Antron Brown scored his long-awaited first win as an NHRA team owner on Sunday at the Menards NHRA Nationals presented by PetArmor at Heartland Motorsports Park in Topeka, Kansas. It was his 53rd Top Fuel triumph, and 69th national event win overall.
Brown’s AB Motorsports team, owned and operated by the three-time Top Fuel world champ, made its debut at the start of the 2022 NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series season with high hopes, but it’s no secret that the team struggled to find its footing through the first half of the season. Prior to Sunday’s victory, Brown had only five round wins on his 2022 scorecard but had sensed the team had turned a corner during the Western Swing, particularly in Seattle when the team was consistent in the heat while the majority of the field grappled with the challenging conditions.
“People weren’t even talking about us anymore, we weren’t even in the conversation. You could see it on some people’s expressions on their faces when the media was writing us off, but those on the outside didn’t know what was going on behind the ropes, and what goes on at the shop,” said Brown of the team’s documented struggles, which saw them advance beyond the first round only three times through the first 13 races.
With temperatures lingering in the high 90s all weekend long, Topeka presented a similar set of challenges as what the team had faced in Seattle, and the Matco Tools team was ready. Led by crew chiefs Brian Corradi and Mark Oswald, the new team faced a loaded ladder of top five-ranked championship contenders in every round on race day.
Brown qualified: No. 11 with a 3.818 at 281.89 MPH, and began his march to the Heartland Motorsports Park winner’s circle by picking off Top Fuel points leader Brittany Force in round one. He defeated Josh Hart in round two when he clocked consecutive 3.8-second passes. In the semifinals, Brown’s third appearance of the year, the Brownsburg, Ind. resident faced technical alliance teammate Justin Ashley where both drivers pedaled their way down the track with Brown coming out on top to set up a battle against reigning world champion Steve Torrence, who was also seeking his first win of the season. The longtime friends were nearly even leaving the starting line but Brown quickly pulled ahead and never trailed for the win, posting a 3.902 E.T. to Torrence’s 4.443 to earn the Wally trophy and collect AB…
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