Englishtown winner Troy Coughlin Sr. hopes history repeats itself in Bristol

Englishtown winner Troy Coughlin Sr. hopes history repeats itself in Bristol
BRISTOL, Tenn. (June 18) — A week ago, JEGS.com Pro Mod driver Troy Coughlin Sr. had some good fortune in the first round before winning the next day in Englishtown, N.J.

At the NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals on Saturday at Bristol Dragway, Coughlin again had some good fortune in the first round. Can history repeat itself?

“I hope so,” Coughlin said. “We’re shooting for that, for sure. We’ve got a lot of good things going. The car is running great, so we’ll stick it back in line tomorrow, and we should be on a little bit better racetrack. Looking forward to it, for sure.”

Last week in Englishtown, Coughlin survived a first-round battle with Mike Janis after the JEGS.com Corvette veered out of the groove, but Coughlin kept the car off the wall and won the round. He then dominated the next day to win the NHRA J&A Service Pro Mod Drag Racing Series race.

In Bristol, Coughlin’s car spun the tires at the hit but was able to hook up and catch Gerry Capano.

“The car spun the tires on the starting line, which it hasn’t done all weekend,” Coughlin said. “So, yeah, we got a bit of a break there when Gerry Capano’s car must’ve hurt an engine at about the 1,000-foot mark because I could see the smoke coming out of it.

“He was out in front of us, and we were definitely behind the eight ball on that, but once the thing hooked up, the Proline power took over. We passed around him and got to the finish line first — barely.”

Coughlin’s pass was 5.990 seconds at 218.02 mph, beating Capano’s 6.052-second run at 232.91 mph. The win puts Coughlin, the No. 2 qualifier, against No. 7 qualifier Steve Matusek in the second round Sunday. Matusek advanced when Danny Rowe red-lit.

The race will be decided on Father’s Day, and Coughlin has son Troy Jr. and daughter Meghan with him in Bristol. Daughters Paige and Kelly could not make the trip.

“It is pretty cool to have T.J. and Meghan here,” Coughlin said. “One of these days I’ll get the whole family here, but everybody’s got different schedules and going in different directions. They’re racing and doing stuff with family, so that’s important.”