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Rhonda
Hartman-Smith Interview
To say the
least, Rhonda Hartman-Smith is a busy lady. In this
Q&A session, Rhonda talks about what it is like to
race in the Top Fuel ranks, as well as a myriad of other
family-related jobs. She talks about the changes the
team has made in the offseason, what they learned from
their first top 10 points finish and what they want to
accomplish this season. Rhonda also discusses how she
has handled the near career-ending accident her husband
suffered during competition last year.
Q: What would you be doing if you weren't driving
Top Fuel cars?
HARTMAN-SMITH: Well, I am the office manager for
our family business, so I would probably still be doing
that along with being a mom.
Q: You are surrounded by your family at every
race. Does that help you do the job?
HARTMAN-SMITH: It's the only way I could do it.
My dad is out here and since the team is the family I
bring my daughter out here and still do the work. I
wouldn't be able to do it all without their support. My
mom comes out to the races and she watches Megan when I
run. My husband helps me out, takes care of her and
takes care of me.
Q: Would your family still be this close if it
weren't for racing?
HARTMAN-SMITH: Oh yeah. Our family has always
been really close and really tight. With the family
business, we work together, we are always going to the
lake together and going on vacations. I think we would
be just as tight even if we weren't racing.
Q: What do you think about POWERade getting
involved with the NHRA?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I think it's great for the sport.
It is going to bring more sponsors with POWERade being
on board. I am excited because it is a product that we
can all associate with. We can market it real well.
Q: What do you think about the competition level
of the Top Fuel category this season?
HARTMAN-SMITH: It takes a lot of money to run
these cars and it is really hard to be competitive with
Kenny Bernstein and Larry Dixon and I think you will see
some cars fall off because of the expense. I think if
there was more sponsorship out there, you would see far
more than just a full field out there because there are
so many teams and drivers out there who just can not get
full funding right now. I think eventually you will see
more sponsors and different types of sponsors stepping
into the sport. It just takes time.
Q: What is your relationship like with your
sponsor, FRAM?
HARTMAN-SMITH: They are so great. They are just
wonderful. They have been great to me ever since I
started racing. They have been a product sponsor. I feel
like they are all family.
Q: How did you get involved with racing Top Fuel
cars?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I have been around the sport
forever. My dad has built and driven race cars and my
older brother (Richard) started driving. I used to work
on his car, help out and go and clean parts and do
whatever it took. I made travel arrangements or whatever
we needed. Eventually my brother got hired as a driver
for another team. The car was there, my dad was there,
and on my 16th birthday we went out and made some laps
and I went and got my license in the Alcohol Funny Car.
I always knew I wanted to be in Top Fuel. That was
always my goal. I just worked my way up. I think I
pushed my father along. He didn't want to progress as
quickly as I did, but I just pushed him.
Q: What do you like about drag racing and how
long do you see yourself being involved with the sport?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I will probably be involved with
the sport forever. With my husband being so involved and
all he does with drag racing, I think I will always be
around the sport. Especially with my dad and the entire
family being so involved. It might not always be as a
driver, but in one way or another, I'll stay involved.
As a driver, I really like the competitive nature of the
job. I am a very competitive person and I love going out
there and achieving personal goals. I just feel real
natural being a driver.
Q: How have you approached the 2002 season
differently from the past year?
HARTMAN-SMITH: We are being more aggressive.
Before, we were a little too conservative and we had a
medium budget and we were forced to be more
conservative. We didn't have a full-time team and some
people flew in and flew out for the races. This year we
have a full team of eight guys (for both cars) and we
are just concentrating on being more consistent and
making less mistakes as well as being more aggressive
out there. Before, we were just trying to qualify the
car and learn everything we could. Before, our goal was
to be in the top 10 and we did that. Now we want to
progress. We have realistic goals. We know we can't go
out there and win championships right now. We just don't
have the experience and the budget to do it. I think we
are growing slowly and taking everything little by
little.
Q: Is the Top Fuel title something you are
committed to earning?
HARTMAN-SMITH: Yeah, we did it at the IHRA. I won
national events and ended up No. 2 (for the season). I
was one round away from being the champion. But there, I
was very competitive and I had the budget to do that.
Here, it is a lot harder to be competitive. It's like
going from the minor league to the major league. It is
so much harder. But I know that it is something I really
want to compete for. Right now, it is not realistic. My
goals are something I can achieve.
Q: How important is it for you to get that first
national event victory?
HARTMAN-SMITH: It is very important for me. It is
important for us to win more rounds and qualify better.
I would love to win a national event. It would be
awesome, especially because of how hard it is to compete
with Dixon and Bernstein. They are the top cars. Knowing
how difficult it is to compete with those teams, winning
a national event would be a great accomplishment.
Q: Can you tell when the car is going to be
capable of winning rounds?
HARTMAN-SMITH: When my husband got into his
accident, we turned the team around a little. We tried
different people in different places to concentrate more
on the car. We showed a big improvement. We ran our best
time ever and I think on race day we knew we had a
really good car for those conditions. We went out and
won first round and I felt we could have won the second
round. I thought we were really on our game. You know
when the car is having a good day or when you are not
and the car is inconsistent and that can be very
frustrating.
Q: Your husband, John Smith, was involved in a
horrible crash in Brainerd last year when Gary Scelzi's
car collided with his car. How do you feel about John
being back in the car for the first time since the
accident?
HARTMAN-SMITH: It's very hard. I want him to come
back for him. I hate that what happened, happened to
him. I hate that he was injured and did not walk away
like Gary Scelzi. He has had to go through a really
tough time. We have had the tears and we have tried to
laugh. We never laughed at what happened, but we have
tried to turn it around and see the positive about what
happened. It has been so tough. I have seen him struggle
and in the 10 years that I have known him, he has never
had to deal with anything like this. He was in the
hospital for two weeks. He had four surgeries. Before
Thanksgiving, and right before our daughter's birthday,
he had to have another surgery to have all of the pins
pulled out. He just couldn't move. It was awful. We had
a family vacation planned with the entire family to go
on a cruise. We planned it last year with the whole
family. He was miserable. We all felt bad for him. It
has been a tough time. But he has wanted to do this for
so long and he has had a great attitude about it. It is
hard for me to see him struggle. I am glad to see him
back out there making a run. He had some trouble (with
the first run during testing at Tucson) because he
doesn't have as much strength as he had before and he
had some trouble with the clutch.
Q: How difficult is it for you to balance being
the driver of one car on the team as well as the wife of
someone making a comeback?
HARTMAN-SMITH: It has been hard. I would be lying
if I said that I haven't thought of quitting. Because I
have. The most important thing is taking care of my
family. We have a little girl and when I saw my husband
hurt and her reaction to what happened to her dad, it
was really hard. He couldn't hold her, he couldn't play
with her, he couldn't run after her or do anything. I
look at that and I don't ever want to put her in a bad
situation because she relies on both of us so much.
Being a mommy is so different from being the driver. I
have been around this for so long and it is hard to say
why I keep doing it. I feel safe with my family working
on the car. Both of our cars have always been safe and
we have never crashed them. We have never gone over our
heads driving them. We have always been conservative.
Q: Are you looking forward to having John drive
the second car on the team?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I want to see him do it for him.
Not for any other reason. We have the choice on whether
we want to run a second car or not. I just want to see
him do it because that is what he wants to do. He wants
to show that he can get back in it and do it and that he
is OK. It makes him happy and that makes me happy.
Ultimately, that is what he wants to do, be a driver.
Q: Have you changed anything about your approach
to a run or the way you drive because of the accident?
HARTMAN-SMITH: No. I went to Indy (for the 2001
U.S. Nationals) right after the accident and he got out
of the hospital the day before. My mind mentally was not
in it because I didn't want to be there because I wanted
to take care of him. But I went there and tried to focus
on what I had to do. The first run was the hardest
because in the back of your mind you have a horrible
picture of what happened and it was really hard to get
in the car for the first time. I just went with the
attitude that this team is going to pull together and we
are going to be strong. Indy didn't go well because it
was frustrating. But we turned it around at Reading and
the rest of the year. We felt good about it. We had to
do it for ourselves just to put it out of our minds.
I've only seen the tape of the accident once and I won't
watch it again. I just don't want to think about it.
That was a freak accident and I don't want to think
about it.
Q: Could you have made the return to the driver's
seat so quickly if you weren't surrounded by your
family?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I don't really know. I am
not a quitter and I would not have quit that easily.
When I had Megan and I sat out a year and half, it was
frustrating. I didn't want to be a spectator. I wanted
to be involved. I get bored very easily. I wanted to
make a comeback and I pushed my dad to do it. I think I
would have done the same. After my husband's accident, I
probably would have pushed to comeback just to be strong
and not let it affect the team.
Q: How much have you helped John rehabilitate the
injuries and prepare to get back into the car?
HARTMAN-SMITH: He did an interview after his
crash and he said I was the glue that stuck us together.
I don't think that is what I would have said. But I was
the glue. I think I help keep the family together and
keep us strong and help make things happen.
Q: You finally have a full staff of team members
working on the car. How will that affect everyone?
HARTMAN-SMITH: This year I feel really good about
the team. These guys just click really well. They work
well together and they really want to race. They have
racing in their blood. I think they are going to be
really dedicated and get the job done.
Q: Have there been times when you have had to
deal with being a female Top Fuel driver rather than
just a Top Fuel driver?
HARTMAN-SMITH: Nothing specific, but when you
beat (a male driver) they might have a little grudge.
But when a guy beats me or even a girl, Melanie Troxel
beat me once, it's hard. It's hard only because you have
been beat, not by a female or a male, but just that
someone else beat you. That is how I look at it. They
might look at it differently, but I don't let it bother
me. I don't let much bother me because I am out there to
race. I could care less if I was racing Bugs Bunny.
There have been incidences, even with fans. I have had
fans e-mail me and tell me to stay home and wash the
dishes. It doesn't bother me. I have been doing this for
a while. I have been around it with my family and I
think a lot of people know that. I think the biggest
issue I have is that because I race with my family and I
race for my dad, people think I am daddy's girl and I
get everything I want. They think I fly in, fly out and
that is all I do. That is the furthest thing from the
truth. I think that is the biggest mis-conception about
me. I wish people would get it through their heads. The
people who say that don't know me at all. I have worked
so hard to get where I am and I continually work. I
don't have a glamorous life where I make millions of
dollars and I just fly in and out for the races.
Q: What is the advantage of having a two-car
team?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I feel it's harder right now to
have a two-car team. We don't really have the funding
for two cars. It's harder on our team because it is not
set up like the John Force team. He definitely has an
advantage (with the multi-car team) because he has it
going on over there. He has a lot of people and a lot of
money. I find it harder because my husband is driving
one car and I am driving the other. He is the crew chief
for my car and we are back and forth a lot. It is hard.
It is double the work. But I will say that there have
been some things that we have found on the other car
that was wrong with my car. In that way, it has been an
advantage having two cars.
Q: What do you want from the 2002 season?
HARTMAN-SMITH: I just want to see us qualify well
and in the top half of the field. I want to see us get
past the first round more often and win more rounds. I
want us to put together some solid runs and see us in
the top eight for the season.
-Courtesy,
NHRA Communications Dept.-
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