obert Hight swings his customized 12-gauge shotgun
Transcription
obert Hight swings his customized 12-gauge shotgun
obert Hight swings his customized 12-gauge shotgun on target in a smooth, well-practiced arc with the kind of ease and comfort that you or I might point the remote control at the TV. The differences are two: first, Hight isn’t aiming at some 48-inch plasma screen; second, when Hight twitches his finger, the channel doesn’t change — instead, a loud report is followed milliseconds later by the obliteration of a six-inch clay disc trying in vain to make a 45mph getaway from his keen eye and quick trigger finger. Hight, known now to drag racing fans around the world as the driver of John Force’s Automobile Club of Southern California Ford Mustang Funny Car and the NHRA POWERade Drag Racing Series’ top rookie last year, was a champion long before he hit the quarter-mile to start 2005. He’s a former state champion trapshooter with a long list of impressive credentials and accomplishments. Now he’s trying to teach me how to shoot trap. When the National DRAGSTER staff huddled this winter for its annual planning meeting, during which we explore our strengths and opportunities and how to best utilize them, we focused on our great working relationship with the racers and our unprecedented access to them, and we hit upon the idea for a series of articles we informally began calling “teach me,” wherein we’d get the top Pros to share their non-drag racing hobbies with us. Hight’s shooting fame was well documented during his rookie 20 ✦ National DRAGSTER campaign, and because I’ve fired a few handguns, shotguns, small-bore rifles, and even an honest-togoodness World War II .45-caliber tommy gun, it seemed a natural for me. Of course, I’ve never shot at anything that was moving. We’re at Redlands Shooting Park in Southern California, a range owned by Terry Bilbey, Hight’s longtime shooting buddy who has let us in ahead of opening time to make whatever humiliation I encounter a private affair. At least that was the plan. Before I know it, our “private lesson” has become quite public. When Hight rolls up in his Ford (naturally) pickup, I’m surprised to see Force with him. Minutes later, Tom McKernan, president of the Automobile Club of Southern California and an avid skeet shooter, also drives up. Beating them all to the range was the camera crew for Driving Force, the upcoming A&E show on the Force family. No pressure, right? Trapshooting Basics rapshooting is but one of many sports based on shooting small disks launched into the air. The “trap house” contains a machine that throws the “birds” into the air in a random pattern limited to a 44-degree horizontal arc. The birds exit the house at about 45 miles per hour and will travel about 50 yards before hitting the ground. Each trap field has five shooting stations in an arc, each 11 degrees away from its neighbor. The shooting stations are paths radiating out from the trap house with distances marked from 16 to 27 yards. A round of trap is 25 birds, five birds shot from each station in rotation. The most common forms of trapshooting are “singles” and “doubles.” Singles are single birds shot from the closest distance, 16 yards from the trap house. Doubles are two birds launched simultaneously, also shot from 16 yards. A round of doubles is usually 25 pairs, or 50 birds. T Top Fuel star Cory McClenathan, one of my all-time favorite racing buddies, is also present, at my invitation. He, too, A typical trap field: five stations in a small arc. Robert Hight, far left, is at has been shooting for years, and station two and already has fired in this round. That’s me shooting in station when I shared with him earlier three, waiting for the target to come out of the trap house (the small this year my plan to shoot with rectangular box at center) while Automobile Club of Southern California Hight, he asked to be included. President Tom McKernan and Top Fuel veteran Cory McClenathan, both Cory Mac has brought along his experienced shooters, stand at the ready in stations four and five. own piece, a $4,000 Browning, and “Pull” he says again, and another one bites the dust. while we awaited Hight’s arrival, he gave me the first “Pull.” Three up, three down. basic tips on what to expect and how to shoot. “Your turn,” he says. Bilbey chips in his advice, too, and he’s clearly someone to listen to. He has been shooting Hight has been shooting since his teenage days in competitively since 1970, is a member of the the Northern California burg of Alturas, population California Golden State Trapshooting Hall of Fame, 3,500, and admits that initially he wasn’t a shooting and in 1978 became just the 20th person to shoot a star, so to speak. grand slam, nailing 400 straight targets: 100 from the “I was more into baseball back then, and I wasn’t 16-yard line, 100 from the 27-yard line, and 200 in very good at shooting when I started, so I kind of lost doubles (see Trapshooting Basics at right). He met interest in it real quick,” he recalled. “My brother Hight through shooting, which led to a business started out good, and when he would beat me, it relationship with John Force Racing. Bilbey is general would make me mad, so I really started trying harder manager of Aard Spring and Stamping in Temecula, and even quit baseball.” Calif., which makes nozzle springs, clutch springs, By age 15 he was a California state champion and valve springs, and other goodies for JFR. shot competitively until he went to college in the Hight pulls from the truck cab his gun, and it’s no Plymouth Belvedere he restored at age 16. Always a Wal-Mart special, that’s for sure. From a polished gearhead, he put aside the AA degrees he earned, one case bearing an engraved name tag comes an Italianin business and one in accounting, and worked for the made Perazzi MX2000. Hight, like any good hot fuel teams of Roger Primm and Tommy Johnson Jr. rodder, has customized it with an adjustable stock before joining Team Force in 1995 as a clutch and has vented the barrel to adjust how it shoots. technician; his first race with the team was the 1995 Value? A cool $10,000. Mopar Mile-High NHRA Nationals, which Force won. In 1999, he married Force’s eldest daughter, Adria, We stand at position three, directly behind and 16 and was off the road for several years and continued yards from the “trap house” from which the “birds” are to shoot. He bagged his first and only grand slam in launched. Hight steps up to demonstrate. Bilbey has 2000. fixed the target-hurling device so that it will only throw The Hights made Force a grandfather with the targets straight ahead. birth of Autumn Danielle in September 2004, during Gun at his waist, Hight composes himself, focuses, cradles the gun to his cheek, and calls “Pull” into a speaker affixed to a waist-high pole in front of him; the voice-activated system launches a fluorescent green disc into the sky. BLAMMO! The disc has barely left the trap house before it disintegrates into a shower of green clay, the bits and pieces joining a carpet of green already littering the ground. which time Hight also was serving as the team’s test driver. He made his leap to full-time driver last year and impressed immediately. Because much of the credit for his success was given to his ability to concentrate, honed by years on the firing line, team publicist Dave Densmore gave him the somewhat hokey nickname “Top Gun.” He proved an apt student of racing, winning two races in his rookie campaign and finishing fifth in the Funny Car standings, but what kind of shooter tutor would he be? After a requisite safety lesson (the only time you put a shell in the gun is when it’s your turn to shoot; the gun’s safety is ignored; the gun is either loaded and ready to shoot or unloaded) and basic instructions on loading and unloading the gun — a simple $400 pumpaction Remington 870 — I step up to the firing line for the first time. Hight has loaned me a pair of redtinted shooting glass and a “holster” that holds a box of to page 22 The student and the master. The “range gun” that I used was an inexpensive Remington pump; Hight’s weapon is a custom-made Perazzi MX2000. Note that the breech of Hight’s gun is open and unloaded while I shoot. Check out Hight’s bitchin’ gun and the cool Perazzi blinders on his yellow-tinted shooting glasses. July 21, 2006 ✦ 21 next six straight, several of which disintegrate with a satisfying poof of lead shot and clay. I’m stunned and quite proud of myself until I’m reminded that the targets were locked to shoot only straight ahead. from page 21 25 shells. If nothing else, I certainly look the part. (Not surprisingly, Hight and McClenathan are wearing shirts touting their major sponsors, AAA and Fram Boost, respectively. Me, I’m wearing a National DRAGSTER Challenge T-shirt that bears the slogan “Do you have what it takes?” Do I?) I came into this adventure with mixed expectations. Twenty years of video gaming has given me what I consider above-average hand-eye coordination and, because I mostly play what are called “first-person shooters,” the concept, at least, of hitting a moving target is not totally foreign. Hight had told me that if I could hit 18 of the 25 targets that constitute a round, I’d be doing well. (“I didn’t do that my first time,” he told me, doing nothing to inspire my confidence.) I’ve already begun to compose a long list of excuses. There are the fingers on my left hand that I broke in January. Oh, and the blister in my right middle finger from assembling my grandson’s birthday-present “fort” the weekend before. And, oh yeah, I think I have a rock in my shoe. Hight seeks perfection in all that he does. He’ll watch videotapes and pore over computer data of every run he makes in his Funny Car. “Frank Hawley taught us there’s no such thing as a perfect run; you can always improve something,” he says. “That’s why I study every run closely.” Now he’s watching me with the same intensity. I bring the shotgun up to the prescribed position, stock firmly wedged against my shoulder, cheek resting slightly against, eye trained down the barrel, which is aimed just to the right of where we know the target will emerge (so that I can see it more easily and quickly) and at a point just above horizontal. “Let me see one,” I ask, using my newly learned cool shooter lingo, and a green disc flies from the house so that I can actually see what it’s going to look like. “Get focused and take your time; there’s no rush,” says Hight. “Whenever you’re ready …” Top Fuel racer and avid shooter Cory Mac shot well with his medium-priced Browning. McKernan, who looked very great white hunterish in his dapper hat, shot as well as he looked. “You have to compose yourself before you call for the bird,” advised Hight. “It’s just like before I stage the Auto Club Mustang. You take a deep breath and draw your focus. You block everything else out. Then you roll in there.” Hight doesn’t dispute the notion that his shooting background has helped his driving. “When you’re shooting, if your mind wanders for just a second, you’ll fail. You have to maintain focus for twohour periods while you shoot more than 200 targets. “In drag racing, you only have to keep that focus for two minutes, but I’ve been part of the crew, and I know how hard these guys work, night and day. If they give you a great car and you drive it out of the groove or you’re late on the Tree, you’re not just affecting yourself — it’s the crew and the sponsors, too. There’s a lot of pressure in driving that I wasn’t aware of until I began doing it. “What I really like about shooting is that you can’t blame anything if you miss; you can’t blame the track, the clutch, anything — it’s all you.” Okay, it’s all me. “Pull,” I call into the speaker. The disc soars out a ways, and as I track it, it somehow stays in my sights. I squeeze the trigger and knock two small chunks off the bottom of the target. A hit in my first at-bat! “You hit it a bit low,” says Bilbey, standing directly behind me but in perfect position to bring me back to earth; Hight is off to my right. “When you hit it square, you’ll know it.” Still flushed with confidence, I reload the gun, racking the slug into firing position with an ain’t-Icool? motion and call forth another target. And promptly miss it. “Low again,” says Hight. “Make sure you’re really seeing the target when it leaves the house and tracking it. Most times when you miss it’s because you lifted your head before you shot because you couldn’t see the target.” As if learning a new sport weren’t tough enough, “Pull!” BLAM! “Pull!” I had to do it in the camera’s eye when the video BLAM! “Pull!” BLAM! “Pull!” crew for the upcoming Driving Force real-life BLAM! “Pull!” BLAM! “Pull!” television series unexpectedly showed up to BLAM! Somehow I nail the chronicle our adventure. 22 ✦ National DRAGSTER Hight asks if I’d like to try it for real using his gun. It’s kind of like someone asking you if you’d like to drive their Maserati. I defer. Maybe later. For some reason I’m afraid of hurting his gun. Actually, calling it a gun is a little like calling the Mona Lisa “a painting.” Perazzi is a world-renowned name in the shotgun biz. According to Hight, the gun that Vice President Dick Cheney was using when he wounded a fellow hunter earlier this year was one of four “field guns” of a custom-made $120,000 set of four presented to him by Perazzi. The stock of Hight’s gun is made from beautiful Turkish Walnut and can be adjusted for max comfort. It’s preened and polished and one bad-asslooking piece. If it were a car, it would win Best In Show. Hight was able to purchase the shotgun and upgrade it with his shooting winnings, which gives an idea of how good he was. Now it’s for real. The trap machine is set to fly targets at random angles (it oscillates in a 44-degree arc), so now we’ll see what we’re made of. C-Mac and McKernan also have taken some warm-up shots, Cory going four for four and McKernan, who prefers skeet — where the targets fly right to left and left to right in front of you on a predictable path — bagging three of five. Hight takes station one, at the far left, one of the more difficult spots because you get the acute angles. I’m in station two, McKernan in three, and McClenathan in four. Everyone will shoot five targets from his position, alternating with the other shooters, then we’ll all move one place to the right. After shooting five times at all five positions, the round will be over. “Pull,” calls Hight, and he blasts the target easily. I get a couple of softballs the first two throws, not exactly straight ahead but not wild angles. Everyone goes perfect through two shots and Hight hits his third in a row before I blow the streak on my first real angle shot. I’m devastated. Then McKernan misses. At least it won’t be a “beer frame” on me. We go through all five stations. Hight, proving human, misses two for a score of 23. McClenathan is impressive with 21, McKernan nails 19, and I get 17, missing three of five from station five, the hardest station because you’re at the far right already, and when a bird flies out at a strong right angle, you can lose it behind your barrel. I’m surprised that I’m doing this well, as are ND photographers Marc Gewertz and Richard Wong, who came with me to chronicle the episode. Apparently, though, the fact that I know my score before Wong announces it is a problem. “If you start to count, you change your whole routine and it screws you up,” Hight tells me later (much later — thanks, pal). “You’ll have 23 in a row and start thinking, ‘Oh, only two to go,’ and then you’re done for. It’s all about the concentration, forgetting everything else.” I tell him that as I was shooting, even through my earplugs, I could hear Force a good 50 yards away, talking loudly into his cell phone (well, loudly to me; to Force, I’m sure it was normal volume). Hight never heard him. “Just like in drag racing, you can help yourself by watching your opponents,” he says. “If the drivers in front of me are getting out of the groove in my lane, I can adjust. In shooting, you watch for problems the (Above) John Force taught Hight how to drive, so it’s only fair that roles were reversed in Hight’s world. (Below) Range owner Terry Bilbey also helped improved Force’s form when Force wasn’t on his cell phone (left) doing business. “I told John, ‘Give me that thing; I bet I can hit it,’ ” joked Hight. I took the handle of Hight’s high-dollar gun and blasted some targets. Hight has added an adjustable stock and made other modifications to fit his style of shooting. other guys are having: how the wind affects their targets, if they’re moving up and down and recognizing it before it’s your turn. It’s all about having your head in the game.” Hight leaves to join Force a few fields down to shoot scenes for Driving Force, so McClenathan, McKernan, and I shoot a couple of rounds in his absence, stealing glances over at Force, who at one point hits three in a row. I’m impressed. After Hight returns, we try a quick round of skeet shooting, different from trap in that the birds fly from left to right and right to left in front of you on a set course. That part makes it easier; the fact that they’re whizzing past you instead of sailing away from you, as in trap, makes it harder. I pretty much sucked at this, hitting maybe half the targets while McKernan was clearly the ace, routinely pegging the birds and doing well on doubles, where birds are launched simultaneously from both the left and right and you hit them with successive shots before they disappear from view. Hight, of course, also was outstanding. We bid farewell to Cory Mac, who heads off to a doctor’s appointment to check lingering effects of his Bristol tumble; there, they discover he has been walking around with a couple of broken ribs. Gewertz and Wong put down their cameras to join Hight, me, and McKernan for another round of trap. I can’t believe this, I think to myself: two stations and 10 shots into the round, and I’m a perfect 10 for 10. I’m matching Robert Hight shot for shot! The others have missed a few, and I’m suddenly finding this way too easy. It’s become automatic. Relax. Concentrate. Position gun. Call. Find target. Follow. BOOM! Damn, I’m good. Okay, so I know I’ve nailed 10 in a row, right? So obviously I’m eschewing Hight’s sage advice, right? Do I need to tell you what happened next? (Above) We also shot a round of skeet, where the targets fly left to right and right to left across your field of fire. The window in the building at left is the “high house” and flies the target high and to the right, followed by a target from the “lower house” (not seen off to my right), which squirts out lower and to the left. (Below) Skeet is McKernan’s preferred form of shooting, and it showed. Under Bilbey’s watchful eye, he clearly was the star here. First shot, station four. Steady. “Pull!” Miss. Grrrr. “Pull!” Hit! “Pull!” Miss. Double grrrr. I know I’m still counting and, worse, know that station five, my weak point, is coming up next. I close out with two more hits and reluctantly sidle up to five. Despite my best “self talk,” five pulls later, I’ve broken only one bird. I rotate all the way back to station one, where in practice I had hit seven straight. I make a deal with myself: I’m not going to count. I know I have only five shells left in my box, so I’ll know when I’ve shot five, and I’ll only count the ones I miss. Still, I know I need to hit four to reach Hight’s goal for me. Between my shot and the time it takes the next four to shoot, I have maybe 20 seconds, so I make the most of them, recycling every bit of advice I’ve received. One down. Two down. Three down. That’s 17. I’m still counting, dammit. I silently ask the shooting gods for a kind angle but get a screamer that sails hard to my left. I track it for what seems like forever before drawing a bead and squeezing. It disintegrates. My last shot is a cream puff, almost right up the middle, and I nail it dead center. Nineteen! We shoot a little more throughout the day, even trying out some trap doubles (using Robert’s gun, I’m able to hit both targets in three of 10 tries and at least one on the other seven), but the highlight is watching Hight go head to head with Bilbey in a round of 25 doubles. Bilbey shoots a perfect 50, plucking the targets from the sky within milliseconds of one another; Hight shoots a disappointing-for-him “Once you’ve done it and you’ve got the basics and your gun fits you right, it’s not hard to break 100; my last couple of targets I was a little nervous because I knew I hadn’t missed any and had only two shells left,” he admits. Hight counting? Tsk tsk. So, “Teach,” how did I do? “You probably did better than 90 percent of the people who come out the first time,” he said kindly. “But I’ll tell (Above) The final shootout: Burgess versus Hight. Final score, Hight 50, Burgess 27. Guess I’d better stick to writing. (Left) Do you think these guys were making fun of me? 42. “I’m rusty,” Hight admits. “I’m jerking, not at all smooth.” Then again, it’s been a while since he has shot, and Bilbey shoots pretty much every day. Hight says it’s not unusual in a large shoot that eight or 10 shooters will finish the first round with perfect scores of 200, then move on to subsequent rounds of 25 with only the perfect scores continuing to advance until the champion is crowned, just like in drag racing, he notes. “Last year, it surprised me how close the racing had gotten,” he admits. “This year is more of the same. John’s been to how many finals and only won one? The reigning world champ hasn’t won a race and has as good a car as anybody. It’s very tough out there. The racing is so close.” The day ends with the trapshooting equivalent of a match race: Hight versus Burgess. We’ll shoot a round of 25 from 16 yards and then, because I’m a glutton for punishment, a round from 27 yards. Robert dusts off a perfect 25 for 25 at 16 yards while I lag behind with 17, struggling to compose myself in the shortened time with just two shooters. We move to the 27-yard line, reserved for the sport’s best shooters. It takes a much steadier hand because every gun movement is magnified and, obviously, the targets are 33 feet farther away. To top off my anxiety, the range is now open to the public, and I’m being watched with curiosity by the locals. Hight, being the show-off, hits 25 again, making for 50 straight. I hit 10 of 25, making double digits only through back-to-back hits on my last two tries once I found a rhythm. you, once you break like 23, then you want 25; it’s addicting. Having the right gun and having someone show you how to do it is a big part.” Amen, Robert. Praise the Ford guy and pass the ammunition. ND With our ammo spent and all of the targets reduced to kibble, my admiration for Hight’s skills, poise, and patience reached new heights. It was a great time. July 21, 2006 ✦ 23