Friday, May 17, 2024

Reutzel Rolls to POWRi Victory at Donnellson

The POWRi 410 Winged Sprint Car series made their only visit to the state of Iowa for 2024 on a beautiful Friday evening at the Lee County Speedway in Donnellson with a solid roster of twenty-seven drivers on hand. New promoters Neal Kohlmorgan and Patrick Profeta had the surface of the three eighths mile D-shaped track smooth and juiced with Garret Williamson establishing a new track record in qualifying with a lap of 13.096 and nearly every driver who had a chance to be interviewed by Scottie Cook during the course of the evening commented on how this was the fastest that they had ever seen it here at Lee County. 

The first heat race is ready to go at Lee County

The field would be whittled down to twenty-two for the thirty lap $5,000-to-win main event and on the first wave of the green flag it would be Blake Hahn going to the front as the field exited turn two for the first time. However, in the middle of the pack, one car got sideways in turn one and that would cause a stack up with both Roger Crockett and Tasker Phillips getting upside down. Phillips had just raced his way into the final starting spot through the B-Main after missing his heat race due to mechanical issues, and this would now end his evening earlier than he had hoped.

Meanwhile Crockett, in the Beaver Tool #12x, would get repairs in the work area and the 2022 series champion would restart the race from the rear of the field. On this start the pole-sitter Aaron Reutzel would race ahead of Hahn exiting turn two to take the lead as laps started to go in the books. Four of them to be exact before the caution waved for Crockett who had slowed on the back stretch needing to duck back into the work area for additional repairs.

On this double file restart Austin McCarl would get a nice start to go from fifth to third and he would bring with him the ninth starting Paul Nienhiser who was making the bottom work and would soon slip by Austin to go third.

Reutzel would build about a straightaway advantage before he entered traffic and when the slower car of Xavier Doney closed the door on the leader entering turn one on lap nine, that would allow Hahn to close to just one car length going down the back stretch. Reutzel would then throw a big slider on Doney in what would be the "move of the race", at least as far as the winner was concerned, as this one would go the rest of the way under green.

Hahn was not able to find a way around the rim-riding Doney and soon five cars were now racing in a tight formation and in traffic for the runner-up position. McCarl would take advantage of that opportunity moving from fourth to second on lap sixteen. Williamson and Chase Randall were part of that pack as well and when McCarl started to drive away, the fun battle to watch was now for third.

As the laps wound down Reutzel had built a half track advantage over McCarl, who had still not caught back up with the lapped car of Doney, while the battle for third was now not far away from being lapped by the leader. Reutzel would continue to stretch the advantage until he took the checkers for the win followed in by McCarl for second. Williamson would nip Randall for third as Nienhiser slowed in the final two circuits giving up fifth to Blake Hahn while Gunner Ramey started seventeenth and finished in six. Nienhiser would actually pull into the infield exiting turn four on the final lap never taking the checkers, but he was scored as the final driver on the lead lap in seventh.

It was another impressive win for Reutzel who also won the last time that the 410's were here in May of 2023. While several of tonight's drivers will now pull to Knoxville for Saturday night action, the POWRi series moves on over to the I-70 Speedway just west of Kansas City to make it a big doubleheader weekend.

Stock Cars, Sport Mods and Hobby Stocks would provide support with a cool $1,000 going to the winner in each division. The Stock Cars would go first for twenty laps with Johnny Spaw's son Bronson starting from the pole position. Dustin Vis would just nip him at the line though to lead lap one and the ten car field would race the entire distance under the green. Both Dustin Griffiths and Derrick Agee would close in on Vis during the final half of the race and it was a thrilling run to the finish as Griffiths used the high line in turn four to take second as the white flag waved and he would then get a run on the leader with the checkers waiting. Exiting turn four Vis would drive up the track some, so Griffths tried one final move to get his nose under the winner at the stripe while Agee was right on Dustin's bumper as well to take third.

The final margin of victory would be 0.135 second while Agee was just another 0.247 back in third. Nicholas Profeta, who has moved from the Sport Mods to the Stock Cars this season would slip by Spaw late to finish fourth while Bronson would settle for fifth.

Only one caution would slow the 15-lap headliner for the Sport Mods and that would come on lap five as when Cole Gillenwater slowed on the high side exiting turn two, Reed Wolfmeyer had no place to go so he spun to keep from making hard contact. Shane Paris had taken the lead from Brandon Dale on lap two and he would go on to lead the rest of them as well in taking the victory. Dale would be the runner-up with Logan Cumby finishing in third. Kyler Girard and Jason VanZomeron would fill out your top five.

Putting the big money on top enticed only three Hobby Stocks to show up making me wonder if a $300-to-win and $100-to-start purse might have drawn better. They would start a twelve lap race in three wide formation and, whether it was staged or not, James Pilkington and Dustin Griffiths would entertain those of us who had stuck around for the final event of the night and they even swapped the lead twice mid-race, In the end though it would be Griffiths taking the top prize over Pilkington and Jeremy Dooley,

I want to thank the two young ladies at the pit gate for the hospitality that they gave to this late arriving reporter as I was busy getting some quality time in with the youngest of my five grandsons, Beckett who had brought his lovely mother back to Iowa from Texas for the weekend. Next up for me, if the schedule permits, will be another trip back up to the Benton County Speedway in Vinton this Sunday night with the PRO Late Model series joining the always exciting weekly divisions. Then, on Sunday May 26th, I look forward to the annual Memorial Day weekend Sprint Invaders show at 34 Raceway west of Burlington.

Hope to see you again soon here on the Back Stretch!

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

TBJ Dominates In Inaugural Summer Challenge Series Event at Independence

For the second time in fourteen years the Independence Motor Speedway served as the host for the inaugural race of a new regional touring series for the IMCA Modifieds. In 2010 it was a yet to be well known Josh Foster who surprised a stacked field of fifty-nine drivers to take the first event of the Hawkeye Dirt Tour on a May evening in Independence. Fourteen years later, with Foster scoring his first career feature victory in an IMCA Late Model at 34 Raceway this past Saturday night, we were again in the stands at Indee on Monday for another "first" as the Farley's Wholesale Tire & Quick Lube IMCA Modified Summer Challenge presented by Mesa Muffler debuted with another talent laden field of forty-five drivers on hand looking for the $2,000 top prize and a leg up on the competition in the six event schedule that will later go to Spencer, Stuart, Marshalltown, Interstate and Park Jefferson.

Passing points from the five qualifying heat races would set the field for the thirty lap headliner and let's just say that tonight's winner earned his paycheck with a thrilling performance in the fourth qualifier. Starting seventh and with studs such as NASCAR Truck Series champion Matt Crafton, IMCA Modified National Champion Jeff Larson and IMCA Stock Car king Dallon Murty ahead of him in the first two rows, Tom Berry Jr. steadily picked his way toward the front using some aggressive, but clean slide jobs until he was behind the leader Murty in the final three laps.

We were all anticipating another slide job as he had perfectly executed on both Cole Czarneski and Larson, but instead Berry did not come all the way up to the top in his first attempt at the lead. Murty now knew that he was there and started to protect the lower line entering turns one and three only to have Berry stay up top and let him wonder where he might be coming from next. After the white flag waved the challenger again showed his nose to the leader in turns one and two and he was able to keep it there racing down the back stretch. Murty would then drive deep into turn three and when he drifted to the top in four, his momentum was too much for the slim cushion to hold him and Berry slipped by him on the bottom to take the win.

Tom Berry Jr. at speed - Barry Johnson photo

A former IMCA Modified National Champion himself, Berry would then start from the pole of the thirty lap feature and while he would lead each and every one of those laps, there would be plenty of action behind him to satisfy this race fan. Ethan Braaksma would try to maintain the pace early until he was overtaken by the 2023 Super Nationals champion Tim Ward who had started third. Cautions on laps four and twenty-two for drivers slipping off the top of the track would group the field and on that second restart a two car crash involving Trevor Fitz and Brennen Chipp would see both drivers have their evening come to an early end.

Barry Johnson photo
On the final restart Joel Rust would make a nifty move to get to second briefly after starting from seventh, only to have Braaksma get back to where he had started from earlier. As the checkers waved over Berry with Braaksma not far behind, Rust would slip the right rear off the top of turn four just enough to allow Ward to get back to third. Spencer Diercks, who had started eleventh would fill out the top five while the hard charger of the race would be Cody Laney who wheeled Timmy Current's #12T from twenty-first to to eighth. 

The Modified feature was the third of five main events to be contested on the night and the Sport Compacts would start off the list with a sixteen lap affair that was peppered with some good ol' fashioned door banging to determine the winner. The race would also feature five lead changes across four different drivers with just one caution flag when the field stacked up exiting turn four on the second circuit leaving behind a field of debris as a bumper cover was stripped off of one of the cars.

Jake Anderson had led the first lap and just nipped Christopher Mannion at the line before that caution waved and once back to action it would be Chris Pittman who would take the point. Oliver Monson had started fifth, but he was there to swipe the lead on lap four only to have the seventh starting Stephen Randall sweep by him two laps later.

Monson was not about to go away though as he would stalk Randall riding the top line until the wave of the green indicating just two laps remaining. Racing through turns three and four coming to the white flag, Monson would dive low and when he slid up the track the side-by-side contact would allow him to take the lead with one to go. At that point Randall felt that he could also play it in that manner so as they went into three and four for the final time, Stephen used the exact same tactic to regain the lead and take the win much to the delight of the crowd. Jaice Tuttle, who had started from twelfth was right there in third and ready to pounce if the lead duo roughed each other up too much, although a check of the results this morning list him as a DNF(?). Pittman and Mannion were next in line.

Oliver Monson (5) and Stephen Randall (47) battle it out - Barry Johnson photo

The Stock Cars were up next and they would go twenty laps of non-stop racing with pole-sitter Tom Schmitt leading the way. Cayden Carter in Michael Petersen's #1x started sixth and made his way up to second before gradually reeling in the leader. The final five laps would have Carter glued to the rear bumper of Schmitt waiting for a mistake from the veteran hometown racer and, with two laps to go, Carter was able to pull even with Schmitt in turns one and two.

The momentum off the top side was just too good though and there would be no stopping Schmitt from taking the victory ahead of Carter. Cole Mather held off an eighth starting Rowdee Van Genderen to finish third while Vern Jackson advanced from twelfth to fifth at the checkers.

Tom Schmitt on his way to victory - Barry Johnson photo

Following the Modified feature, the IMCA Northern Sport Mods would also knock off twenty laps of racing with no cautions with another pole-sitter warding off a strong challenge to take the win. With two-time All Iowa Points Champion Brayton Carter going from the pole, one would have figured this one to be a race for second, but young Taylor Kuehl had something else in mind as she quickly moved from fifth to second and then reeled in the leader.

Kuehl's line through the middle was definitely faster than Carter's high line through turns three and four, but she would give up any ground that she had gained as they raced those same line's through turns one and two. Taylor would draw even with the leader just shy of the mid-race point, but in the closing laps "Speedy Bray" would start to pull away as he captured his 100th career IMCA sanctioned Sport Mod victory. The personable young driver from Oskaloosa has tallied up those wins in a short period of time in both sanctioned and unsanctioned events as this was already his sixth of this season after winning thirty-one times in 2023, fifteen times in 2022, eighteen times in 2021 and twenty-three times in 2020. Kuehl would have to settle for second, Cole Suckow made an impressive run from tenth to third, Shane Paris finished fourth while Jarrett Franzen took fifth.

Taylor Kuehl (2) puts the pressure on Brayton Carter (01) - Barry Johnson photo

The Hobby Stocks would close out the evening for eighteen laps with Calvin Dhondt grabbing the lead at the drop of the green from his outside front row starting position. My eyes were on the twelfth starting Nathan Ballard who has been on a tear this year already with eight feature wins on the season coming at Memphis, Bloomfield, Marshalltown, Davenport and Vinton. The high line was definitely the place to be and passing would take precision as Ballard steadily made his way to the front.

Following a caution on lap nine he would restart from the fifth spot and when two drivers ahead of him made contact in turn two, Ballard slipped to the inside of them at the perfect moment in order to get to second. The caution would wave again a lap later and the leader would now have Ballard knocking on the back door trying to cause a mistake.

The challenger would slip his nose just under the left rear of Dhondt on several occasions and even appeared to have a run on him coming to the white flag before Jim Ball's spin created another caution. The green, white, checkers finish would give Ballard one last opportunity to perhaps force the issue, but he played it clean and Dhondt made no mistakes in taking the victory. Tyler Ball's third place run would be wiped out by a disqualification so that would make the rest of the top five look like this; Bradly Graham, Shawn Kuennen and Jacob Floyd.

I was surprised to look at my phone and see that it was 10:45 just after the final checkers flew as it did not seem to be that long of an evening. Perhaps it was made more enjoyable by sitting with Ed Reichert, Gary Lee and Dustin Jarrett, or it could be the fact that I had just watched five feature races with 104 laps of action slowed by only seven cautions compared to Friday night where I watched Super Late Models alone cause ten cautions in the first nineteen laps of their feature.

As always it was an enjoyable trip to Independence as I had the opportunity to catch up with my good friend Kevin Kemp and to get a quick word in with two of my favorite promoters Dana Benning and Mike Van Genderen. I know for sure that I will be back up to Indee on Tuesday, July 16th, for the return of the Mohrfeld Solar Sprint Invaders and there are some other events on their 2024 schedule that may coax me back again as well. I won't be able to attend, but don't forget that Independence will host the SLMR Late Models this coming Saturday night May 11th.

I will be checking the weather on Wednesday for a possible trip to Oskaloosa before a Mother's Day weekend full of events will keep me away from the tracks. Here's hoping that we see you again soon here on the Back Stretch!


Saturday, May 4, 2024

Feger, Bollinger and Parga Usher In A New Era At Spoon

Over the past ten years or so we have seen some first time promoters try some unique ideas to try to breathe life back into their track's weekly racing program. Down in Oklahoma it was Free Grandstand Admission every race night throughout the season. In northern Iowa a new promoter tried a free will donation for entrance to the grandstand. Now, in 2024, first time promoter Cloyd Barden looks to revive the weekly program at the Spoon River Speedway south of Canton, Illinois, by moving the race night from Saturday to Friday and by offering a purse structure that would exceed many of the special events in the area.

Not only is he paying the UMP Super Late Model feature winner $2,000, but second gets $1,500, third collects $1,200 and even the fourth place finisher almost gets four figures with $950. And this is no "Dolly Parton" purse as tenth gets $350 and it is $250 just to start. The other four divisions are not slighted either with the UMP Modified first place prize at $1,500, the Pro Late Model king for the night takes home $1,000 while the E-Mods and the Hornets collect $600 and $300 respectively. All totaled, with a full field of twenty in each class, that is just shy of $30,000 in purse money for a weekly show, nearly three times the amount that gets paid out at most tracks. And this is not Knoxville where a weekly crowd of 3,000 looks like nobody is there in the spacious front stretch grandstands that seat around 15,000 during the Nationals. At an adult admission price of $15 and pit passes at $35, I would think that a crowd of 1,200 or more would be needed to have a chance of breaking even and while the stands did fill in pretty nicely as the night wore on, I'm not sure if that number was met. Revenue from track sponsorship does not seem high either as I only spotted nine signs in the infield.

I knew that I wanted to get over to Spoon River early in the season to see how this was going to all work and, after last week's races were rained out, that made my targeted date of May 3rd the opener for this newest experiment in weekly race promotion. Twenty cars each in the Super Late Models and Modifieds signed in, about ten fewer than I had expected, while the E-Mods topped the list with twenty-two. The Hornets had seventeen cars on hand while the Pro Late Models pulled just thirteen. While there were some drivers that had made nearly a 100 mile tow, the only one that I spotted on the list that had traveled farther than me was Austin Self, the native Texan and former NASCAR Truck Series competitor, who now lists Statesville, North Carolina, and he has towed his UMP Modified up to the Midwest to do some racing around the Illinois bullrings.

Jason Feger prepares for his record setting lap
While a bit dry and dusty to start with, the race track soon became lightning fast after the top was peeled off and while there was one soft spot at the exit of turn four, the surface was wide and racy despite the rains of the past couple of weeks. Two drivers, Daniel Adam and then a few moments later Jason Feger, lowered the track record previously held by Jonathan Davenport from 12.866 to 12.642 and the racing action was just like I love it here at the Spoon; lightning fast and multi-grooved.


The Pro Late Models would be the first of the five features to take to the track with twenty laps the distance and this one was basically decided on the first circuit. Jose Parga, who in 2023 won in each of his first nineteen starts, had lined up fourth for this one and he was in second exiting turn two and then after driving under pole-sitter Tommy Elston exiting turn four he would take the lead that he would never relinquish. Three cautions would slow the race, including a front stretch skirmish on lap thirteen involving two cars racing in the top five when Brad Denney and Vance Wilson got together.

Even with the late restart, Parga would drive away to win my more than a straightaway over Elston. Denny Woodworth would advance from ninth to third, Denney recovered to finish in fourth while Jason Oenning was fifth.

The twenty-five lap UMP Modified main event would be up next and the action throughout was furious, that is while under green flag conditions. Pole-sitter Mark Anderson would set the pace with the first caution coming on lap three when top-five contenders Austen Becerra and Zac Oedewaldt tangled on the front stretch sending Becerra's #22 nose first into the outside wall. After the lengthy delay to clear the track just one more lap was scored when Degan Dozard ended up stopped on the exit ramp from turn one to the pit area sitting in a precarious position. I'm not sure what the hold up was, but it seemed like forever to finally move his car the rest of the way into the pits and once back to racing only two more laps were logged before Brandon Roberts and Charley Hess both spun in turn four.

On this restart Trevor Neville made a big move to the inside of turn one forcing the leader Anderson up the track, and when Mark recovered he would clip the right rear of Mike Chasteen Jr's car sending Chasteen sliding toward the infield on the back stretch. That would put Anderson back out front for the restart and he would now block that bottom line to hold Neville at bay as Ray Bollinger now joined the battle. Bollinger who had apparent motor issues during qualifying had come from fifth to second in his heat race to earn a second row start in this one, and it was now obvious that those issues had been resolved as he joined Neville in putting pressure on the leader.

A caution for debris on lap thirteen created another restart and now Dave Wietholder would make it an entertaining four car battle at the front. Bollinger would get under Anderson exiting turn four to take the lead on lap seventeen and one lap later Wietholder would suddenly slow exiting turn four before driving to the pits at the top of turn one. One final caution, the sixth of the event, would fly on lap twenty-two as Tim Carpenter Jr. was cruising just over the banking on the back stretch and into turn three setting up a three lap dash to the finish.

Neville would make one last charge, but there would be no stopping Bollinger from taking the win as Anderson came home in third. Austin Self had steadily made his way through the field to finish in fourth after starting eighteenth while Evan Fink filled out the top five coming from a fifth row starting spot.

Surely the "yellow fever" had now been taken care of with that event as the thirty lap headliner for the Super Late Models rolled to the track?

Nope

The action was intense up front featuring Tommy Sheppard Jr., Daniel Adam, Jason Feger, Ryan Unzicker and late in the race Jake Little, and that was the only reason that I stayed in my seat rather than packing up and getting a head start on the two hour and ten minute drive home as, count 'em, ten cautions were needed in the first nineteen laps! I won't detail them all here in order to maintain the theme of our website, but perhaps the most significant one in regard to the outcome of the race came when Ryan Unzicker slowed to a halt on the front stretch while running second on lap thirteen.

Sheppard held the lead for the first two laps before the rim-riding Adam took over and on lap nine Feger charged into the lead exiting turn four. However, when he slid off the top of turn two, Feger would slip to fourth as Adam regained the point. Jason would battle back through the multiple restarts and he would go back to the lead with eleven to go and mercifully those final eleven laps would stay green as the new track record holder would add the feature win to his list of accomplishments for the evening. Daniel Adam showed that he is an up and coming star in this sport with his runner-up effort, Sheppard finished third with Jake Little, who at one time had moved to second, finishing fourth. Rich Bell ran a consistent race to move from twelfth to fifth.

As soon as the checkered flag waved over this one I, as well as many others in the stands, decided to call it a night and perhaps you will understand why as I give you how the time schedule played out for the evening:

Hot laps scheduled for 6:30, started at 7:05

Racing scheduled for 7:30, started at 8:23 with the first of three ten lap heat races for the 13-car field of Pro Late Models

Heats ended at 9:29

Features started at 9:41

Checkered flag for the Late Models waved at 11:15

I'll give the new promoter a pass for getting started late as that can happen to just about anybody on opening night when track registrations are needed and that first Driver's Meeting of the year can take some extra time. I will, however, scold whoever had the bright idea of running three ten lap heat races for the thirteen cars in the Pro Late Model class. Unless your sanctioning body requires you to do something different, there is no reason to run three heat races in any class until you get to twenty-one cars. And, if you are qualifying and then starting straight up by times, there is no reason to run ten laps either. And that goes for any class! Even the World of Outlaws Late Models and the Lucas Oil Dirt Late Model Series only run eight lap heat races at their events.

Beyond that, the rest of the late evening falls on the shoulders of the drivers and again, perhaps the fact that this was opening night and that they had to shake some rust off of their driving skills had something to do with it. But nineteen cautions in the feature races of your top three divisions? Come on guys, you have to do better than that or there won't be this type of money out there for you to compete for much longer. 

Earlier in the day on Facebook, someone had asked why the E-Mod feature would only be fifteen laps instead of twenty and a random responder said, "probably because it would usually be a demo derby and caution after caution. That would be my guess." Here's hoping that both the E-Mods and the Hornets ran their feature races won by Kevin Morrow and Kenny Butterfield relatively caution free to put a little egg on the face of that commenter, otherwise this would have turned out to be a "two day" event to start the season.

Next up on the schedule here at Spoon River is a Wednesday May 8th visit by the Castrol FloRacing Night in America series that will feature the best of the best in Super Late Model racing. Then the next weekly show will be run on Friday May 17th and, just like any other racing program, both the drivers and the fans will need to show their support in order to make it a success. And I hope it is, because I absolutely love to watch the racing here at the Spoon River Speedway.

Next up on my schedule is the Mohrfeld Solar Sprint Invaders joining the always exciting weekly program at the Benton County Speedway in Vinton on Sunday night. Then, on Monday May 6th, I plan on being at the Independence Motor Speedway for the debut of the IMCA Modified Summer Challenge Series. Hope to see you soon, somewhere out there on the Back Stretch!