Night number two of the annual Frostbuster series was held on Saturday night, April 5th at the Boone Speedway. While only two of the scheduled four races in this series were held due to weather conditions, the two nights of racing were well supported by racers from many states plus a tough core group of fans at both tracks.
Winners on Saturday night included Dylan Thornton, Kelly Shryock, Cam Reimers and Dillon Richards. Only four classes were raced on Saturday night at Boone but car counts were still high with one hundred and seventy three drivers signing in to race in just those four classes and a full program of twenty eight racing events kept the crowd entertained.
Quite frankly, it was a miserable night for racing and only perhaps would Boone have attempted to race under such harsh conditions. With so many drivers traveling so far to race, I think there were plenty of folks just thankful that they would put their neck out and race on what was far from a nice night for auto racing, even in April in Iowa. And based on the number of pit passes alone that they sold, I hope that they came out just fine.
While the temperature barely fought its way to the low forties, it was the bitter wind, blowing well over twenty miles an hour and never backing off until later in the program that made spectating so miserable. Of course it was right in the faces of the audience and there was really no way to avoid its blasts. It was a matter of wearing everything warm that you owned and then thinking warm thoughts as the wind blasted you right in the face.
While the car count for Boone was right at or slightly exceeding the numbers from Marshalltown on Friday night, there were fifty nine drivers that ran at Boone on Saturday that weren't seen the previous night. By the same token, there were forty six drivers that ran on Friday that didn't follow the tour on to Boone on Saturday.
The program consisted of four heat races for each class, a pair of B Features and then ending with four main events. Despite the large fields, track officials resisted the notion of running more than four heats with each heat containing at least nine drivers and some heats up to a dozen. While this helps speed up the overall program, using the draw/redraw method of lining up the races, this makes it tough to overcome a bad draw with heat races of only eight laps. Perhaps that is why things started out a bit rough, with the early events for the Sport mods turning into smash fests before everyone seemed to settle down and race better. After that the program ran off very smoothly and for the second straight night, track officials were able to click off a very large racing program in just four hours and with the early start time on Saturday, all racing was done by 9 pm. Boone even threw in two track prep periods but with six tractors and packers plus multiple water trucks, they can redo the track twice in about the same time as it takes me to lumber down to the restroom and back!
Twenty four car fields were set for all four of the main events with the Sport Mods rolling out first for their twenty lap event. And just like Friday night, we were in for some dandy feature races with lots of passing, great battles for the top spot and few yellow flags.
The Sport Mods may have been the wildest of the night with my unofficial count of six lead changes between two drivers as the "White Castle" sliders were in full effect. Randy Havlik held the pole position with Cole Suckow to his outside but it was Cam Reimers who snuck up from the second row to take the lead on lap one. Suckow quickly moved in on him to pressure and two laps later, Suckow make the pass for the lead.
Through the first half of the race, Suckow continued to lead but Reimers was all over the leader, looking to make a pass and retake the point. Havlik continued to maintain third at the halfway point with Dustin White and Nate Albrant close behind. A spin by Michael Johnson with twelve laps completed was the only yellow of the race with Dusty Masolini now cracking the top five.
The last eight laps of the feature were wilder even than the early laps with Reimers claiming the lead on lap fourteen, only to see Suckow slide in for the lead one lap later. Not done yet, Reimers retook the lead with another slider on lap seventeen, only to see Suckow once again return the favor one lap later as the crowd was going wild.
Reimers was not done yet, as the did another slider coming to the white flag to grab the lead one last time and he then maneuvered on the final tour so that Suckow couldn't return the favor and Cam drove across the line with a half car length on Suckow to grab the exciting win. There were also some big charges by other drivers to get to the top five, the biggest was that of Tyler Nerud. Nerud started twentieth on the grid and on the last lap, outfought Masolini for third while Taylor Kuehl completed the top five.
Twenty four Modified drivers took the green for their thirty lap feature and when Troy Morris III came from row two to grab the lead on the opening lap, it looked like a repeat from Friday night. However, that didn't prove to be the case and using the healthy cushion to his advantage, Dylan Thornton came screaming to the front and passed Morris III on lap three.
Thornton was flying on the top side and quickly put some distance on the field and when Morris III broke on lap seven and slowed rapidly with Tood Shute piling into him and ending the night for both, the first yellow waved.
Thornton continued to hold the lead and pull away form the field with Jake McBurnie, Trevor Fitz, Izac Mallicoate and a charging Jeremy Mills battling behind him. Miles had really picked up the pace and after starting eleventh, he was up to third at the halfway point.
Two yellows just after the halfway point kept the field bunched, but Miles was able to move into second but he could gain no ground on the flying Thornton, who continued to scream around the cushion. where he has much success.
The final thirteen laps ran off nonstop and no one had anything for Thornton, who drove on for an easy win. Mills would finish off second but that late race story was the charge of Ethan Braaksma. Braaksma started tenth, was not even in the top five by halfway but in the second half of the race, tore all the way up to third where he finished ahead of Fitz and Logan Anderson as the former Sport Mod star showed the he will be a force in the Modified class also.
The Stock Car feature was a classic example of when the track goes to a fast low groove, look out for Kelly Shryock. Even though he started tenth, he quickly picked away on the leaders, shooting pass them on the low side when they slipped out of the groove and by the halfway point of the twenty five lapper, he was up to second behind race long leader Jimmy Gustin.
One lap after the halfway point, Gustin slipped off the bottom and Shryock, who had been plotting his move for several laps, blasted past Gustin to take over the lead and once in front, he was gone. Despite three late yellows and a red when Johnathan Logue got booted over on to his roof, Shryock dominated the late going to score the win.
A late charge saw Braden Richards up to third and when Gustin hooked a rut on the final corner and nearly turned over himself, Richards drove under him for second. Jay Schmidt and Austin Bouzek completed the top five.
What a weekend it was for Hobby Stock driver Dillon Richards. After blowing away the field at Marshalltown on Friday night, he again dominated a forty plus field of drivers on Saturday night, winning by a wide margin in a nonstop main event.
It didn't hurt that he redrew the pole position or the fact that the race went twenty laps of green flag racing which didn't allow the drivers near that back to gain ground under yellow, but it probably didn't matter as he was clearly the class of the field, ever since he has been dating way back to Arizona in January.
Eric Knutson started second and held that spot through the halfway point of the race, but a late charge by Joe Doran, who started seventh, allowed him to race into second in the late going to claim the runner up position. Knutson held on for second with rookie Kolby Sabin and Chris Krug also running in the top five.
For the second straight night we saw a program that was very well run with little in the way of delays and a prompt starting time. Overall there was a lot of green flag racing and the one spin rule always keeps the drivers trying their best not to halt races.
Logan Kelly was waving the flags on Saturday as he certainly works quite a few tracks in the Iowa area. The announcing duo, as usual, was the hard to beat combo of J Van and Ryan Clark. Sorry I missed seeing Clark before the races as I always like to talk to Ryan but on this day, he was probably hiding out where it was warm until the final second before race time. I even had a brief interaction with legendary promoter Robert Lawton on Saturday. He was working on the food booth in the pits when I saw him and noticing that he was wearing a walking boot, I asked him what had happened. "Broke it," was his quick comment as he moved on. That was our conversation as Robert is clearly not one to be making small talk on opening night.
While the weather was not very pleasant either night, I have no complaints. Not many folks in this country, with all the bad weather this week, got to see two races within an hour of each other with nearly two hundred cars at each show, excellent racing and at top notch facilities. Thanks to everyone at Boone for providing the second half of a blockbuster weekend of racing.