Wednesday night, July 27th, the Stuart International Speedway was back in action for their Wednesday night show and while it may have been their regular Wednesday night date, not many races at Stuart anymore are "regular race nights" any more as it seems that virtually every race is some kind of special with extra bucks on the line for the drivers and lots of things going on for the race fans too.
This night the feature attraction would be the eleventh annual Clint Walrod Memorial race, highlighting suicide awareness and championed by Clint's father, the esteemed Reverend Wambat. Over ten thousand dollars was added to the weekly purse with that money being spread out over the field with many drivers benefitting on this night. Many fantastic supporters of this race helped out to make it a special night as all six classes that normally race here would benefit. For this event, Mike Van Genderen used what has been a popular trend this year, first started by his buddy Trent Chinn at Spencer, and that is to pay all the classes the same amount of money which has been a huge hit among the so called, support classes. Spencer made it work great and more and more tracks are going to that same format. Here it was a grand to win in all classes, minus the Trucks with extra money then being contributed.
On this night there would be a large number of cars on hand and lots of racing as along with the five IMCA classes that regularly race here, the Karl Chevrolet Trucks would also be on hand along with the Outlaw Mini "spinout" Mods. Just shy of one hundred and thirty drivers signed in to race on Wednesday on what was another warm and sultry July night in central Iowa. A busy night would see twenty five races run off in just over three hours as everyone was in high gear on this night.
In my opinion the Stock Cars and Hobby Stocks presented the strongest fields of cars but there were good entries in all classes. Drivers here are expected to "toe the line" and that means that if you spin or get in some kind of entanglement, you better move or you'll be in the pits, pronto. And that leads to some smooth running qualifying events, even though an occasional driver might get the short end of the stick, depending on the circumstances. Just two yellow flags flew during the heat races and what that meant was that even though Mike VanGenderen took a little time for track prep, we were already feature racing at a time when many tracks would still be trying to get their heats done.
On this night, I thought the Stock Car feature stood out as the best race of the night. All twenty five that signed in to race started the main event and it was like rush hour on the freeway, the traffic was so heavy. Austin Kaplan took the early lead and despite heavy pressure from Austin Meiners, Buck Schafroth, Brandon Pruitt, Tom Berry Jr and Damon Murty, he continued to hold the top spot.
Berry Jr would make the strongest move as he worked his way into second and tried to get under Kaplan for many a lap without success. Finally, following a lap sixteen yellow, Berry Jr would get up some momentum and slide under Kaplan to take over the lead as the pack was racing to receive the white flag. Things got very wild then as Kaplan refused to yield, fighting his way back up to a challenging position as he slid Berry Jr in turn one and retook the lead, with Berry Jr fighting his way off the dirt berm down the back chute. Tom still had the chance to throw one more slider as they raced into the final corner. Berry Jr could have thrown a dirty one if he chose and run Kaplan right out of the groove but he played it clean, which Kaplan acknowledged in his victory lane speech and pulled up short, allowing Kaplan to have his outside line. This likely cost him the race though, as Kaplan was able to power down the final chute and win by less than a car length in another Stock Car thriller. Schafroth would finish third and Murty, after hammering the turn one wall in his race to the front, would slump back to fourth at the finish.
My advise to promoter MVG for 2023. Drop a couple of his classes that don't produce the amount of cars that they should, pay the Stock Cars a grand every week with a solid payback for the other positions so that he had twenty five or thirty a week, run a couple of other classes with the Stock Cars and he'd have a hell of a show every week. The Stock Cars here just can't be beat!
Another big moment on this night was seeing Sport Compact driver Michael Hotze win his first ever feature race. And he picked a good night to do so, as the grand he won must have been like winning the lottery, compared to his previous winnings racing. He started on the pole, got off to a nice lead and took advantage of the fact that the race ran off nonstop.
His early lead was just enough to allow him to hold off a fast closing Kolby Sabin, once Sabin rid himself of traffic and moved into second. Tyler Fiebelkorn would finish third as Hotze almost seemed stunned in his interview that he had actually won.
Whitewalls and all, Dylan Nelson would win a competitive Hobby Stock feature race. With twenty three starters, this race took up much of the track space also but after Nelson passed early leader Skylar Pruitt, he would be scored the leader the rest of the way.
However, Pruitt, after giving up the lead early, would come fighting back and he nearly retook the top spot in the late going, providing a strong challenge before settling for second ahead of the hard charging "Mayor", John Watson. Brandon Cox looked for all the world that he would take the top spot early, but then his charge seemed to slump and he had to settle for fourth.
Cody Laney would lead from start to finish to win the Modified feature over a surprisingly small group of cars, given the money on the line. Laney would run away from Chase Rudolf early and then have to weather the storm provided by Tim Ward who moved up from the third row. However, Laney had a good line and he would win without too much drama. the hard charger was Happy Gilman who started tenth and moved up to third and would probably have loved to see a late yellow but it was not forthcoming.
The Sport Mod feature would see three different leaders with Cam Reimers leading the last thirteen laps to take the win. Bryan Morris would lead lap one, only to be displaced by Tyler Inman for the top spot. Inman would hold off Reimers for five laps before Cam would drive past to take over the top spot.
Brayton Carter would move up from the fourth row and try to work the low line in an effort to pass the top two. He got past Inman briefly but the top line was dominant on this night at this point and he simply couldn't match their speed on the low side. By the time he got back to the cushion, Inman had retaken him and that's the way the rest of the event would go with the top three in a high speed chase around the cushion and no one making a mistake that would cost them as they finished in that order.
The Karl Trucks had twelve entrants on this night which I was told was a season high. After Bill Davis Jr led for one lap, it was Jeff Johnson that would take the lead. However, he couldn't hold off the hard charge of Late Model driver turned Truck racer on this night, Todd Cooney, who was driving the Dennis Plain entry. With only four laps to go, Cooney swept past Johnson and would go on to win the event with Johnson and Rick Clark trailing.
The final checkered waved just before 10:30 pm and while that is later than Stuart usually runs, they also had more racing and more classes than normal also. The track held up well and there was very little dust, especially considering that that wind was blowing from the Northwest which can often be problematic here. All was fine on the trip home and I opened the garage door at 4:18 am, happy that I made the trip.
No comments:
Post a Comment