| MIKE EDWARDS: BEFORE PRO STOCK THERE WAS MODIFIED | ||||
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Mike Edwards remembers his Modified world championship and the end of the class …
EDITOR'S NOTE: Mike Edwards dominated the 2009 NHRA Pro Stock like few have ever done. While this title was Edwards' first as a professional drag racer, it wasn't his first championship. Edwards captured the NHRA's Modified eliminator title in 1981 and then the class was discontinued, denying Edwards the opportunity to run the No. 1 on his car in championship defense. Fifteen months ago, CompetitionPlus.com ran an article on the time Edwards won a championship as a sportsman racer. We felt it appropriate on a slow news day to rerun this informative article. Whether or not Mike Edwards ever wins another national event, or sets a world record, his name will be forever etched in the history books of drag racing. His accolades come not as a professional drag racer but as a dedicated sportsman racer. Since coming to the professional ranks in the early 1980s, Edwards has been a dyed-in-the-wool GM racer. That’s why it’s ironic that his inclusion into drag racing history is with a small-block Ford Maverick.
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Edwards ran the Modified division with authority and a humble nature. His personality was non-confrontational, but the car he drove was anything but a pushover.
"You could race pretty heavily, go to 8 or 10 races a year and it wouldn’t cost a whole lot. The whole class was just fun, the indexes were able to let you be real competitive back then. I just enjoyed running that class." - Mike Edwards on racing Modified eliminator.
Edwards said the Modified eliminator heavy-hitters hung out in the Super Modified division. “If you showed up for Indy in C/Super Modified you better have a lot of gas because you’re going to go a lot of rounds,” Edwards said. “When they first came out with that class, they would let the canted valve Ford run C. We started dominating and they took it out and made us run A or B. I switched over to B and ran real good there but it seemed like the Super Modified were the best. That’s a ten inch tire and a 750-cfm carburetor. They weight over 3400 or 3500 pounds so it’s hard to hook those little things up.” For Edwards, the moderately inexpensive class was a purists division that carried a lesser price tag than Comp eliminator and an opportunity to race against other stick shift racers since Super Stock was largely comprised of automatic cars. “You could race pretty heavily, go to 8 or 10 races a year and it wouldn’t cost a whole lot,” Edwards recalled. “The whole class was just fun, the indexes were able to let you be real competitive back then. I just enjoyed running that class. There were a lot of good cars in [NHRA] Division Four, that’s the division I ran in.” Edwards raced against the best of the best Modified had to offer and didn’t even have to go to the nationals to gain the experience. “If you could win Modified in Division Four you were pretty hateful,” Edwards beamed. “I was fortunate to do that a couple times. That’s back when Bear Barrilleaux ran the old Volkswagen, he was so hard to beat. “Then you had others like Dick Maris, David Nickens, you could go to Houston and just about fill a Modified eliminator event, there were that many cars there. I mean good cars, I miss those times. I’m just blessed and fortunate I had a chance to race back then.” The rules makers in Modified eliminator could be downright brutal in maintaining parity as Edwards recalled. There was no formula in place such as the Competition Index Committee utilizes today. A good day on Sunday could obsolete a combination on Monday. Or on the spot, you were adjusted. “If NHRA thought you had an advantage they would adjust you,” Edwards recalled. “I know Buddy Ingersoll, when he was running that turbo Pinto he got hit .15 in the staging lanes at Pomona. They didn’t know how fast the car would run. He just smoked everybody and they adjusted him right there on the line. Buddy had a turbo he would just turn it right back up. They took it to a point that he had the thing running on the edge and breaking the little old four-cylinder. He won a lot of races, though. “That’s the fun part about Modified back then is you could build an off the wall car that could do something like that. That’s what made it fun.”
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