
Santa Maria High School junior Angel Espinosa was bored with schoolwork, and his grades showed it. He was looking for a reason to stick with his studies.
He found motivation when his automotive shop teacher got him involved in a unique after-school program: drag racing.
In 2007, the Santa Maria Police Department was looking for an activity to get students into classrooms (and to keep racing off of city streets), so officers contacted teacher Lorin Cuthbert and professional drag racing legend Art Foster. In a fit of ātemporary insanity,ā and to help reduce the schoolās high dropout rate, Cuthbert said, he and Foster came up with an objective: Cuthbertās students would build a nitro-fueled dragster from the ground up, maintain it, and act as pit crew at professional races.
āOur goal was for the guys that have a passion for cars, to give them a venue,ā Cuthbert said. āWhatās happened, as a side benefit, is these guys have turned into good students.ā
The students take the dragster to an American Nostalgia Racing Association track in Bakersfield to race against pro and semi-pro drivers. Because the school requires the programās nine students to keep their grades up in order to join the team at the racetrack, the class gives them a reason to focus on their studies.
āMy grades were low, but I got into the team, and to go to the races, I had to get my grades up,ā said Espinosa, who turned Fās into Aās and Bās after being forced to sit out a race. āI was down because my whole racing team was going, and I wasnāt going to get to go, and that motivated me to get my grades up in all my classes.ā
Foster, a former Santa Maria High School graduate, brought his 45 years of drag racing experience to the schoolās garage, teaching the students all the aspects of a racing team and giving them all the tools to be competitive on a professional level.
Under his tutelage, the students learned the dragster inside and outātaking apart and reassembling the car, mixing nitro and methanol fuels, and maintaining the engine.
āAt 2:30, when schoolās out, theyāre in that shop,ā Foster said. āYouād think theyād been doing this for 20 years.ā
The only thing the group doesnāt do with the car is drive itāthatās forbidden for insurance reasonsāso the task falls to Fosterās son A.J., a former student of Cuthbertās.
As the pit crew, the students handle all of the crucial responsibilities involved with getting a car capable of reaching 200 mph ready for a burn. Theyāre entrusted with keeping the driver safeāgetting him in his fire suit and strapping him in the carāand otherwise handling all of the preparations for making the starting line.
āThey do everything a professional race crew would do,ā Cuthbert said. āThey pack the chute, change the oil, check the valves and the air pressure. The driver only drives, and even then he needs help getting in the car and positioning it. We train the students, and they do everything at the track.ā
Junior Oscar Gudino, whoās been in the class since its inception, is the teamās crew chief, making sure everyoneās on same page.
āI get nervous at the start,ā he said. āI just start praying that everything works. If something goes bad, itās on me.ā
The boysā mentors say the program teaches the crew important life skills to use on and off the track. Foster said he sees a transformation in the students the moment they get in the van to Bakersfield.
āTheyāre kids until they actually get in that car. Then theyāre young men. Theyāve grown up so much,ā Foster said. āItās an amazing program. It gives them a reason to see why they need to go to school, why they need to know math, to know how to communicate, and to know how to act as a team.ā
At races, the students have more than held their own. At a meet in Bakersfield earlier this month, they took 14th place in their class, winning the respect of skeptical veteran drivers who didnāt know quite what to make of the new kids on the block.
āWeāre out there competing with the guys that have been racing 20 or 30 years,ā Cuthbert said. āIf youāre going to race, you race with the big boys.ā
Drag racing is an expensive sport. The group spends about $2,500 in parts and fuel each time they take the car to the track. While the fuel and various other supplies are donated by a local petroleum company, the dragster goes through more parts in one day than most cars go through in a year. Foster and Cuthbert, whoāve known each other for 35 years, have had to dig into their own pockets to keep the kids going back to the track.
āWeāve gotten a lot of help, but we donāt have the right kind of help,ā Foster said.
Cuthbert said he hopes Foster and he can find a sponsor to keep the boysā hopes aliveāin terms of racing and education. m
Staff Writer Jeremy Thomas thought drag racing involved a car and a dress. Contact him at jthomas@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Mar 26 – Apr 2, 2009.

