Behind The Wheel Podcast: FORMULA DRIFT RECAP FT. JOEY REDMOND!!!

Can’t believe we are at the final round of Formula Drift! Today, Jared and Scott are joined by Formula Drift Editor, Joey Redmond as we talk about the 2021 Season thus far and what we expect at Irwindale this upcoming weekend!

Thank you for Tuning in and please, if you like the podcast and what we’ve been doing here, please SUBSCRIBE! We’re on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher and we always put the full video interviews on our YouTube Channel (https://www.youtube.com/konigwheels)

(we’d love if you subscribe there as well!) Thank you for listening!

 

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Joey’s Instagram: @joeyredmond
https://www.instagram.com/joeyredmond/

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Scott’s Instagram: @scott_konig
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www.konigwheels.com

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FORMULA DRIFT FINAL ROUND! Behind The Wheel Podcast: FDIRW RECAP!!!

Formula Drift (FDIRW) FINAL ROUND arguably one of the best FD Finales in a while?! Scott (Konig Wheels, Marketing Director) and Joey Redmond discuss how it all went down from top to bottom in this special edition of podcast! Thank you for tuning in and leave us some feedback for future shows! We appreciate you listening/watching … until next year FD Fans!

Behind the Wheel Podcast

You can also, subscribe or download the podcast on our website, iTunes, Google Play, Youtube & Sound Cloud:

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Thanks for listening!

FOLLOW:
Scott Weiss (Konig): Scott_Konig
Joey Redmond (Wrecked Magazine): joeyredmond
Konig Wheels USA Instagram: @konigwheelsusa

Behind The Wheel Podcast: FD Edition – FINAL FDIRW

Formula Drift season for 2018 is over and we have two crowned champions (Pro and Pro2!) With some major upsets and awesome highlights, the masses are naming this one of the best Formula Drift finales ever. What do you think? Scott (Konig, Marketing Director) and Joey Redmond break down Joey’s 10 points of Formula Drift Irwindale! Thank you so much for tuning into these special FD podcast formats this year. We hope that you enjoyed them and for your drift fans it offered some entertainment value as the season moved along. Feel free to let us know what you think and leave us some feedback for future shows. We hope to improve upon the format and provide you more of these when Formula Drift kicks off their 2019 season in April! Thanks again!

 

If you like what we’re doing here, please subscribe! We’re on iTunes and Google Play! Additionally, every full episode is uploaded to YouTube!
…. (details/cheat sheet below! – Audio )

0:20 | Intro
2:18 | Aasbo Must Hate the Final Battle at Irwindale
7:28 | Dirk Stratton Wins Rookie of the Year in a Corvette
11:27 | Forrest Wang Proves He is King of the S-Chassis
15:10 | Travis Reeder Fails to Qualify and Still Wins Pro 2
23:58 | Will the Ferrari Project Continue?
29:39 | Europeans Dominate the American Drift World and Sweep Podium
37:09 | Justin Pawlak was the Secret Championship Contender You Didn’t Think About
40:48 | The 99 Score Qualifying Run Got Us So Close
41:30 | Vaughn Redeems his Season
45:17 | Back to Back by 4 Points
49:50 | Outro / Contact info

FOLLOW:

Scott Weiss (Konig): Scott_Konig
Joey Redmond : joeyredmond
Konig Wheels USA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/konigwheelsusa/

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Great Season for Kelsey Rowlings! FDIRW Recap!

FORMULA DRIFT PRO 2 IRWINDALE, CA – FINAL | Oct 12th and 13th

“BREAKTHROUGH”

After a long drive from Florida, I finally arrived at Irwindale Speedway for the final round of the 2018 Formula Drift season. The team and I were feeling pretty confident now that our new power steering pump seemed to fix our previous steering issues. After a few warm-up laps, I already was feeling comfortable on the track and was running very high lines on the bank. I kept cleaning up each run and got settled very quickly, only making small changes to our setup before qualifying.

As I pulled up to the line to qualify, the nerves hit. The intimidation of this track, both in its layout and history, was intense. Not only was it the final round of the series, but it has been known as the “House of Drift,” and has the potential to destroy your car with its walls. I floored it down the straight and clutch-kicked into the bank. I held a very high line, very close to the wall at the top of the bank. Pumped on my bank run, I lost a bit of concentration coming off the bank and ended up being off the first inner clip by a few feet. Knowing I had to make up for the mistake I slid the car deep into the next outer zone, right up against the inner bank wall. I carried my momentum through the zone, past the final inner clip and finally past the finish line. Overall, it was a solid run with a score of 82. I knew I could do better, but I ended up with an 80 on my next run. With my higher score of an 82, I qualified 7th and was put in the bracket against one of my Konig teammates, Alec Robbins.

When we arrived at the track the following day, we prepped the car for top 16 practice and mounted some fresh Achilles tires to our Konig Hypergrams. My very first lap of top 16 practice ended up being one of my best runs of the weekend, so I was feeling very confident. Unfortunately, that confidence was shut down aggressively in just our fourth lap when we wrecked hard into the wall just before the finish line. Between running a little too wide, getting into the marbles, and finishing off my tires at the very end, we slid right into the wall and popped the car into the air a few feet. I broke both of my Konig wheels on the passenger side, the front Coilover, and brake line, and I bent the front lower control arm, rear lower control arm, and rear knuckle. With only about an hour before top 16 battles started, I wasn’t sure if we would make it.

We got the car back to the pits and the team was already pulling out all the spare parts we had. Andy Hately and his crew also rushed over to help us with the car, knowing we had our work cut out for us. Fortunately, we had most of the parts we needed. The rear knuckle and front lower arm were reused since we didn’t have spares, but everything else was replaced. Unfortunately, the Coilover broke so bad that it fell out on track and was taken away by the track cleanup crew, but I needed the spring. We had been running a 10k spring in the front but our spare Coilovers had an 8k spring on them. Because we had no choice, we decided to just run the different springs. We were able to get a top hat from James Deane since we also broke the Wisefab-specific top when our Coilover was ripped out.

We finally got the car to the point where we could align it and bleed the brakes after installing the new brake line. Because of the bent parts we had to leave, we had to get the alignment as close as we could. When the brakes were being bled, I ran over to participate in the top 16 opening ceremonies without my car, but I knew it would get done and we were going to make it out to compete.

My first run after the wreck was my lead run in competition against Alec Robbins. I threw the car into the bank as committed as I could, but I could tell it felt very off. I struggled to settle the car while still trying to position it in all the right places. After the inner clip, I transitioned into the inner bank and the car was so unsettled I had to shut it down or risk putting it into the wall again. Because of receiving an incomplete on my first run, I knew it would be hard to make up for it. I could have stopped just then, but since it was the finals, I knew I had to go out again and do better.

This time, I had an idea of what to expect from the car when I threw it sideways behind Alec. I kept some distance on the bank since I knew I would be fighting the car, but started closing the gap as we approached the first inner clip. I managed to stay with him around the remainder of the course with decent proximity. Although overall the performance was not my best, I knew I did the best I could at the moment and I was proud of myself and the team for getting the car back out there for the competition. This season has definitely been one of learning, but even more so of improvement. Now that we are entering the off-season, I can’t wait to refresh the car and see what we are capable of achieving next year!

www.driftchick.com
www.facebook.com/KelseyRowlings
https://www.instagram.com/kelseyrowlings/

Kelsey is running Konig Hypergrams in 17×9 et 25mm front and 18×9.5 et 25mm rear. The Konig Hypergram is Flow Formed.

THE CHAMP! TRAVIS REEDER!! (FD PRO2)

FORMULA DRIFT PRO 2 IRWINDALE, CA – FINAL ROUND! | OCT 12TH and 13TH

** Before Travis jumps into his recap from this past weekend below we just wanted to say a few things. We want to start out by congratulating Travis and his entire team on a great season. These drivers and teams work extremely hard and spend so much time, money and effort all year long to be able to attend these Formula Drift rounds and perform at such an intense level.

We’re extremely proud to have Travis as part of our extended family. Over the past couple of years, he has been the definition of class and really lives up to, and exceeds, what we look for in a driver. The season’s last event at Irwindale is the perfect example of that. He stripped parts off his own car to help his friend, and competitor, Dylan Hughes be able to make his Top 16 battle. Dylan was the only one that could have beat Travis for the championship this year and all he needed was a single win in his Top 16 Battle. Travis knew that but still wanted to make sure that his friend had the opportunity to be champion. That is not just sportsman ship…thats the definitiion of class.

Travis always puts the sport first. So Travis CONGRATULATIONS again and THANK YOU! **

TRAVIS REEDER RECAPS FDIRW:

travis reeder fdirw

This event recap is going to be a little different than past examples for several reasons. Some of those reasons I am proud of and some…not so much. Formula Drift Irwindale was the most difficult, eye-opening, crazy and humbling event I’ve ever been a part of. If you would have told me in 2011 when I started drifting that I would be where I am today and what happened this past weekend was going to happen, I would laugh at you hysterically.

The crew and I started the weekend like any normal pro 2 round. Double checking things on the car, organizing parts and going over a general game plan for the coming weekend. The time came to head out on track for our first and only three-hour practice that connects straight to qualifying afterward. Immediately after the first lap, I knew the car was WAY off from what it needed to be for the steep and fast Irwindale oval. We made gear changes, shock changes, tire pressure adjustments and anything else we could do to try and get grip out of the car. It was overly tight and damn near undrivable. The difficult part of the situation we were in was that with our time limit, we had to juggle seat time and time making changes so that we didn’t favor one thing or another. In the end it only netted us 9 practice laps before it was time for qualifying.

I lined up on the grid, nervous as usual, but ready to get qualifying going to see where we land for the ladder part of the competition. I made my first lap, still fighting the car and struggling with the outrageous amounts of grip the car was still producing. I made multiple mistakes on the first and second banks but kept the car sideways for the whole run. We were given a 65 which was disappointing and placed the team and me outside of the pack for the comp on Friday. With the pressure high and me struggling to think of anything other than a championship, I lined up for my second run. I drove the car 120% with nothing to lose. I was prepared to wreck the car or get into the show, and although the team and many of my peers felt my second lap had solidified us a spot in top 16, it did not. I had scored only a few points below the cutoff and didn’t know how to feel. I had never failed to qualify for a drift competition throughout my career until now. And it just so happened to be the most important event of my life where a championship seemed the most possible. I felt like I let everyone down who had ever supported me. the déjà vu set in from last year where I had to wait on the sideline and let other drivers decide my championship at the final event of the year. We had a couple whiskey’s that night lol.

travis reeder fdirw 2

Friday was competition day, and although I was still feeling embarrassed and down, I held my head high and was ready to bench warm and wait for everything to unfold. With the focus on my good friend Dylan Hughes who had qualified 15th, the only driver who could clinch the championship from me, we watched from the grandstands as practice started. All Dylan had to do in the competition was advance past the top 16 and the championship would be his. Shortly after practice started, something happened that changed everything. Dylan had made a mistake and driven his car into the wall on the first corner.

Immediately after the hit I had stood up rapidly. I had only two choices. Knowing Dylan had very minimal spares for his car I could lock up my trailer and wait to see if he can fix the car before competition starts, most likely handing me the championship, or I could do what most people wouldn’t and do everything I could to get one of my closest friends back on track for a fighting chance at the title. I sprinted to my car which was parked at the AEM booth and drove it (faster than I should have) to the pit and waited for the tow truck to drop off Dylan’s mangled s13. I had gotten word that he needed nearly every passenger side suspension piece replaced to get the car 100% again. I made the decision to get my car on jack stands and offer Dylan and his crew any part they would need off it. With only an hour until opening ceremonies, I and my team, alongside Dylan’s thrashed as hard and as efficiently as we could to get his car together in time. We replaced front and rear lower control arms, front and rear coil overs, camber arms, tie rods, repaired a bent subframe and realigned the car. Dylan pulled the car on track just in time for opening ceremonies. We all were ecstatic seeing what we had done in such a short amount of time, and before we knew it the competition had started. Dylan lined up for his top 16 battle against Fillipi. As I stood on the outer bank, unable to see what was happening, I stared anxiously at the finish line. I was overflowing with nerves as I awaited the call from the judges. The decisions were in, and Dylan had failed to beat Fillipi and advance to the top 8.

This was the strangest feeling I had ever felt in my entire drifting career, I was unsure if I was supposed to feel bummed that a great friend was knocked out of competition after all of our hard work to get him back to the line, or to feel overjoyed that something I had always wanted so badly was finally mine, a pro 2 championship. Something hit me right then, it was now that It had dawned on me what professional drifting was all about. It’s about family all coming together to help each other and enjoy this crazy motorsport we all love so much, even if it means sacrificing certain things that mean worlds to you. So, with that, I am so proud and thankful for my amazing team for supporting me tirelessly through the ups and downs of this 2018 formula drift season. My family, for standing by my side no matter what and always having a smile on their faces. And my ever so awesome sponsors for believing in my small program and making sure I have every tool I need to succeed in this insane game. You are all the real MVP’s!

WE ARE THE 2018 FORMULA DRIFT PRO 2 CHAMPIONS!

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Travis is running Konig Ultraforms in 17×9 et 25mm front and 18×9 et 25mm rear. The Konig Ultraforms is Flow Formed.