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Jason Harris wins a third straight PDRA Brian Olson Memorial World Finals Pro Boost title at Virginia Motorsports Park, defeating Ty Tutterow after a red light. It is Harris’s first win this season.
The final promises a 3.58-second shootout, but ends at the tree when Tutterow goes -.041 red. Harris records a 3.586 at 209.20 mph, while Tutterow posts a 3.588 at 209.46 mph.
Harris’s ProCharger-boosted Southern Diamond Company “Party Time” ’69 Camaro requires rapid repairs before the final. Supercharger damage from chasing lane choice forces quick turnaround, executed cleanly by a busy crew.

His elimination pace sets the tone. Harris fires a 3.564 at 210.08 mph, the quickest of race day, dispatching rookie Frank Falter IV in the opening round.
Round two becomes an intra-team contest. Harris defeats teammate John Doc, 3.621 at 208.71 mph to 3.646 at 208.01 mph, reflecting a disciplined approach and productive data-sharing inside the operation.
Harris advances when Kurt Steding cannot make the semifinal call. A push for lane choice yields a 3.651 at 186.46 mph and supercharger damage, triggering the late thrash before the final.
Tutterow’s route is authoritative. He edges Johnny Camp with a .010 light and 3.567 at 210.97 mph, covering Camp’s 3.574 at 208.26 mph in a high-quality opening-round matchup.
He then meets title rival Melanie Salemi. She leads early but slows, while Tutterow posts 3.706 at 206.20 mph. That pass secures the 2025 title in Pro Boost racing.
Tutterow underlines form in the semifinal, cutting a .009 and delivering 3.601 at 209.65 mph as Randy Weatherford slows to 8.868, setting up the Harris showdown.
Post-race, Harris credits Southern Diamond Company, Hoosier Racing Tire, Pro Line Racing, ProCharger, and TKM. He highlights support from John Doc and help from Randy Weatherford and Scott Lang during a demanding campaign.
The outcome separates event execution from season-long efficiency. Harris confirms race-day sharpness under pressure, while Tutterow’s consistency delivers the championship. Both camps target 2026 gains, with power management and reliability the clear priorities.

Miles Carter covers grassroots and regional drag-strip action, from bracket racing to street-legal shootouts. His event previews and performance-upgrade guides keep local racers up to speed on timing-slip trends, tire tech, and weekend race highlights.