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2024 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series

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2024 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series season
LeagueNHRA
SportDrag racing
League championsTBA (Top Fuel)
TBD (Funny Car)
TBA (Pro Stock)
TBD (Pro Stock Motorcycle)
NHRA seasons
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The 2024 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series season was announced on August 31, 2023.[1]

It will be the 69th season of the National Hot Rod Association's top drag racing competition. The NHRA will have 20 Top Fuel, Funny Car and Pro Stock events, marking the first time since 2018 that Pro Stock car will compete the full season.[2] There are typically 15 Pro Stock Motorcycle, ten Pro Modified, and ten Factory Stock Showdown races during the season, and the rounds which all three will compete will be announced at a later date.[1] There will be All-Star Call Out races, which are based on a format used by the Discovery television program Street Outlaws: No Prep Kings, where the drivers select their opponents in early rounds.[3]

On October 25, 2023, Camping World, which had been the title sponsor of the series since late 2020 in a four-and-a-half-year contract, and the NHRA agreed to relinquish naming rights sponsorship in renewing its NHRA professional category sponsorship while expanding to premier partner status that includes professional and sportsman series sponsorship for the next three seasons through 2026.[4] That allowed the NHRA that day to announce Mexican food producer Gruma, S.A.B. de C.V. will become the new naming rights sponsor of the series.[5] Gruma will promote their Mission Foods brand, which also expands their Mission Foods Challenge to all 14 regular season rounds in 2024, unlike 2023 when the event was not scheduled for the two four-wide rounds.

On November 9, 2023, the NHRA announced Virginia Motorsports Park in Dinwiddie, Virginia will return to the schedule to fill the June unannounced date that replaces Denver on the schedule. Originally planned to be a three-day event, the NHRA announced on April 2, 2024 that the event would be modified to a two-day format with three qualifying sessions taking place on Saturday. [6]

The season was originally scheduled for 21 races with one unannounced date. The unannounced date was anticipated to be held at I-70 Motorsports Park in Odessa, Missouri and would replace the Heartland Nationals event, held at Heartland Motorsports Park in Shawnee County, Kansas, which closed because of land and tax disputes between circuit ownership and the local government. The NHRA announced on March 10, 2024 that the planned Odessa round will not take place in 2024 because the drag strip, which during development was called the new Kansas City International Raceway and later Central Power Raceway, is still under construction.[7] That circuit opened April 11, 2024 for club competition, with national event suites and towers still under construction.

Schedule

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Schedule released August 31, 2023. Last revision March 10, 2024

2024 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series Schedule[1]
Date Race Site TV Winners
Top Fuel Funny Car Pro Stock Pro Stock Motorcycle
Mar 7-10 Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals TFCO Gainesville Raceway Gainesville, FL FS1 Shawn Langdon (1) J.R. Todd (1) Erica Enders (1) Gaige Herrera (1)
Mar 21-24 Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip Pomona, CA [a] FS1 Justin Ashley (1) John Force (1) Dallas Glenn (1) N/A
Apr 5-7 NHRA Arizona Nationals Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park Chandler, AZ FS1 Shawn Langdon (2) Austin Prock (1) Greg Anderson (1) N/A
Apr 12-14 NHRA Four-Wide Nationals 4 Lanes Las Vegas Motor Speedway Las Vegas, NV FS1 Doug Kalitta (1) Bob Tasca III (1) Jeg Coughlin Jr. (1) N/A
Apr 26-28 NHRA Four-Wide Nationals 4 Lanes zMAX Dragway Concord, NC FS1 Justin Ashley (2) Matt Hagan (1) Greg Anderson (2) Gaige Herrera (2)
May 17-19 Gerber Collision & Glass NHRA Route 66 Nationals presented by PEAK PerformancePSCO Route 66 Raceway Joliet, IL FS1 Antron Brown (1) Matt Hagan (2) Dallas Glenn (2) Gaige Herrera (3)
May 31 - June 2 NHRA New England Nationals New England Dragway Epping, NH FS1 Doug Kalitta (2) John Force (2) Troy Coughlin Jr. (1) N/A
Jun 7-9 Super Grip NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals Bristol Dragway Bristol, TN FS1 Tony Schumacher (1) Austin Prock (2) Jeg Coughlin Jr. (2) Gaige Herrera (4)
Jun 22-23 Virginia NHRA Nationals Virginia Motorsports Park Dinwiddie, VA FS1 Doug Kalitta (3) Austin Prock (3) Aaron Stanfield (1) Gaige Herrera (5)
Jun 27-30 Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals Summit Motorsports Park Norwalk, OH FS1/FOX Antron Brown (2) Bob Tasca III (2) Aaron Stanfield (2) Gaige Herrera (6)
Jul 19-21 NHRA Northwest Nationals Pacific Raceways Kent, WA FOX Steve Torrence (1) Austin Prock (4) Jeg Coughlin Jr. (3) Chase Van Sant (1)
Jul 26-28 DENSO NHRA Sonoma Nationals PSMCO Sonoma Raceway Sonoma, CA FOX Antron Brown (3) Bob Tasca III (3) Aaron Stanfield (3) Matt Smith (1)
Aug 15-18 Lucas Oil NHRA Nationals Brainerd International Raceway Brainerd, MN FOX Justin Ashley (3) Blake Alexander (1) Dallas Glenn (3) N/A
Aug 28 - Sep 2 Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals 1.5 FCCO Lucas Oil Raceway Brownsburg, IN FS1/FOX Clay Millican (1) Austin Prock (5) Aaron Stanfield (4) Gaige Herrera (7)
Countdown to the Championship
Sep 12-15 Pep Boys NHRA Nationals Maple Grove Raceway Mohnton, PA FOX Antron Brown (4) Austin Prock (6) Aaron Stanfield (5) Hector Arana, Jr. (1)
Sep 20-22 NHRA Carolina Nationals zMAX Dragway Concord, NC FS1 Antron Brown (5) Austin Prock (7) Dallas Glenn (4) Matt Smith (2)
Sep 27-29 NHRA Midwest Nationals World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway Madison, IL FS1 Tony Schumacher (2) Jack Beckman (1) Dallas Glenn(5) Gaige Herrera(8)
Oct 10-13 Texas NHRA FallNationals Texas Motorplex Ennis, TX FS1 Justin Ashley (4) Matt Hagan (3) Jeg Coughlin Jr. (4) Gaige Herrera (9)
Oct 31 - Nov 3 Ford Performance NHRA Nationals Las Vegas Motor Speedway Las Vegas, NV FS1
Nov 14-17 In-N-Out Burger NHRA Finals 1.5 In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip Pomona, CA FS1
  1. ^ The Final round of the Winternationals was postponed and held at Phoenix due to inclement weather.[8]

Additional rules for specially marked races

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4 Lanes: The Nationals in both Las Vegas and Charlotte in the spring will compete with cars on four lanes.

  • All cars will qualify on each lane as all four lanes will be used in qualifying.
  • Three rounds with cars using all four lanes.
  • In Rounds One and Two, the top two drivers (of four) will advance to the next round.
  • The pairings are set as follows:
    • Race One: 1, 8, 9, 16
    • Race Two: 4, 5, 12, 13
    • Race Three: 2, 7, 10, 15
    • Race Four: 3, 6, 11, 14
    • Semifinal One: Top two in Race One and Race Two
    • Semifinal Two: Top two in Race Three and Race Four
    • Finals: Top two in Semifinal One and Semifinal Two
  • Lane choice determined by times in previous round. In first round, lane choice determined by fastest times.
  • Drivers who advance in Rounds One and Two will receive 20 points for each round advancement.
  • In Round Three, the winner of the race will be declared the race winner and will collect 40 points. The runner-up will receive 20 points. Third and fourth place drivers will be credited as semifinal losers.

1.5: The U. S. Nationals and In-N-Out Burger Finals will have their race points increased by 50% . Drivers who qualify but are eliminated in the first round receive 30 points, and each round win is worth 30 points. The top four receive 10, 9, 8, and 7 points, respectively, for qualifying positions, with the 5–6 drivers receiving 6 points, 7–8 drivers receiving 5 points, 9–12 receiving 4 points, and 13–16 receiving 3 points. Also, the top four, not three, drivers after each session receive points for fastest times in each round (4-3-2-1).

TF/FC/PS/PSM CO: All-Star Call Out competition for that category.

Mission #2Fast2Tasty NHRA Challenge

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The Mission #2Fast2Tasty NHRA Challenge is a collaboration between NHRA and Mission Foods, introduced in the 2023 NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series.[9] The challenge spices up Saturday qualifying schedule at regular-season events. Semifinalists from the previous race compete anew, culminating in a final during the last qualifying session. Winners gain a purse, as well as bonus points.

Bonus points are awarded as follows:

  • Winner (3)
  • Runner-up (2)
  • Quickest losing semifinalist (1)

Bonus points earned from the challenge will be added to a driver’s total points at the start of the Countdown to the Championship playoffs.

2024 Mission #2FAST2TASTY Challenge Schedule[10]
Date Race Winners
Top Fuel Funny Car Pro Stock Pro Stock Motorcycle
Mar 23 Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals N/A[a] N/A[b]
Apr 6 NHRA Arizona Nationals Tony Schumacher (1) J.R. Todd (1) Erica Enders (1) N/A[b]
Apr 13 NHRA Four-Wide Nationals (Las Vegas) Antron Brown (1) Austin Prock (1) Jeg Coughlin Jr. (1) N/A[b]
Apr 27 NHRA Four-Wide Nationals (Concord) Justin Ashley (1) Bob Tasca (1) Erica Enders (2) Gaige Herrera (1)
May 18 Gerber Collision & Glass NHRA Route 66 Nationals presented by PEAK Performance Justin Ashley (2) J.R. Todd (2) N/A[c] Gaige Herrera (2)
Jun 1 NHRA New England Nationals Steve Torrence (1) John Force (1) Dallas Glenn (1) N/A[b]
Jun 8 Super Grip NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals Clay Millican (1) Austin Prock (2) Erica Enders (3) Matt Smith (1)
Jun 22 Virginia NHRA Nationals Brittany Force (1) Austin Prock (3) Greg Anderson (1) Matt Smith (2)
Jun 29 Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals Doug Kalitta (1) Austin Prock (4) Greg Anderson (2) Richard Gadson (1)
Jul 20 NHRA Northwest Nationals Justin Ashley (3) Austin Prock (5) Aaron Stanfield (1) Gaige Herrera (3)
Jul 27 DENSO NHRA Sonoma Nationals Shawn Langdon (1) Austin Prock (6) Jeg Coughlin Jr. (2) N/A[d]
Aug 17 Lucas Oil NHRA Nationals Antron Brown (2) Austin Prock (7) Greg Anderson (3) N/A[b]
Sep 1 Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals Justin Ashley (4) J.R. Todd (3) Dallas Glenn (2) John Hall (1)
Overall Winners Justin Ashley Austin Prock Erica Enders Gaige Herrera
  1. ^ Only one round of the challenge was completed in Pomona due to weather. The semifinal winners will share the final round purse in each category, with no bonus championship points being awarded. In Top Fuel, Shawn Langdon and Steve Torrence advanced to the final, while J.R. Todd and Austin Prock both won their matchups in Funny Car. The Pro Stock winners were Erica Enders and Dallas Glenn.
  2. ^ a b c d e Vehicle class did not compete at this event.
  3. ^ Pro Stock Car will not participate in the Challenge at Route 66 due to the Pro Stock All-Star Call Out taking place
  4. ^ Pro Stock Motorcycle will not participate in the Challenge at Sonoma due to the Pro Stock Motorcycle All-Star Call Out taking place

Notes

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References

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  1. ^ a b c National Hot Rod Association, "2024 Camping World Series schedule includes returns to Phoenix and Chicago", Retrieved August 31, 2023.
  2. ^ https://www.nhra.com/news/2023/pro-stock-compete-all-21-races-during-2024-mission-foods-series-season
  3. ^ Wade, Susan. "How NHRA Is Thinking Outside the Box for Big-Money Callout Specialty Race". AutoWeek. Hearst Publications. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  4. ^ https://www.nhra.com/news/2023/camping-world-and-nhra-announce-partnership-extension-through-2026
  5. ^ "Mission Foods enters multiyear deal as title sponsor of NHRA's premier series". NHRA.com. National Hot Rod Association. Retrieved 2023-10-25.
  6. ^ staff, Posted by NHRA com. "Virginia NHRA Nationals to feature three qualifying sessions on Saturday in shift to two-day event". NHRA. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
  7. ^ "NHRA Adds Flying H Dragstrip to 2024 National Schedule". Speed Sport. Turn 3 Media/NASCAR Digital Network. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  8. ^ staff, Posted by NHRA com. "Schedule set for Winternationals conclusion, Mission Challenge in Phoenix". NHRA.
  9. ^ ""Mission #2Fast2Tasty NHRA Challenge to debut during 2023 regular season"". NHRA. 19 January 2023. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  10. ^ ""Mission Tortillas Partnership NHRA"". NHRA. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
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