Aniki Ken, Day in the life of Ken Takahashi

Friday, May 01, 2009

1st rules of Drifting in the US

Back in August 8th 2005 I made a post that began the beginning oh a whole new motorsport "Drifting".....
Before then, drifting was a black art and judging a drifting competition was even more mysterious.
Here is a copy I published back in 2005 of the 1st English Rules for Drifting that which all professional Drifting obey by.


“The Hard Call”
by Ken Takahashi

Many of you don’t know who I am. Is there controversy in the judging of Formula D? Perhaps a lot of the drivers feel they don’t know what the judges are thinking of or what their judging on. It seems unclear and “who” is judging? These seem to be the common questions on a lot of the drivers mind.

Well, first off let me introduce myself and my philosophy. My name is Ken Takahashi and at first appearance I just look like a very plain, middle aged, slightly over weight, typical Japanese America (Nisei). What’s his connection to all this? For starters I brought over and managed DRFT team and Driver Utsumi Akinori to run the 1st US D1 back in August, 2003. Before that in June, 2003 in conjunction with Apex’i, I provided D1 driver Imamura a 350Z for a drifting exhibition. I also gave Calvin Wan his first career push by having him drive for me in D1 back 2003. I was the one that put Bob Bondurant in the passenger seat with “Vertex” Ueno and introduced an American legend to drifting at SEMA 2003. I was promoting “Tarzan” Yamada during his introduction as the ambassador of drifting in 2004. I also helped launched Chris Forsberg’s professional career and set the standard of professional teams by making “Team Motorex”. I have sponsored Ken Gushi, Hubert Young, Koguchi’s 180, Seigo Yamamoto’s S14, and Andy Yen/Autolink. And most importantly of all I was there at the very beginning! Were we laid down the foundation for judging drifting in Formula D.

As I recall, I was the only one up at the judges stand that was able to learn (D1 style) what to look for by Tarzan, Utsumi, Koguchi and Seigo. I still enforce there four basic rules: entry speed & speed/ drift angle/ transition & line/ and excitement & style. In it’s purest form this is what it breaks down to. It is the compilation (or lack of) these four criteria that a judge bases his decisions.

I believe a judge tells you enough as a group on what a judge wants to see and how you can achieve the highest amounts of points. But its only you as an individual that knows your own style and level of expertise that you can push yourself and the capacity of your car. The Overall run of the course should be fast (a bi-product of speed is bellowing smoke = good points). Fast in and out of clipping point in full drift is crucial.

Entry: the entry is the opening of the package. It is the 1st thing the judges are going to notice and a deciding factor to hold his interest. The entry should always be fast. How you initiate it, whether feint or cut across is your own style, some might be better than others on certain tracks so you should lean to do both well. As you practice on that course play with it to see which is better to accomplish the fastest entry speed you can go and set yourself up in a good position for the next turn. Remember, some deciding factors weather you win or lose is whether you make a mistake in the entry.

Drift Angle: may sound simple but there is more to it. The lead car has no excuse to not have the maximum amount of angle he or she can do and hold during a run. The lead car must also protect the line by making it slightly smaller than the qualifying line. Following car- it is the following cars challenge to mimic all the angles the lead car is going to do and not letting the lead car pull away. Following car must follow the 1st cars line and keep it tight. It is also the following cars responsibility to gauge the lead car and not get trapped by a sudden lose in the power band that will unable you to continue a drift around a corner.

Culture shock: America is a society of instant gratification, we don’t like to wait. In boxing we root for the KO not TKO. We order food by the numbers. We love digital cameras because we can see our pictures right now. Well, we have a tendency to feel that we have to pass to win. Not so in drifting. There are acceptable and unacceptable passes. Taking the chance and going for the kill subjugates you to a number of penalties that can cost you the win. Passing car cannot disturb or force out the lead cars line. Must be done in full drift, front tires must be in counter position not straight, must follow though in full drift and cannot cut across the course or course line in order to achieve this. The repercussion of a unacceptable pass can give you negative points on transition = steering correction, line = sacrifice clipping point, drift angle = straighten the car to pass, and C.O. course out = off line (picture a wall there? You would have crashed, same as spin). So is it worth it? Only if the lead car makes a BIG mistake.

Line: best drift line not race line. Quite commonly on a lot of tracks here in the US there are two different lines. Your qualifying line and competition line. In qualifying line, it’s all about you! You and the battle against the track. To show your true skills on how quick you can adapt your skills as a driver and the ability to bring out the energy the track holds.
Competition line is not as flamboyant, a little tighter but not to tight, this is a battle against drivers to show who is a better lion tamer. Taming the track bring out the best drift and making it look easy.

Excitement and style: a lot of people came up to me and ask me “I feel I did everything right, why did I loose?” Sometimes there right. They ran the line, they hit the clipping points, they might have bellowed smoke exiting, but my answer most of the time is “the other person did better.” See as a judge we don’t just judge with our eyes, we also hear it too. We listen when your on or off throttle. We listen when your back on throttle before or after the clipping point. We listen what gear you come in at and see you turning your wheel left when you should be turning right. When a driver is in the “zone” quite often it’s a good run. What makes this such a great sport is when the driver is on game he literally transforms, this is when it separates the men from the boys. They put their nuts on the table and takes it to the edge, they are the ones that gets closes to the walls, that just guns the car before the apex and just sling shots their car across the track, “No Fear” that’s all I can say. And when you see these guys “in the zone” you can fell it, the crowds feel it, that’s when you know you got a winner. That’s excitement and style.

I’ll be the first to admit, I’m not a driver, nor do I pretend to be one. As a judge I feel it is my duties to give them a fair and non-bias event. And is my obligation to the drivers to legitimately make calls that explanations can clarify. Drifters are a different breed, their not followers but more trend setters, rebels, they were drifting when drifting wasn’t cool, they didn’t care. You can’t tell these people to conform without explanation, you have to earn their respect. These guys are out there driving 110% driving with all there heart. And sometimes when I’m standing up there in the judges stand it blows me away the passion these boys have for this sport and it humbles me to try that much more to make the “hard call”.

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Thursday, November 16, 2006

Formula D Pro Am event in Laughlin

They paved the parking lot across the river into a track.
the main event was on sunday.

we had John Yim(daily drifter), Taka, me, Hiro & Mike (US drift)
me & Yoshioka congratulate Lance....
I think Charlie from Just Drift drank abit tooo much
all in all the event went good. 8 temp lic were given out and 8 1yrs lic were given to those who won top 8 in tandem.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

traveling to Laughlin

I had to drive to Laughlin NV, for the Formula D Pro Am to Judge. instead of driving by myself, I went up with acoulpe of my friends. the 15 fwy was jammed packed! so Lawerance (A-Spec) told me to take a side street. turns out to be a dirt path that went up the mountains, no guard rails, it was like rallying!
My poor car! only 6K on the odameter, I had to go though rivers and over big rocks! I hope the undercarrage is ok? :( Oh, thats Yoshioka on the right. (D1 Driver)
And just 3min from my destination I get pulled over by a cop! cought doing 79mph in a 45mph. zone.

Super Street Time attack

November 8th Masa and I brought out the Mine's GT-R to Buttonwillow for the Super Street Time Attack.
We had Tarzan driver the car. Unfortunatly we only brought 1 set of S tires (which was only good for 3 runs) and Tarzan could not get a good time. best time was 1.52 :(
it's me, Masa, Nakayama (cheif mech), Nikura (Mr. Mines) & Geka...
After weres we went to eat at "Kan" in Torrance and look who was eating at the table besides us...? Andy Luk (Formula D) & Dai Yoshihara!
This is Nikura-san telling Dai to leave Nitto and go with Bridgestone then they can work more together....

Irwindale Feeder Series

October 28th. was one of Naoki's minor drift events. Alex, Andy & I came out to judge and see who gets FD license for next year.
This is us laying out the course with Taka & his "chinpira"wagon
people at the drivers meeting....
After we had dinner at some steam dumping place... wow, it was very good, I think between the 4 of us we ate 70
after dinner Jerry's car die so we had to wait for AAA.....
October 28th.

Irwindale Formula D final round

October 14th was our last evnet for 2006.
Alex, Andy & I were judging, our judges stand keeps getting better and better every year.
The track owner congratulated us for making a new record for attendence. we beat D1's numbers. over 10,500 people packed the stands!
Finally, Dai made 1st.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Dinner with the big mucky mucks...

The other night I had dinner with Mr. Chiba. he is the owner & manager or Team Taisan. They use to run the Banihana racng tream. and he is active in the French Le Manns & the Le Manns classic.
Here is me and the former president of Porsche North America racing dept.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Shelby Mustang drive day

On Friday Ford held a test drive day of there Shelby line of Mustangs.
It was held at Dukes in Malibu for a lunch and cruse. Ford brought out 4 for their Shelby GT for us to test drive up & down PCH. They brought out the GT500, GT-H, GT in Automatic & GT in manual. One of the bad boys was this GT-500 convertable. factory production car with 500hp!
As scary as 500hp may sound it was a very stable ride. It wasn’t as peaky & as hairy as a high 500 horse power Skyline GT-R. it was pleasant to drive and very controllable.
Another interesting car was the Shelby GT-H. it’s exclusively for Hertz rental cars. It’s a rental car! At 325hp it sounds nice but it only comes in automatic and has a open rear diff and has no by-pass switch L but still it was fun to drive….
I had a chance to take a sneak peak at the new 2007 Lexus LS460L (limo version)
With reclineable rear seats and full controls for AC and music in the back, it’s an awesome car! Mercedes is in big trouble!
After driving all moring the lunch was a nice finishing touch....
Thanks Ford!!!

Monday, September 18, 2006

Formula D New Jersey

Wall New Jersey was the back drop for our second to the last race of the sesson. I have to say, this was probably the tuffs event from a judges point of view.

It’s a tiny track, so the speeds are not that high. But what is high is the top 16 drivers driving level. They’re all so good, everyone’s level is about the same so it make is harder. NJ really tested us judges abilities and knowledge of the sport.
In the first rounds of top 16, Ken Gushi got knocked out by Kenji Yamanaka: here are my reasons. In 1st round Gushi ran a better run than Yamanaka giving Gushi a 6/4 advantage. 2nd round Yamanaka defiantly ran a better run giving Yamanaka a 6/4, since it came out equal we gave them a “one more time”. 2nd battle Gushi leads and took a 7/3 advantage, Yamanaka had made several corrections around the bank & transition around the clipping points. But, when Yamanaka lead Gushi made a fatal error around the bank, coming in to fast Gushi had to lock his breaks all the way to the clipping cone costing him the win at 2/8.
Also, in top 16. Dai in the rockstar car & Okubo was also a hard call. 1st round Okubo take advantage 8/2 to Dai, Dai missed shifted around the 1st horse shoe costing him his drift. In the 2nd round Dai did a great job of saying up with Okubo, and Okubo even corrected around the bank. But Dai’s win of 7/3 was not enough & the win went to Okubo.
During the final 4. Tanner was leading JR with a strong 8/2 but in the second round Tanner hits JR going around the 1st horse shoe. After careful review we gave the win to Tanner at 6/4. here’s the reason: going around the horse shoe JR was on full gas, the reves were up but the car continually got slower and his angle was going out to wide (a matter of fact when Tanner hit, he hit square on the door, that’s how sideways JR was). Also, there was a back fire indicating a mis-shift, and while left foot breaking. Tanner’s job as 2nd car is to mimic and gage himself, but at that close distance JR’s car slowed down abruptly because of a mistake.

Look how tiny our plane was…. It’s like a private jet!

Trailer to Red Sun, Black Sand.




this summer my friends were casted as extras for this movie. the trailer finally came out. At the time during the shoot the whole ideal of making a WWII movie about Iwo Jima up in the Los Angeles moutains seemed kinda cheesy, but after seeing the trailer I was impressed! It's Japan's Big Block buster war flix like America's Saving Private Ryan. Produced by Clint Eastwood, staring Ken Watanabe (last Samurai). What's neat is that it's a big Hollywood budget movie but from the Japanese point of view.... can't wait!

Friday, September 15, 2006

2 old friends 2 different paths

Met up with my old buddy Toshi down in Costa Mesa for lunch. It's funny how he's "the voice of D1" and I'm a Formula D Judge. But we've been friend long before all this.... back when things were alittle simpler. Were both still into cars! and drifting, but he went over to D1 & me FD.
but when we hang out were just Toshi & Ken......

Revver Launch Party in Hollywood

GT Channel is partnered up with a streaming company called Revver. last night Revver had a launch party @ the Rosavelt hotel on sunset blvd, in Hollywood. it very intresting going to a party of a different industry other than motorsports.