The World of Outlaws Late Model Series continued their trek into the upper Midwest with a stop at the Ogilvie Raceway on Monday night, June 22nd. They will be in this are for the next week or so, having upcoming races in Minnesota and North Dakota before they head out following the 4th of July holiday weekend.
This was the first WoO race at Ogilvie since 2019 and just based on the crowd that was on hand, especially given that it was a Monday night, along with the quality of the racing action provided by the track, it will not be near as many years before they return again. In fact, WoO officials must be wondering this morning why it the world that they ever stopped coming to this track and area.
The Late Model feature was an excellent one with six lead changes over the forty lap feature race distance and more slide jobs than almost could be counted as Bobby Pierce, Jonathan Davenport and Nick Hoffman were the primary deliverers of the slide jobs but that's not to say there weren't others doing the same as they fought for positions other than the lead spot.
The field of thirty Late Model drivers on hand was a solid one with probably more open motor cars on hand for the race than in past years. Several of the local spec engine WISSOTA drivers also raced the event, some for track experience and some hoping to make the show. The most successful of those was Kelly Lake Minnesota Sketter Estey who made the show with his spec engine AK chassis car.
Running with the Late Models on Monday night were the WISSOTA Midwest Modifieds and they did a great job as the supplementary class. They had a nice sized field, ran clean races that weren't caution plagued and indeed, ran off their feature race from start to finish nonstop. The winner in that class was Jake Molitor.
The track was very slick for qualifying and some of the drivers took some time to adjust to the slippery conditions but like the pros that these drivers are, they quickly figured out the track. Ross Robinson, as the first driver to hit the track for qualifying, was also the quickest at 15.969 seconds, the only driver under sixteen seconds. After that though, his night slipped a bit as he was the last driver in his heat to make the main and only could muster a seventeenth place finish in the feature.
Four heat races and a B Feature set up the main event for the Late Models with Pierce drawing the pole position. However, the initial leader was Davenport who started on the outside and beat Pierce in lap one. Things got heated as the slide jobs and intense racing for the lead started almost immediately. In the first ten laps, those two had exchanged the lead four time officially and many more than that as they raced back and forth. The track was slick but had a bit of a cushion and it was ideal for slide jobs with the wide racing surface providing plenty of room to dive bomb each other.
The action continued between the top two drivers with them either sliding each other or tail gating as they set up another run. Joining them after lap ten was Nick Hoffman and suddenly the two car battle turned into a three car war. The first seventeen laps, before the first yellow came out for a slowing car, was among the most entertaining and intense racing seen all year. And it was still good after that but unfortunately, a series of yellow flags did break up the action just a bit too much.
When Davenport crunched the wall following that restart as the leader, it pretty much ended his night as he would pull off in just a few laps with much damage to the rear of the car. This also gave Hoffman the chance to slide from third to first with Pierce trapped behind Davenport.
Hoffman then led the next ten laps with Pierce all over him looking for an opening as the track started to change just a bit and low side became faster. This is when the yellows became most prominent with debris stoppages slowing the action twice. A lap thirty restart was key as Pierce got a poor start and Ryan Gustin moved past him for second, only to see the yellow fly once again as the restart cone had been "killed" which gave Pierce a break and as it turned out, Gustin had been the "killer" of the cone so it bit him hard.
Pierce then got back into second and just a lap later drove under Hoffman to retake the lead. Pierce found the low side to be good toward the end of the race and the last few laps were a bit anti climatic as Pierce pulled away and everyone seemed to slip down to the bottom to race. One the final lap Hoffman got under Gustin to take back second with Tyler Erb and Trey Mills completing the top five. Twenty drivers were still on the track at the finish and the well spaced yellows had allowed all drivers to stay on the lead lap as traffic never became an issue during the race.
Pierce appears to be on a roll right now as he begins to extend his point lead over Hoffman and no matter what the field seems to throw at Pierce, at the end se always seems to find a way to bring home the win.
The Midwest Mods ran three big heat races plus a B Feature to set their twenty four driver starting field for their twenty lap main event. They did a great job of racing, going nonstop for the whole distance and only a single driver failed to finish the contest. Jake Molitor started on the pole and he would lead all twenty laps with a dominant performance, especially impressive given that he does not race at this track on a regular basis.
Jason VandeKamp started fifth and worked into the runner up slot by the halfway point of the race and he spent the later half of the race trying to catch Molitor. As Jake got into lapped traffic, of which there was quite a bit in the second half of the race, VandeKamp started to make some progress and in the final couple laps was close enough to provide at least a mild challenge to the leader. Another five laps might have made things interesting but as it was, Molitor handled the traffic well and would drive on for the win.
Jason Miller had an outstanding run in the Eric Gadach car, starting seventh and coming home third with Devin Fouquette and Joe Swearingen completing the top five.
Congratulations to promoter Nate Fischer and the Wagamon family that own Ogilvie for putting on and excellent night of racing. Also, a tip of the hat to the track and series officials for moving the show along and even though the Late Model feature got a bit hung up in the later laps, the final checkered still waved before 10:30 pm.
The series moves on to the I-94 emr Speedway on Wednesday where the Late Models will be joined once again by a likely big Midwest Mod field once again with the WISSOTA Street Stocks also racing. James Trantina III and Don Shaw will have the track ready for more outstanding Late Model action.