enders knows this is just the beginning for the World Championship team.
We’ve got to keep a positive attitude and keep the mindset that this is only a beginning for us,” Enders said. “We just finished putting our motors together on Wednesday in Phoenix. We can only go up from here, and I know that with all my heart. It is a very tough pill to swallow. I hate losing, I hate losing first round. If there’s any consolation to it, at least it was to my teammate.”
Enders qualified No. 9 in Pomona, the first time since the Sonoma, Calif., event last August that she qualified outside of the top half of the field.
We’ve got to do some work with these race cars,” Enders said. “That run marks run No. 15 under our belts, and that’s nothing, considering I had over 300 runs on my other car. We’ll learn it, we’ll get it, and we’ll be back to the top — you bet your butt.”
Enders had tempered her expectations for Pomona, knowing the new Dart and Mopar engine is early in its development by Elite Performance, but she didn’t expect such tire shake against Coughlin.
The track was way different today than it was the whole weekend,” Enders said. “We run behind the fuel cars, and they did zero track prep, which is pretty detrimental to our class. Of course, being first out doesn’t help, but that was our own fault.  All things considered, coming here we figured we’d be a middle-of-the-pack car, and that’s exactly what we were. We’re going to go home and go to work on this stuff. We’ve got a couple weeks until Phoenix, and in between Phoenix and Gainesville there’s another couple of weeks. I fully expect by the Gatornationals to be a lot more competitive. We’ll keep moving in the right direction.”

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

First test with EFI a success for Enders

February 1, 2016 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Erica Enders new Dodge Pro StockTwo-time defending NHRA Pro Stock world champion Erica Enders is fresh off a successful first test session with her new EFI-equipped Elite Motorsports Mopar Dodge Dart on Saturday at North Star Dragway.
The Pro Stock class recently made the switch to NHRA-mandated electronic fuel-injected engines, an imposed 10,500-rpm limit, and a shorter wheelie bar configuration .   Enders and her Elite team also were testing their new equipment under their manufacturer alliance with Mopar and Dodge – a new RJ Race Cars Dart built in the shops of crew chiefs Rick and Rickie Jones.
I was really impressed,” Enders said. “It was a pretty awesome experience. I feel like my expectations were a little tainted by what other people had reported about EFI and I didn’t know what to expect, but then to experience it first-hand with my guys, I’m very optimistic. Things went well, and I’m excited about the season.   We accomplished a lot in one day, and we did that because of the preparation and hard work of all my Elite guys.”
Enders put her new Dodge through the motions in a full day of testing, while the team took notes on the many differences between the former Pro Stock configuration and the new one.
 The drivability is absolutely different,” Enders said. “It’s definitely challenging, but change always is. I couldn’t have asked for a better first experience with it. We had a great track to test on, and with a brand-new race car and all the new EFI stuff, we went out and went right down the racetrack — no blips, no hiccups, nothing. It was great.”
The new body changes also meant a clear-view for Enders – no more large hood scoop blocking her vision from inside the car.
I’ve never raced with an open windshield like that,” Enders said. “I’ve always had a hood scoop or a blower or something, so it was definitely different to have a wide-open view. That was a big change, but I ignored that aspect of it because I was so focused on doing my best in the race car. That wasn’t even a thought.”
The team continues preparations for the start of the 2016 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series season with upcoming pre-season testing at Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park in Chandler, Ariz., starting next Sunday.

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Erica Enders, NHRA, Pro Stock, Women Racing

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