PRUDHOMME
RETIRES
Don The Snake
Prudhomme
Personal Information:
Date of birth: April 6, 1941
Residence: Rancho Santa Fe, Calif.
Birthplace: San Fernando Valley, Calif.
Wife: Lynn
Daughter: Donna
Height/Weight: 61/175 lbs.
Hobbies: Dogs, fishing, golf and landscaping
Biography
Ask even the most casual of motor
sports fans who the biggest name in drag racing is and you are
almost always sure to hear one name Don The Snake
Prudhomme. A true legend of the sport, Prudhomme, 68, concluded
his 47th year in drag racing in 2009, his 15th season as an owner
after logging 32 seasons behind the wheel as one of the sports
elite drivers.
Snakes remarkable driving career began in 1962 with his
first Top Fuel victory at Smokers March Meet in Bakersfield,
Calif., before ending with 49 NHRA career victories the
sixth most in NHRA history following his farewell Final
Strike Tour in 1994. For his career, Prudhomme reached
the finals 68 times, posting a remarkable 35 wins in 45 Funny
Car finals (.777 win percentage) and 14 wins in 23 Top Fuel finals
rounds (.609 win percentage). Overall, he won 389 of 589 rounds
of competition for a .660 winning percentage.
Along the way, Prudhomme reached many important milestones and
broke several barriers in the sport. He became the first driver
to win four consecutive NHRA series titles, won the prestigious
U.S. Nationals seven times, was the first Funny Car driver to
break the 250-mph mark (250.00 mph), was the first to post an
elapsed time under 5.20 seconds (5.193), became the first driver
to win seven of eight national events in one season (1976), was
the first NHRA Winston World Champion (1975), and became the
first driver to win the U.S. Nationals and Winternationals in
the same season (1965). At age 51, he became the third Top Fuel
driver to pass the 300-mph mark (301.60) in 1993.
Off the track, Prudhomme gained notoriety in the early 1970s
when Mattel introduced the Mongoose (Tom McEwen) and Snake
Hot Wheels car sets, helping to introduce the sport of drag racing
to a larger, more mainstream audience.
Prudhomme did not stop re-writing the NHRA record books despite
leaving his role as a driver to become a multi-car team owner.
Wins by Larry Dixon (Top Fuel) and Ron Capps (Funny Car) at the
1998 Winternationals in Pomona, Calif., saw Snake become only
the fifth owner in history to have cars in two different categories
take home event titles at the season-opening event. Prudhomme
saw his Dixon-Capps tandem repeat that feat a second time at
the 2001 Brainerd, Minn. race. The duo repeated their accomplishment
again in 2002 at the Pontiac Excitement Nationals near Columbus,
Ohio.
The 2000 season saw many highlights for Prudhomme. As a team
owner, both drivers Larry Dixon and Ron Capps finished in the
top three in the championship points race while Prudhomme was
honored for his accomplishments as a driver with his induction
into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in Talladega,
Ala. with such other racing heroes as A.J. Foyt, Mario Andretti
and Aryton Senna. Talladega really was a highlight for
me and I dont think it can get much better than that,
said Prudhomme.
The 2001 season was one the brightest for the Snake
as an owner as Dixon battled each week in the Top Fuel category
before falling just 95 points shy of giving Prudhomme his first
championship as an owner. The 2001 campaign saw each of Snakes
drivers post wins Dixon (six), Capps (two) and Johnson
(one) while wins by Johnson in Las Vegas, Dixon in Gainesville,
Fla., and Capps in Bristol, Tenn. gave Prudhomme three consecutive
winning weekends.
During the 2002 season, the Snake
was able to watch Dixon power his Miller Lite Top Fuel dragster
to nine victories en route to his first career NHRA POWERade
Top Fuel championship. It was the fifth title of Prudhommes
career. In addition, Prudhomme was named the No. 3 driver in
NHRA history by a panel of drag racing historians as the NHRA
celebrated its historic 50th anniversary season.
The 2003 NHRA season was another banner year for Snake Racing
as Dixon drove his Dick LaHaie-tuned dragster to its second consecutive
NHRA championship winning eight races in 13 final round appearances
to earn the $400,000 championship bonus.
Prudhomme inched ever closer
to his milestone 100th victory in 2004 as Dixon earned two victories
moving the legendary driver/owner within two victories of the
century mark. Dixons 35th career win in August equaled
drag racing icon Big Daddy Don Garlits for third
on the all-time Top Fuel wins list. Prudhomme also saw Johnson
post career-best performance marks in his blue Skoal Racing Chevy
flopper at the season-finale in Pomona (Calif.).
The 2005 season for Snake saw
Johnson break an 89-race winless streak when he dusted the field
to score the win at the season-opening Winternationals at historic
Pomona (Calif.) Raceway. Two months later, Prudhomme become just
the third driver/owner in NHRA history to reach the 100-win plateau
when Dixon captured the win at the spring Las Vegas event. Dixon
added two more victories, including the prestigious Mac Tools
U.S. Nationals at Indianapolis, to give the Snake 102 career
Wally trophies. Dixons third career U.S. Nationals
triumph was Indy win No. 10 for Prudhomme, who won The Big Go
seven times as a driver. Dixon raced to a second place finish
in the Top Fuel division, while Johnsons sixth place finish
was a career-best for the veteran Funny Car driver.
The 2006 campaign saw Prudhomme
enjoy two more victories from Johnson and the Skoal Racing Funny
Car team, as well as a runner up finish in the lucrative Skoal
Showdown at the U.S. Nationals in Indianapolis to finish the
season sixth in the final point standings. Dixons Top
Fuel team reached one final round for the season, finishing 7th
in the teams final season with long-time sponsor Miller
Lite. Snake now has a total of 104 combined victories as a driver/owner
for his career. In 2007, Prudhomme fielded Johnsons Skoal
Racing Chevy Impala Funny Car which doubled up with teammate
Dixon in Top Fuel as Snake Racing swept the Englishtown, NJ event.
Dixon, who drove last season for SkyTel, also recorded wins
at Joilet and Dallas to increase Prudhommes overall career
win total to 108.
The 2008 NHRA POWERade season
saw Prudhomme guide Dixon in the U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company
Top Fuel Dragster to five final rounds and two more victories
(Phoenix, Pomona 2) en route to a second-place finish in the
final season point standings and brought Prudhommes total
win count to 110.
The 2009 NHRA Full Throttle campaign
saw the debut of rookie driver Spencer Massey taking over the
role as pilot of the U.S. Smokeless Racing dragster for Don Prudhomme
Racing. Massey, the 2008 IHRA Top Fuel Champion, reached five
final rounds while collecting his first career NHRA Top Fuel
win at Joliet, IL and his second in Las Vegas (wins No. 111 and
No. 112 for Prudhomme). Massey went on to win the 2009 NHRA
Rookie of the Year award. Prudhomme also teamed up with Carroll
Shelby as Shelby Autos announced the limited production of the
Shelby Super Snake Prudhomme Edition GT 500. Motorbooks International
also published Tom Madigans book Mongoose
vs. Snake How a Rivalry Changed Drag Racing Forever.
Career Accomplishments &
Highlights
Career wins/final rounds (driver):
49/68 (35/45 FC, 14/23 TF)
Career wins/final rounds (owner): 63/128 (18/41 FC, 45/87 TF)
Career total victories: 112
Career No. 1 qualifying awards (driver): 58
Career No. 1 qualifying awards (owner): 40
First Professional victory (TF): Bakersfield March Meet (1962)
First NHRA victory (TF): Pomona 1 (1965)
First NHRA victory (FC): Indianapolis (1973)
Best points finish (driver): 1st (1975-78 FC)
Best points finish (owner): 1st (2002-03 TF)
Career-best elapsed time (TF): 4.736 (Reading 1994)
Career-best elapsed time (FC): 5.157 (Dallas 1989)
Career-best speed (TF): 302.72 (Brainerd 1994)
Career-best speed (FC): 279.67 (Reading 1989)
· 49 victories
(driver)
· 63 victories
(owner)
· Eighth winningest
driver in NHRA history (49 wins)
· Fourth winningest
Funny Car driver in NHRA history (John Force)
· Four NHRA championships
(driver)
· Two NHRA championships
(owner)
· 1989 Skoal Showdown
winner
· Three Skoal
Showdown wins as team owner (Ron Capps 1998-99, 2002)
· Three Budweiser
Shootout wins as team owner (Larry Dixon 1995, 2001-02)
· First member
of Cragar 5-Second Funny Car Club (5.98 seconds, Oct. 12, 1975,
Ontario, Calif.)
· First member
of Crane Cams Funny Car 250-mph Club (250.00 mph, May 29, 1982,
Baton Rouge, La.)
· 15th member
of Cragar 4-Second Club (4.980 seconds, Feb. 2, 1991, Pomona,
Calif.)
· Third member
of Slick 50 300-mph Club (301.60 mph, March 6, 1993, Baytown,
Texas)
· First NHRA Driver
to win in both Top Fuel (1965 Pomona) and Funny Car (1973 Indy)
· Second NHRA
Driver to qualify No. 1 in both Top Fuel (1965 Pomona) and Funny
Car (1970 Ontario)
· One of three
driver/owners (John Force and Warren Johnson) to have reached
100 wins
· Still holds
the NHRA record with 7 consecutive Funny Car National Event victories
(1975-76)
· Still holds
the NHRA record with 30 consecutive Funny Car elimination round
wins (1976-77)
· Still holds
the NHRA record with 13 consecutive Funny Car final round appearances
(1975-77)
· Still holds
the NHRA record with 8 consecutive Funny Car final rounds to
start a season (1976)
· Shares the NHRA
record with 7 consecutive Funny Car No. 1 Qualifying positions
(1976-77)
· No. 8 all-time
with 52 NHRA No. 1 qualifying efforts |