Hagan
Matt Hagan in action at Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park. (NHRA photo)

Q&A: Hagan Set For 250th Funny Car Start

Q: Think ahead to ten years from now. Are you driving a Funny Car, a tractor, or both? 

MH: “I don’t know if I’ll fit in a Funny Car ten years from now, I’ve got to slow down on my eating (laughs). But yeah, I want to race for as long as I can, it’s what I’m passionate about. I feel like I’m good at it. There are some things that just click and fall into place, and you just know you’re supposed to be doing it, and that’s what drag racing is for me. I’ll be here as long as the sponsorship is here. MOPAR has been with me nearly my entire career here at DSR, which is really great.

“To now have nearly 250 races under my belt is pretty incredible to me. It takes so much time and money and energy to be out here. I’ve seen a lot of people come and go over the course of my career. Drag racing is a fix you can’t get anywhere else; once it’s in your blood, you just crave it. Everything comes to an end, and I’m not sure when that will be, but I’ve been blessed so far. And my crew, we’re ten guys with one goal, and when it all comes together, that’s an incredible deal. To be 36 and still be at the pinnacle of your sport and be able to compete like this on the weekends, in other industries if you’re a football player or a baseball player, you’re pretty much used up by the time you get to be my age. It’s one of those things where the sport itself is growing, and I’m excited to be a part of it. It’s come a long way in the past ten years, and I hope to see it grow further.”

Q: Who would you consider to be your toughest competitor, and who do you most enjoy beating?

MH: My teammates – that’s the answer to both questions. Not only are they (Jack Beckman, Ron Capps, Tommy Johnson Jr.) good drivers, but I know they also have all of the best parts and pieces and people behind them. You want to beat everybody, but when you lose to your teammate, you feel like you didn’t do your job because you’re working with the same quality of stuff. That’s also why they’re my fiercest competitors.”

Q: Who do you consider to be your drag racing mentor?

Photos
J.R. Todd (near lane) races Matt Hagan in Funny Car competition in Las Vegas. (Barry Ambrose photo)

MH: “I’m a first generation drag racer, and I didn’t grow up following the sport, so it’s not like I had that one person that I really looked up to. When I signed on with DSR, (Ed) “Ace” McCulloch was in the shop and was giving me the lowdown on everything, and I was like ‘who is this dude?’ I don’t know the history of the sport like Jack (Beckman) or other people, but really, I just look to my peers and my crew guys. Trust me; my guys have no problem telling me when I screw up (laughs). They put their blood, sweat, and tears into this race car and they’re my family away from my family, so as long as I keep them happy, that’s what makes me happy. It’s the worst feeling in the world to disappoint them; they drive me to dig deep, get up on the wheel, cut a good light and keep it in the groove because I don’t want to let them down.”

Q: What would you say the biggest difference is in how you drive the car now from when you first started?

MH: “My confidence. The first couple hundred runs in one of these things, you’re thinking ‘what’s it going to do to me?’ You never lose respect for the car because you realize it could hurt you in the blink of an eye, but over time, your mindset changes to ‘what have you got for me now?’ These Funny Cars man, they keep you on your toes, but you grow to feel more comfortable in the car. You’re not thinking ‘well what if it puts a hole out, what am I going to do?’ or ‘when should I pedal it?’ It all just becomes more natural. It’s like putting on an old shoe. That to me has been the biggest change from when I first started to where I am now, and you can only get that with seat time and laps and knowing what the car is doing and knowing how to make those quick decisions in the car. There’s a lot of times when it can blow up in your face, literally, and that’s on you because you made the wrong decision out there. You learn really quick to listen to the motor and what it’s doing.”

Q: And now, a very crucial question. At 6’1” and clocking in at 250 pounds, you’ve rightfully earned the nickname ‘Hulk Hagan’ from your fans. So, how in the world do you even fit in your car?

MH: “I squeeze in there. I don’t have a whole lot of padding around me because I kind of plug that hole (jokes). If I keep on eating, they may have to Crisco me in there. I always tell people, I’m traction control. I sit over the rear end, so the car plants the tire harder.”