LEAH FIRED IT UP FROM REDLANDS TO POMONA … AND BEYOND

Redlands Connection is a concoction of sports memories emanating from a city that once numbered less than 20,000 people. From the Super Bowl to the World Series, from the World Cup to golf’s U.S. Open, plus NCAA Final Four connections, Tour de France cycling, major tennis, NBA and a little NHL, aquatics and quite a bit more, the sparkling little city that sits around halfway between Los Angeles and Palm Springs on Interstate 10 has its share of sports connections. In NHRA racing, that 5-foot-9 daughter of car-builder Ron Pruett got his little girl started. – Obrey Brown

Leah Pruett, who has battled to third place in NHRA Top Fuel standings in a season, was often in the hunt. Pruett, of Redlands, got her start early when her dad, Ron Pruett, built her a junior dragster. Photo provided by Allison McCormick.

Think of Leah Pruett’s connection to the National Hot Rod Association. Figure 2013. It was, finally, part of entering its fastest group of racers, drivers, developers, model-builders, each paid by fascinating ownerships.

NHRA? So quick? So off the charts! Fans were observing. Motor builders were huge parts. The drivers? All ready to fire it up.

Every NHRA season begins and ends in that spinning city of Pomona, California. It’s an hour’s drive from Leah’s home town of Redlands. Every two weeks, there’s an NHRA blast, 24 during each season.

Leah, it seems, was all over it. She reached NHRA duels, in fact, a few years after NHRA’s 2008 rules switch.

Right up until then, it was a quarter-mile blaze. That’s 1,320 yards total. Had to be shortened, though. A racer, Scott Kalitta, was killed. Other drivers were quite concerned. Speed had been built up so brilliantly by car-contending experts, drivers, you name it, there was a danger to those quarter-mile crashes. Rules shortened those speedy events from that 1,320-yard length to just 1,000 yards. It was, they said, safer.

Leah entered this speed-oriented blazing display to a drop in distance.

Wait! Why call her Leah instead of Pruett? Easy. She’d been married to Todd LeDuc. Then Gary Pritchett. Finally, a guy named Tony Stewart — her current marital partner.

Let’s just refer to her as Leah.

*****

Top Fuel, the fastest land speed racing on earth, has attracted the Redlands-born racer, Leah, since she was eight. That’s when her dad, Ron Pruett, engineered a junior dragster for both his daughters — Leah and Lindsey. 

“I enjoy the speed,” says Leah. “It’s exhilarating physiologically. I love speed. To get into the cockpit … I approach it with excitement.” 

Top Fuel racers are closing in on 340-mph, though Pruett doubts it would occur that 2020 year. Too many distractions and delays, courtesy of COVID. 

Speed? Fastest she blasted her dad-built junior dragster with a 78 mph. Leah didn’t hit 100-mph on the track until after she graduated from Redlands High. At age 18, Pruett piloted a Nitro Funny Car to a blazing 200-mph. By age 19, she hit 250. 

At that same age, Leah sizzled to a 300-mph speed in a Funny Car. It’s no wonder she was able to get her Top Fuel license to blaze away at earthly top speeds.

Speed isn’t easy. Yes, there are drivers that won’t go beyond, say, those 180-mph Sportsmen division cars. Said Leah: “You just have to believe you’re bigger than your car. I’ve got a car that’s 12,000 horsepower. You’ve got to believe that you’re greater than your car.”

It must’ve been her dad, Ron — owner of 13 land speed records — who turned his oldest daughter onto speed. Ron Pruett’s the same guy who drove “Pretty Woman” to a land speed record of 250-mph back in the 1990s.  That’s his nickname.

Ron, though, attacked California-based El Mirage and Utah-based Bonneville speed-racing sites often, firing out his self-built racing engines to assault the speed record book. El Mirage is where he’s part of the Dirty Two Club; last anyone heard, it numbered about 130 speed-crazed drivers. 

In years ahead, those Ron’s results could amount to Leah’s next speed challenge. “I’d love to be in the Dirty Two Club,” she said.

Too bad, though. Ron died a few years later.

*****

Indy or NASCAR racing isn’t her discipline. There’s this, though: Leah’s third husband turned out to be Tony Stewart, who retired from his highly-successful NASCAR, eventually taking over his new wife’s spot in NHRA. The reason? She retired in 2024, blazing a way for them to start a family.

Leah and Tony. Married a few years back. At a spot in New Mexico.

*****

A few notes on Leah:

She sizzled to a 334-mph speed at Chandler, Arizona in February 2018 — her lifetime best. Part of a team owned by Don Schumacher Racing (DSR), Leah landed on NHRA’s top team after years of ups and downs. Back in his racing days, Schumacher piloted his way to 302 wins and 16 championships. 

Eight of Leah’s now 12 career triumphs have come in Top Fuel – 18 total, adding three Pro Mod and three Factory Stock Showdown triumphs to those massive Top Fuel chases.

Incidentally, Schumacher is Leah’s teammate in Team DSR, a once-racing stable of drivers that also includes past champion Antron Brown, plus Funny Car drivers Ron Capps, “Fast Jack” Beckman of Norco and Matt Hagan, along with Pro Stock racers Tim Johnson, Jr. and Mark Pawuk. 

Schumacher as a boss? 

“There’s no sprinkles to someone who’s not winning,” Leah said. “He’s a tough boss. But he takes care of his people. He’s very good at separating business from interpersonal.”

Schumacher caught some mighty races from this 5-foot-9 Leah, the Redlands kid who achieved highly in both 2017 and 2018. Little Leah nailed four wins during that 2017 season, counting the Winternationals in Pomona – her first of two. 

A year later, 2018, she cracked off 3.631 seconds, her best-ever ETA – that’s Elapsed Time – at the final season race in Pomona. Nine months earlier, she was measured at 334.15-mph at Chandler, Arizona.

During that 2017 season, Leah racked up 2,452 points. In an open season, it was just 238 points behind series champion Brittany Force. Another female.

Quick note: Brittany was daughter of Funny Car legend John Force.

*****

Top Fuel, incidentally, is the most fired-up car on NHRA’s circuit — Funny Car, Pro Stock, plus the motorcycles — that deals up wicked speed. 

Leah’s been at that Autoplex Speedway in Pomona often, starting during her junior days with her dad. Those Redlands days are gone. Leah in 2013 gave a footnote about Ron and Linda: “My dad and mom got tired of tires and traffic … moved North Carolina.”

A few years later, in 2021, 64-year-old Ron died there.

Lindsey, who shared their dad’s-built alcohol-altered junior dragster, taught school in Yucaipa. At that point, Leah called Columbus, Ind. her hometown. 

*****

A note about her first career national event at the pro level, Feb. 28, 2016. At that year’s Carquest Auto Parts NHRA Nationals in Chandler, Arizona, she finished ahead of Brittany Force in the first all-female final run at the Top Fuel level since 1982.

Leah was 34 years of age. Brittany had her by about two years. And Leah? Had nothing to do with male or female. It was about speed.

“I’ve made the proper progressions of speed,” said Leah. “Nothing is going to properly train you for 335-miles an hour.

“Nothing.”

*****

Stewart? Leah’s husband?

That one-time Cal State San Bernardino University graduate stepped aside from racing in 2024, replaced by Stewart – yes, her husband Tony – while she retired, marking time to start a family. 

Stewart, meanwhile, has won championships in NASCAR and Indy, now seeking the top-level finishes in NHRA. 

Yes, they got married in 2021.

MICHELE LYFORD, TWICE AS OLD AS TIGER WOODS: ‘HE WAS HALF MY SIZE’

A Redlands Connection is a concoction of sports memories emanating from a city that once numbered less than 20,000 people. From the Super Bowl to the World Series, from the World Cup to golf’s U.S. Open and the Olympics, plus NCAA Final Four connections, NASCAR, the Kentucky Derby and Indianapolis 500, Tour de France cycling, major tennis, NBA and a little NHL, aquatics and quite a bit more, the sparkling little city that sits between Los Angeles and Palm Springs on Interstate 10 has an impressive share of sports connections. There was a female golfer from Redlands who took on that sport’s greatest player on his little ride along I-10 as a 6-year-old. – Obrey Brown

Tiger Woods
Tiger Woods, long after the day when he played in a golf exhibition at Redlands Country Club, a 6-year-old on his way to a prominent career in the sport. He played against Redlands’ Michele Lyford, shooting 51 to her round of 43.

CORTE MADERA, Calif. — Michele Lyford-Sine, who lives in a quiet neighborhood in this smallish community a half-hour’s drive north of San Francisco, remembers running into PGA golf professional Dave Stockton in New York a few years back.

Stockton, who was playing the Westchester Open, stayed with Lyford-Sine and her family in that 1999-2001 era.

“When we lived there,” said Lyford-Sine, originally from Redlands, “he’d come stay with us when he played in that tournament.”

Stockton, now a Redlands resident, mentioned to Tiger Woods, said Lyford-Sine, telling the five-time Masters champion, “I’m sleeping at the house of the only girl that’s ever beaten you.”

That remark might have caught the 15-time major champion by surprise way back on Dec. 29, 1981.

5d1f827570ecc.image
A few years after that exhibition duel with Tiger Woods, now 15-year-old Michele Lyford hits off the practice tee at Redlands Country Club.

That remarkable date was one day before Tiger’s sixth birthday.

The site: Redlands Country Club.

“I was only 12,” said Lyford-Sine. “I was asked to play.”

Redlands Country Club golf professional Norm Bernard, described as a huge proponent of junior golf, had known Rudy Duran, Tiger’s personal coach during his youthful days. Together, Duran and Bernard formed the match – a 9-hole exhibition on RCC’s front nine.

It was Duran, Tiger, Michele and Earl Woods, Tiger’s dad who, at one point, hoisted the little guy up so he could see down the fairway.

“I was nervous,” Lyford-Sine said. “I couldn’t let this 6-year-old beat me. I was twice as old as he was and he was half my size.”

In the end, she shot 43 — not a bad score for a 12-year-old on the par-35 RCC front nine — and Tiger shot 51.

“It was,” she said 38 years later, in 2019, “a little weird not having my dad there.”

Ted Lyford, the multi-year RCC club champion, was at work. Neither was her mother present, but younger sister, Jennifer, followed that duel.

“The way people hover over their kids,” said Lyford-Sine, “kind of made it seem strange. That’s the way it was back then. Parents didn’t hover as much as they do now.”

She recalled. “I remember his dad lifting him up so he could see the slopes of the course.”

Tiger, who was just turning six, had already appeared on the Mike Douglas Show, ABC’s That’s Incredible and, perhaps, another program or two. He was a golf prodigy. Few probably figured that this kid would someday turn professional golf on its ear.

Lyford-Sine shared another small connection with Tiger. They both eventually attended Stanford.

“My entire goal in life,” she said, “was to get a full scholarship to Stanford. I won a few big tournaments and that got me in.” Her grades probably had more to do with Stanford’s acceptance.

Among those “big” tournaments, though, was the 1987 Girls CIF-Southern Section championship, beating Rialto Eisenhower’s Brandie Burton, that year’s runner-up, by eight shots at North Ranch Country Club in faraway Thousand Oaks, Calif. Burton, if anyone can recall, would later become a top LPGA Tour player.

Lyford-Sine was a San Diego Junior World champion in 1983, shooting 227 to win the girls 13-14 division. Lyford-Sine repeated in 1986, winning the girls 15-17 division by shooting 295.

By the way, a kid named Eldrick Woods was the 9-10 champion in 1984, winning the first of six Junior World titles. Eldrick Woods, of course, is known as “Tiger.”

Stanford, though, was a tough haul for golfers — male or female — with certain majors in school.

“You’re in a school that has the smartest people on the planet,” Lyford-Sine said.

If she was looking to show off her golfing accolades and her academic prowess, consider most people would take on a major that’s routine enough to include both athletics and academics. “There are some majors you can do that with,” she said.

Woods was a Stanford student – at first. Said Lyford-Sine: “Tiger left (Stanford) after two years.”

Whether he left to pursue a brilliant pro golf career, or that he was caught up in that academic-versus-athletic war is unknown. “I’ve never thought to ask him,” she said.

“You cannot compete athletically and compete academically,” she said. As golfers, “we missed so much school. It doesn’t feel good.”

After two years, she left golf to complete her academic workload. “I did okay (in golf), not great,” she said.

It was six years earlier, just after Christmas at Redlands Country Club in 1981, that Tiger and Michele duel took place. She probably wasn’t thinking about a Stanford academic workload taking place in the distant future. It was that Redlands duel that took place first.

“We had people following us,” she said, “but I got over the nervousness.”

Afterward, once Lyford-Sine outdueled Tiger at Redlands Country Club, Bernard threw a birthday party for that little guy.

“I remember,” said Lyford-Sine, “we sang happy birthday to him and he blew out candles on a cake inside the restaurant at Redlands Country Club.”