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Archives for December 2015

You are here: Home / 2015 / Archives for December 2015

Sports Minded | Female Racers

December 27, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Competitiveness is a wonderful thing harnessed by strong, capable ladies in the sports world. Many women in motorsports were also athletes in other sports before they began their racing careers.

These sports minded female racers drew on the experiences they gained in other sports to help them in the racing world.

Sports Minded Female Racers : What sports do/did you play?  How did it help you in Motorsports?

Leave us a comment below with your sport and experiences!

Category: Horsepower & Heels BlogTag: Ashley Keller, Dina Parise, Erica Ortiz, Journee Richardson, Leah Pritchett, McKenna Haase, Shannon Mudro, Women Racing

Courtney Force and Graham Rahal Wedding [VIDEO]

December 20, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

John Force Racing shared a beautiful new video of the Courtney Force and Graham Rahal Wedding that took place beachfront at Rancho Dos Pueblos in Santa Barbara, CA.

Courtney Force and Graham Rahal Wedding

Category: Heel ClicksTag: Courtney Force, Women Racing

Wedding for Bia Figueiredo

December 20, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Special news for Brazilian Stock Car/ Former Indycar racer Ana Beatriz “Bia” Figueiredo, who walked down the aisle amidst family and friends on Saturday, December 19, 2015.

Wedding for Bia Figueiredo

Bia Figueiredo, a São Paulo native, married Fabio Casaram in a beautiful ceremony.   She posted a special message to her new husband, family, friends and fans on Facebook:

Ontem foi um dia muito especial. Rever a família completa e celebrar uma relação de muito amor e respeito. Se sou o que…

Posted by Bia Figueiredo on Sunday, December 20, 2015

Category: Heel ClicksTag: Bia Figueiredo, Stock Car, Women Racing

Larsen Motorsports 2015 [VIDEO]

December 19, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Check out this cool 2015 Jetlife video for Larsen Motorsports!   Watch Elaine Larsen, Marisha Falk, Kat Moller, and Shea Holbrook tear up the track in their Jet Dragsters!

Larsen Motorsports | JETLIFE 2015

Video footage by Les Mayhew

Category: Heel ClicksTag: Drag Racing, Elaine Larsen, Jet Dragster, Kat Moller, Marisha Falk, Shea Holbrook, Women Racing

Horsepower & Heels Women of the Year Awards 2015

December 18, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Horsepower & Heels Women of the YearWe are so excited to announce our first-ever Horsepower & Heels Women of the Year Awards!   The aim is to allow our readers and fans to nominate and recognize their favorite choices for woman of the year in motorsports based on their performances on and off the track.

Horsepower & Heels Women of the Year Awards Categories

For the first annual awards, we’ve selected seven award categories:

  • Female Racer of the Year
  • Female Crewmember of the Year
  • Female Motorsports Professional of the Year
  • Female Rookie of the Year
  • Female Team of the Year
  • Most Improved
  • Most Influential Woman of Motorsports

Each category allows fans to select one woman for nomination.  Once the ballots have been counted, the woman with the most votes in each category will be declared the winner.

Voting is open now through December 29, 2015 11:59PM EST.  Votes will be collected into a database and winners will be calculated by tally of votes.   Only one nominee per category, and one ballot per person/email accepted.   

Winners will be announced on December 31, 2015 and posted on this website.

Vote NOW | Horsepower & Heels Women of the Year Awards

Trouble viewing? Click here to submit your vote.

Category: Official News, Women in Racing NewsTag: Horsepower & Heels, Women of the Year, Women Racing

Chix Gear Fast 15 team announced

December 16, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Chix Gear Fast 15 team 2016Chix Gear Racewear just announced their Chix Gear Fast 15 team for the 2016 season.   The annual contest selects 15 female racers onto the Chix Gear backed Fast 15 team   A total of 242 applications were received for the 2016 contest.

It was a very hard decision and there were SO many great applicants. There is an amazing amount of professionalism and talent in this group of 15.” – Chix Gear Racewear

Follow the success of the Chix Gear Fast 15 team all season long on the new Chix Gear Fast 15 team Facebook page, so make sure to “LIKE” that page!

Chix Gear Fast 15 team

Jenna Johnson – Dirt Late Model, Iowa
McKenna Haase – Sprint Car, Iowa
Tara Longnecker – Bmod, Iowa
Megan Manshack – ATV, Ohio
Lexy VanZandt – BMod, Missouri
Kayli Barker – Asphalt Late Model, Nevada
Shayle Bade – Sprint Car, Nebraska
Brianna Mahon – Monster Truck, Illinois
Savannah Trantham – Sprint Car, Texas
Mandy Chick – Asphalt Late Model – Kansas
Ashley Strickland – Drag Racer, North Carolina
Ashley Capetta – Sprint Car, Pennsylvania
Bri Bandimere – Drag Racer, Colorado
Sarah Burgess – Off Road Truck, California
Skyler Allen – Micro Sprint Car, Kansas

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Ashley Capetta, Ashley Strickland, Bri Bandimere, Brianna Mahon, Jenna Johnson, Kayli Barker, Lexy VanZandt, List, Mandy Chick, McKenna Haase, Megan Manshack, Sarah Burgess, Savannah Trantham, Shayle Bade, Sklyer Allen, Tara Longnecker, Women Racing

Woman of the Week – Erica Ortiz

December 16, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Motorsports Sisterhood features Erica Ortiz as Woman of the Week

motorsport sisterhoodThe Motorsports Sisterhood, a community organization formed to nurture the careers of women in motorsport and provide funding to advance and nurture motorsport careers, featured Horsepower & Heels founder, Erica Ortiz as their Woman of the Week.

The interview discusses Erica’s journey in drag racing, the formation and purpose behind Horsepower & Heels and her experiences with sexism in motorsports.

Read the article:  http://www.motorsportsisterhood.org/blog/woman-of-the-week-erica-ortiz

Published:  December 16, 2015

Category: In the NewsTag: Erica Ortiz, Horsepower & Heels, News, Women Racing

NMRA Rookie of the Year Haley James

December 16, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

NMRA 2015 Class Champions
Photo: NMRA Digital

Capping a monumental season that saw her first-ever heads-up drag racing competition, first event win, a trip to all 6 event finals and her first National Mustang Racers Association class championship, it is no surprise that drag racing upstart Haley James would be shoe-in for the NMRA’s Rookie of the Year honors.

It seems like just yesterday we flew to Bradenton where I’d let go of that trans-brake for the first time and feel that addicting adrenaline rush that we’re all too familiar with,” said James of her whirlwind season.

At the annual NMRA awards ceremony, held  in conjunction with the PRI show in Indianapolis, Haley James would take the stage to claim her Coyote Modified Class Championship recognition for a dominant season in the CM class.   James, who scored 3 event wins and appeared in all 6 event finals during the NMRA season, earned the top points total with her fox-bodied turbocharged, Coyote-powered coupe.

Haley James Class Champ ringShe would also receive the coveted special Nitto Class Championship ring, a jewel encrusted drag racing Christmas tree class ring traditionally bestowed onto each NMRA class champion at the close of the season to celebrate the honor.

NMRA Rookie of the Year Haley James

The Hellion B-Team would continue to rack up trophies in the special award categories.   Haley’s father and crew chief, Dwayne James, would receive the Crew Member of the Year award, beating out other nominees Susie Wiker and Bruce Hemminger.

None of this would have been possible without my team and their unequivocal dedication, my dad especially, for not only funding everything but also for being the most bad-ass tuner ever.”   

And it would be tough to argue with the selection of NMRA’s new Rookie of the Year Haley James, who claimed the award over nominees Steve Daniels and Ryan Jones.

I never thought I’d see myself in Race Pages, or Drag Illustrated, or standing here, not only with the title of 2015 Coyote Modified Champion, but also 2015 Rookie of the Year.”

Rookie of the Year Haley James2016 plans for #1 Coyote Modified Champ

What’s next for NMRA Rookie of the Year Haley James?   Will she return with the #1 on her window next season to defend her title in Coyote Modified?  Or perhaps take her shot at moving up the ranks into another NMRA class?

The future isn’t decided yet.  James stated that her and her Hellion teammates are awaiting the outcome and official announcement of 2016 NMRA rule changes before solidifying their 2016 race plans.    Could we see the new hot shoe champ return to defend her dominating championship run or perhaps take on a new challenge, moving up and seeking a rookie debut in another class?

One thing is for sure, we have only seen the beginning of Haley James’s drag racing career.

Leave a comment below to congratulate NMRA Rookie of the Year Haley James!

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Drag Racing, Haley James, NMRA, Susie Wiker, Women Racing

Victory Motorcycle driver Angie Smith eager to return

December 14, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

Victory Motorcycle driver Angie Smith ready for 2016Victory Motorcycle driver Angie Smith is eager to return to NHRA Pro Stock Motorcycle competition in 2016.   The husband-wife power team of Angie and Matt Smith introduced the Victory Motorcycle brand to the NHRA Mellow Yellow drag racing series competition this season, after Victory began looking for a way to get into the NHRA Pro Stock Motorcycle class in late 2014.   They met with a handful of teams before settling on the championship-winning pair.

Tough transition for Victory Motorcycle driver Angie Smith

But pioneering a new build and combination isn’t without its difficulties and challenges, as the team worked hard to develop the new Victory Pro Stock Motorcycle program.    Angie struggled early in the season with the aerodynamics of the new smaller fairing on the Victory race-prototypes.   At one of the first test sessions with the new bike, the team discovered that the Victory’s smaller fairing proVictory Motorcycle Angie Smith duced much higher wind resistance, with Angie’s hand actually blowing off the handlebars on one of her early runs, overpowering her slight build.  She kept control and stayed on the bike, but her confidence suffered.

An NHRA-approved midseason adjustment to the bodywork alleviated some of the wind resistance that the team was fighting, also helping to put the Victory more on par to the other manufacturers in the class in performance and speed.

“It took a while to get my confidence back,” she said. “But toward the end of the season, I was doing a lot better. I think in 2016 we’re going to be really, really good.”

As the season progressed, so did the confidence of Angie Smith.    She began the season at the bottom of the Pro Stock Motorcycle ladder, with a DNQ at the 4-wide Nationals and 7 total #16 qualifying starts.    But midseason, during the Western swing, their tireless efforts would begin to turn around, netting her a #11 qualified position for the Bandimere event and a season-best #8 effort in Maple Grove.

We are 100 percent behind this deal,” Angie said. “There’s no 9-to-5, 40-hour work week. We’ve been putting in all of out time to make this program better because we want to make Victory happy and we want to be happy as racers. We want this partnership with Victory Motorcycles to last a lifetime. We want to get as many people as we can riding Victory Motorcycles. The best way to do that is win because that shows everyone how great these motorcycles are.”

Though she encountered a rocky start in 2015, Smith is no novice to the Pro Stock Motorcycle ranks.   Angie is one of just 15 women in NHRA’s 64-year history to claim a national event trophy, and her crew chief/husband Matt says she will be adding to her career total in 2016.

She’s come a long way over the last couple of years,” he said. “The 2015 season was kind of a setback for her, mainly because of how the wind affects her on the Victory. She’ll be a lot better in 2016. We’ve just got to get her some more laps. She’ll be good next year.”

Category: Women in Racing NewsTag: Angie Smith, Drag Racing, NHRA, Pro Stock Motorcycle, Women Racing

10 Habits of Highly Successful Women

December 14, 2015 //  by Horsepower & Heels

10 Habits of Highly Successful Women10 Habits of Highly Successful Women

Author:  Glynnis MacNicol and Rachel Sklar

Publication Date:  August 2014

Length: 222 pages

Download from Amazon (Affiliate link)

Synopsis

’10 Habits of Highly Successful Women’ is a collection of essays written by a diverse group of very powerful women on their secrets to success and hard-earned experiences in the workplace.    The stories cover a range of experiences from emotional correctness by political commentator, Sally Kohn; age discrimination with journalist and social media strategist Nisha Chittal; New York Times author Jenna Worthman’s edge with Thinking on the Fly;  and many other life-lessons shared by highly successful women.

My thoughts on “10 Habits of Highly Successful Women”

The biggest thing I took away from these wonderful essays and the knowledge that each of these women shared, is that there isn’t any ‘secret’ to success.  That our journeys are each as personal and unique as we are, and that success isn’t this magic formula or complicated education – it is the sum of our own life story, how we choose to connect dots and climb steps into hills and onto mountains.     For some, the title might be a bit misleading- the book isn’t focused on an actionable list of business advice or acumen, but instead gives the perspective of the varying lifestyles and personalities of these women.  Reading beyond that into the stories of how careers were formed, it reinforces the kind of habits common among women that must be broken, and how overly complicated we tend to make the journey to success in our own minds.    To read how refreshingly normal these women are:  with insecurities, failures and stumbles just like us – is to learn that we all possess what it takes to be highly successful of our own accord.

Some of the stories may strike a chord and others will be more difficult to relate, but that helps to come away with the overall sentiment that the road to success is a personal one, and although we all share many commonalities, success can be reached in a myriad of ways.   I enjoyed reading the early career stories, relating to some and appreciative of the others.   I think it reinforced for me, values that we know but sometimes forget to see the impact on our lives.

Applying Habits to be Highly Successful Women of Motorsports

Although the book details more traditional business career goals, I think much of the advice translates well over to Women of Motorsports and female racers.  These were my Top 4 Take-Aways:

  1. Emotional Correctness:   Women in Motorsports usually fall on one side of a very black and white line: either they completely reject being identified as a woman racer, fighting to be only referred to as a RaceCar driver and not a female driver -or- they fully embrace the girl-power movement, in sparkles and pink, and everything #likeagirl.    There isn’t a thing wrong with either one of those, except that maybe taking that hard stance is less genuine than the complex beings that we are in the sport.Truth is, we are most often a combination of BOTH of those: fierce and capable racers AND feminine and powerful women who are overcoming barriers associated with long standing gender bias in a male dominated motorsport world.   The problem with over-compensating one way or the other, is we are alienating 50% of the population.    The key to applying this as women in motorsports is to be genuine and emotionally correct enough to be relate-able by both sides.   To exhibit your talent and capabilities as a driver or crew member or owner; while balancing that with pride and appreciation for your journey as a woman, and being a role model for women and gender equality in the sport.
  2. Age Discrimination– There definitely is some age bias at work in the motorsport world, although in my observations, they are not exactly aligned with that of women in the business world.    While extremely young women are typically seen as less-experienced, especially when in a more competitive class or category, there seems to be more emphasis placed on the use-by date of women in racing.After a certain age, it seems that women are expected to retreat into the assigned roles of motherhood and spouse.   Many women do not return from those life events, and when they express desire to do so, are often attacked for being selfish and not thinking of their families.   Never mind that men race long after they are married or fathers.   I wrote about this phenomenon in my post Racing After Motherhood, and I believe that much like the business world, we still have much to work towards in terms of allowing women the ability to be both mothers and successful women in racing.
  3. Thinking on the Fly-  Jenna Worthman’s advice about thinking on the fly really touched on a topic that I relate to in the racing world – that there isn’t an education to prepare you for a career in motorsports, nor the experiences you will encounter as a female navigating those tracks.   It is easy to allow yourself to feel unqualified for the career you crave, with few prerequisites to check off to validate your preparedness, and it makes a newcomer feel overwhelmed by the largely uncharted course it will take to achieve the success they desire.   But one quote I especially appreciated:

    You already know so much. In fact, you probably know enough to do the job you want to do.  Respect the process, and know that no matter how much you do know, you can always learn more.  Be willing to learn more.” — Jenna Worthman

    Don’t underestimate what you DO know… because living life equips us with so much more knowledge that for what we tend to give ourselves credit.

  4. Check your Fears – One of the most common themes that ran in the core of most of the essays, was the ability to rise up over our fears.  Fear of the unknown, fear of failure, the things that keep us from saying yes and taking chances that will lead us onto the path of success.Reading some of these stories made me think back to how many times I let fear hold me back from something that may have been my game-changer.   How often had I let fear make me skip that trip to the SEMA show, or how many times I stood aside instead of walking up and introducing myself to that sponsor or team owner.   These stories showed me what could’ve been if I would’ve just taken that chance, bought that plane ticket, sent that cold email, invested in myself and my future success absent from the conservative approach that said I should wait.   In essence – GO, DO, BE.  Do it NOW.

    All you need is ignorance and confidence, and the success is sure.”  —  Glynnis MacNicol

    Looking back, it seems that success for me came the fastest and easiest when I was young, full of drive and passion, and ignorant to how much I didn’t know in the world.   As I got older, the more I learned and the more I was aware of all that I didn’t know, the more I let it paralyze me into fear of action.   No matter what drives your fear, these stories help show that rising above that fear is what it takes to discover your true potential.

Read the book and have something to add? Have suggestions for another title we should review?  Leave us a comment below!    

Category: Books & Reviews

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