John Force Racing pauses racing activities until 2021
John Force has announced that his hugely successful eponymous NHRA team will “remain parked for the 2020 season in order to come back at championship caliber.”
Although the NHRA resumed its season this month, after a four-month hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Mello Yello Drag Racing Series continued without the presence of John Force Racing, which runs two Funny Cars for Force himself and son-in-law Robert Hight, and two Top Fuel dragsters for John’s daughter Brittany Force and rising star Austin Prock.
Today, the 16-time Funny Car champion Force revealed that his four JFR entries are sidelined for the remainder of the 2020 season. The team has 21 NHRA championships and 280 victories to its name.
“When I first got into racing, I always had a love for cars, I loved the camaraderie of the team, I loved the competition,” he said. “As I evolved, I realized what it took to become a winner. It took money and that’s when I started chasing corporate America. I had no personal wealth, I had to find sponsors to get me the crew chiefs I needed to win.
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John Force Racing pauses racing activities until 2021
John Force has announced that his hugely successful eponymous NHRA team will “remain parked for the 2020 season in order to come back at championship caliber.”
David Malsher-Lopez
David Malsher-Lopez
Jul 31, 2020, 6:03 PM
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Austin Prock, Brittany Force, John Force, Robert Hight, John Force Racing
Although the NHRA resumed its season this month, after a four-month hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Mello Yello Drag Racing Series continued without the presence of John Force Racing, which runs two Funny Cars for Force himself and son-in-law Robert Hight, and two Top Fuel dragsters for John’s daughter Brittany Force and rising star Austin Prock.
Today, the 16-time Funny Car champion Force revealed that his four JFR entries are sidelined for the remainder of the 2020 season. The team has 21 NHRA championships and 280 victories to its name.
“When I first got into racing, I always had a love for cars, I loved the camaraderie of the team, I loved the competition,” he said. “As I evolved, I realized what it took to become a winner. It took money and that’s when I started chasing corporate America. I had no personal wealth, I had to find sponsors to get me the crew chiefs I needed to win.
“As the winning happened, I found a new love. The fans. The fans are what kept me motivated and made me never ever think anything would come to an end. Even in the hardest of times – I call them crossroads – I got through it with the help of the fans and my sponsors. I went from a one-car team to a multi-car team, to having machine shops, chassis shops and paint shops and the technology to win.
“Suddenly, the virus hit, and it changed the world. Robert Hight, president of the company, and I got back from Gainesville [NHRA’s third round canceled mid-event] and we started working on a plan. We had to reset John Force Racing. Everyone was having to adapt.
“We had to make cuts everywhere. We ran numbers over and over. In our contracts with sponsors we have guarantees. They get social media, certain number of races, certain number of race days, activation at races and other commitments. No matter how I looked at it, I couldn’t deliver on those commitments. It just wasn’t fair to them.
“The impact of not being able to deliver on these commitments makes sitting out the rest of the 2020 season the right thing to do. No matter how I looked at it, no matter how much I personally invested, I couldn’t make it.
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