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2016 NHRA season in review: Pro Stock champion Jason Line

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Photo courtesy Jason Line official Twitter page

Over the next three-plus weeks, MotorSportsTalk will feature season-ending reviews of the top drivers of the 2016 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series season.

Each day, we’ll have one in-depth review of a driver that finished in the top-five in each of the four professional classes (Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock and Pro Stock Motorcycle), as well as a compendium of select other drivers that did not finish in the top-five.

We began the series Monday with Antron Brown and Tuesday with Ron Capps.

Today we feature 2016 Pro Stock champion Jason Line

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Marc Gewertz/NHRA

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Jason Line

Driver: Jason Line

Age: 47

Hometown: Wright, Minnesota

Team: KB Racing

Sponsor/car: Summit Racing Equipment Chevrolet Camaro

Crew chief: Rob Downing/Tim Freeman

2016 season finish: First in Pro Stock.

2016 season statistics: 24 races, 8 wins, 6 runner-up, 7 semifinals, 2 quarterfinals. No. 1 qualifier eight times. Round-by-round record: 65 wins, 16 losses. Earned third career NHRA Pro Stock championship.

Career statistics (includes both Pro Stock and Sportsman ranks): 308 races, 47 wins (45 Pro Stock, 2 Sportsman), 47 runner-up (47 PS, 0 Sportsman), 64 semifinals, 78 quarterfinals. No. 1 qualifier 49 times. Round-by-round record: 525 wins, 262 losses. 1 DNQ. Three career Pro Stock championships (2006, 2011 and 2016).

What went right in 2016: Won a single-season career-high eight races. … Line and teammate (and four-time champion) Greg Anderson were virtually unstoppable through the season, particularly during the first 2/3 of the campaign. It was neck-and-neck for Line and Anderson until Line pulled away to take the championship by a mere three points, even though he lost in the final round of the final race to Anderson. … Line and Anderson completely overwhelmed 2014 and 2015 champion Erica Enders. Enders won six races in 2014 and 2015, but failed to win even one in 2016 due mainly to the domination of KB Racing’s Line and Anderson.

What went wrong in 2016: Very, very little. Line was the most consistent driver across all four major professional series. He suffered just one first-round exit. Everything else was quarterfinals or higher, including 21 finishes as either a winner, runner-up or semifinalist.

What to look for in 2017: It was a tough back-and-forth battle between Line and Anderson in 2016, and 2017 promises nothing less. Anderson left 2016 with a bad taste in his mouth because he gave it his all to win a fifth Pro Stock championship, yet came up just a little bit short. As close as 2016 was between the two teammates, 2017 could be even closer.

Season reviews already posted:

-- Antron Brown (12/12)

-- Ron Capps (12/13)

-- Jason Line (12/14)

-- Jerry Savoie (12/15)

-- Doug Kalitta (12/16)

-- Tommy Johnson Jr. (12/17)

-- Greg Anderson (12/18)

-- Eddie Krawiec (12/19)

-- Steve Torrence (12/20)

-- Matt Hagan (12/21)

-- Shane Gray (12/22)

-- Andrew Hines (12/23)

-- J.R. Todd (12/24)

-- John Force (12/25)

-- Bo Butner (12/26)

-- Angelle Sampey (12/27)

Follow @JerryBonkowski