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Troy Coughlin Sr. puts JEGS.com Pro Mod in final, while son races to semi’s in Norwalk

NORWALK, OH – The JEGS.com Pro Mod team had a successful day at the NHRA J&A Service Pro Mod Drag Troy Coughlin, Jr and Sr - NorwalkRacing Series event presented by the Real Pro Mod Association on Sunday, putting Troy Coughlin Sr.’s car in the final round and Troy Coughlin Jr.’s in the semifinal.

Plus, Troy Sr. moved into second place in the standings, only five points out of the lead.

Father and son faced each other in the semi’s, with Troy Jr. getting the jump on dad at the start, but Troy Sr. powered through to the victory.

In the final, Troy Sr. had problems and had to lift early, handing the win to Mike Janis.

Still, after qualifying No. 16, Troy Sr. had a strong rebound during eliminations.

“We knew once we got the gremlins fixed that we would have a good, fast race car,” Troy Sr. said. “When it ran good in the first round against Rickie (Smith) and came back and repeated in the second round, we were like, ‘All right, cool.’ ”

But in the semifinal against Troy Jr., Troy Sr. had engine problems at the finish line. The JEGS.com Corvette slid on its own oil in the shutdown area as Troy Sr. fought to slow it down. He was able to get it stopped, but the team had a big task to change engines for the final.

“In the semi’s, we had a snafu and hurt some parts and pieces, but that’s all part of racing,” Troy Sr. said. “The guys came back — Kyle Pettus, Mike Rees, Justin Beaver, Brandon Stroud — and did a nice job. They got this thing all back together.

“We’re not sure what happened in the final, but runner-up is not bad. There’s only one other guy who wouldn’t want our spot, so we’ll take it.”

Troy Sr. slowed to a pass of 7.120 at 137.43 mph as Janis went down the track with a 5.902-second run at 247.34 mph for the victory.

Troy Jr. is sixth in points in what has been a solid rookie season, but he is a racer and isn’t satisfied with semifinal finishes.
“It looks good on paper but not in my heart,” Troy Jr. said. “Our potential was a lot higher than our results, but at least we got Pops in the final.”
Troy Jr. qualified No. 12 and beat No. 5 qualifier Jim Whiteley in the first round Saturday. On Sunday, he knocked out No. 4 qualifier Bob Rahaim in the second round, cutting a .044-second reaction time before having to pedal his car as Rahaim sped ahead. But Rahaim had trouble down the track, and Troy Jr. caught him with a pass of 6.061 seconds at 249.39 mph.

Against dad, Troy Jr. had a .036 light to his father’s .049, but he had trouble almost immediately and slowed to a pass of 10.875 seconds at 78.03 mph. Troy Sr. sped to the win with a 5.948-second run at 247.66 mph.

Still, it was a treat to race his father.

“I wish we would’ve had something for him,” Troy Jr. said. “It’s pretty neat, it’s majestic. I grew up watching him by the fence, so it’s pretty cool. I cheer for him and he roots for me, but deep down, if you ask us when we’re about to stage, it’s a little different.”

Troy Sr., too, treasures being able to race his son.

“It was pretty cool,” Troy Sr. said. “It was cool to race T.J. We just need to get his car picked up a little bit.”

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