NHRA

Jack Beckman To Drive For John Force Racing

Jack Beckman To Drive For John Force Racing

With an NHRA championship still very much in play, John Force Racing president Robert Hight announced Tuesday that 2012 Funny Car World Champion Jack Beckman will drive Force’s PEAK Antifreeze and Coolant Chevrolet Camaro SS for the remainder of the 2024 season in what the team is calling, “Joint Task Force – Mission Championship”.

While Force continues to recover from a TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury) suffered in a June 23 crash in Richmond, Va., “Fast Jack” will slide into the seat occupied by the 157-time tour winner during the season’s first nine races. Beckman will make his debut in the PEAK Camaro in this week’s non-championship event, the 47th Annual Cornwell Tools “Night Under Fire” at Summit Motorsports Park, where he and John Force Racing teammate Brittany Force in the Cornwell Tools Chevrolet dragster will both compete.

When Force was injured, he was second in points behind John Force Racing teammate Austin Prock. By NHRA rules, when a driver is unable to compete, the race team may employ a substitute who can earn points for the original driver in a maximum of eight tour events. This means when Beckman rolls to the starting line for qualifying at the 42nd Lucas Oil Nationals at Brainerd, Minn., on August 16, he’ll be pursuing a 17th championship title for Force. He currently sits sixth in the driver standings with two races remaining before points reset for the Countdown to the Championship.

“When you think about someone who can handle the driving, can deal with the media, take care of the sponsors and take care of the fans, there was only one obvious choice and that was Jack Beckman,” Hight said. “Plus, he has history with Chris Cunningham (co-crew chief on the PEAK Chevy with Dan Hood and Tim Fabrisi) and has the respect of John’s family.”

A 33-time event winner in Funny Car, Beckman last raced competitively in 2020 when he returned to being a full-time elevator technician, a career that he left 22 years earlier to follow his drag racing dream.

The 58-year-old Californian is keenly aware of the unique situation.

“It’s been nearly four years since I stood on the throttle, and I thought that feeling was something I’d never experience again. Though the circumstances that brought me back are regrettable, the opportunity presented to me is beyond my ability to find words. I’m not replacing John…nobody could ever do that. John is one of a kind, and his impact on this sport, and my life, cannot be…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at DragzineDragzine…