When the SCRA hits the track, something
exciting always happens. This weekend it was never more evident when
you put the cool and hot of it all together as the SCRA traveled to
the cool beach scene in Ventura and then the desert hot scene of
Perris for 90 total main event laps of very excellent racing. All
this great entertainment as car counts continue to slide due to the
economic strain and the silly season moves drivers around to other
cars like always.
Ventura Raceway is always a great setting as
the small seaside oval provides plenty of action. This race was
special because it was the rained out Jeff Bagley Classic known as
the memorial for Paul & Helen Bagley’s son Jeff. Although
there was little fanfare over the rescheduled classic during the
night, but it now must include the two who started it for their son,
Paul & Helen. They were tragically lost to us this year in a
sprint car accident. Tom Schmeh came from the Knoxville Hall of Fame
in Iowa to preside over the brief remembrance of the three who lost
their lives in racing incidents. He read a thank you note from the
Bagley family and we moved on to the main event.
Cory Kruseman was very good friends with
all three Bagley family members and he told the crowd early it would
be an honor to win this race. Cory had come home from the Midwest
sprint trail to drive the Alexander # 4 car that was vacated by Super
Rickie Gaunt recently. Rickie will be driving for Tony Smiley
the rest of the year in the Arizona based car. Cory drove the
Alexander Trucking, Ray’s Trucking, Larry Murakami Cont., Silver
Stinger car to 2nd in his heat, then 2nd in the JE Pistons Passing
Masters Dash before starting next to Damion Gardner in the 40 lap
main event. He passed Damion on lap 8 before the Gasman coolly got
by for a few laps, then he reclaimed the lead and held off his
nemesis when he visits (the fast Gasman) for the remainder of the
race. He did a few brodies (oh you know, spinning burnouts) in the
infield and was extremely happy to be the third annual winner of the
classic he won one time before.
Richard Griffin was very active this weekend in
the Little Red Sucker! He was 2nd quick in qualifying, ran 2nd in
his heat, third in the dash and finished 2nd after leading for five
laps early in the race. Richard made a go of it but didn’t run the
bottom as well as the hometown hero this time. He didn’t run the
top very well on one particular trip around the oval when he hit the
wall, knocking two tires onto the track causing Tony Jones to
spin to avoid and Troy Cline to flip and end his night. Tony
came back for tenth, but must wonder what is it going to take to get
a break. He has a brand new Maxim car and is anxious to let it out,
as you will read about at Perris the next night. Later when a flying
Danny Sheridan was closing on Griffin, who didn't have to go
to the back after the wall banging incident, he hit the same two
tires, but it stopped him on the track. He restarted to get a
disappointing 14th, and the wonder of what if. He was the fastest
car on the track for a few laps.
Rip Williams came on strong at the end
of the longer than normal main to put the only Jack Jory entry of
the night on the podium because Mike English is taking a
little time off after the tour. Rip had the John Jory Corp, AMA
Plastics, Tomarco Fasteners Systems # 3 rolling as he was the quick
timer of the night at 12.174, then ran 5th in the dash and grabbed
third from Steve Ostling at the end.
Damion Gardner had a little fire problem in
this one. He had his tire catch on fire from the header flame and
they had to change it during a red flag stop, thus putting him at
the back when he was running 2nd at the time. That’s the rule,
change a tire, go to the back. He came thru the pack to get 5th with
a good drive thru the pack. The
hard charger of the night was local 360 driver, Greg Taylor,
who came from 18th to 6th on wild ride in his 360 powered # 7 owned
by his father Rick. Greg is following the USAC West pavement series
in addition to the VRA races this season.
A nasty crash destroyed the Mike Sala # 19 with
Josh Wise in the seat, but he was OK yet very sore the next
day after a checkout trip to the local hospital. He really banged
the wall hard. Shiny tires went to Greg Bragg and Richard
Griffin’s cars, but the awards would be the next night. We made
Wagtimer Fran Herdrich cry when we had a surprise cake feeding after
the race and presented her with an autographed helmet with drivers
and pit people taking part. Happy big one Frannie!
From the sea to the desert, seems wrong
doesn’t it, but we were off in the morning to the 2nd half of the
Labor day double header. Perris was what Perris is, very hot in the
summer time, but we hopped for more great racing. Cory was off to a
rained out Angel Park Midget show and Jeremy Sherman would
take a shot at another win for the Alexander’s in their # 4 car.
The heat was normal, yet the track really
couldn’t have been better, even after a steady breeze all
afternoon seemed to dry it out some. Troy Rutherford got the
only 16 second qualifying time at 16.962 as the 35 cars tried their
luck in the heat. The lead in the main changed 5 times with two
drivers leading twice before the old familiar Rip Williams
took charge on the bottom with 12 laps to go. From there, the Ripper
pulled away to win his 61st SCRA victory and pull out of a tie that
Cory Kruseman had created the night before.
Before that there was tons of action and most
surprisingly, Jordan Hermansader provided most of it.
Young Hermansader has been out of a ride for a long time. When Bobby
Ferro decided to sort of retire recently, he asked Jordan to step
into his car and see how it would go. Jordan has looked very good
with an 8th and a 7th in two previous starts in the car in July.
This time it was totally different as he won his heat and the dash
to start on the pole of the 50 lap main. He chased down the early
leader, Richard Griffin, to take the lead for 12 laps, then
reclaimed the lead from Rutherford for two more laps before he
probably got excited in the rare air up front and finished a
credible 9th as the hot dogs shuffled him near the end. Great job by
the youngster and it wasn’t the only one of the night.
Tony “Cowboy” Jones put on his spurs
this race and never took them off, finishing 2nd in the Ferreira
Dairy, Standard Feeding, VGI Graphics, # 2 Maxim. He ran the extreme
top groove exclusively and later remarked he was hoping the bottom
would wear out on Rip, but it didn’t. It was only his 2nd podium
this season for the young man who lived on the podium last season.
The new Maxim seems to be doing the job as he gets used to a new
brand of chassis.
Charles Davis Jr made his first podium
of the year with the SCRA as he put the moves on very well this week
in the Ron’s Fuel Injection, Arizona Race Mart, Weld # 94 owned by
his wife Gayle. The travlin’ man was in the hunt all night as he
put some demon’s to rest just like Tony with this finish.The
Gasman was 4th as he led for a while but faded late in the race.
Mike Spencer, who started 14th, became the rabbit late in the
race as he reeled in all but the top 4 on a great and smooth ride in
the # 44 yellow car, and grabbed 5th.
Brian Venard brought out a new Ellis car,
resplendent in Ellis blue complete with a new Shaver bullet this
week. Father Buster was all smiles as he and Brian showed off their
new car. They were especially anxious for me to see one of the
graphics on the side of the car. Among all the sponsor decals was a
little running weenie dog with Wagtimes lettered on his back. Check
it out, it is cool and so thoughtful of the Venard team to include
us in their new toy. Check it out, it’s a hoot!
J Hicks received the $200 Wagsbucks this race
because he destroyed his car. Although covered with a tarp, he told
me after the races it was not a pretty sight as the cage folded up
and he was one lucky dude! It all happened when a wheel came off on
a restart and that quick, he had a pile of junk that Wagsbucks
won’t even come near in helping out. Shiny tire awards for the
night went to the crews of Danny Sheridan and Wayne Marcum’s Jim
Ruth owned # 25.
I guess my weekly tirade with USAC continues
on. The USUCK club, as reported last week, has scheduled against the
annual Oval Nationals and has caused major flack at the PAS and with
its fans. Keep in mind that the paying customers have been staying
away from SCRA races in general this year in bunches due to ecomomic
strife we guess. The Oval Nationals was and is designed to showcase
the best non-wing drivers in the country and help bring them all to
California. That’s why they put up the big purse, in order to draw
the best and pit them against the SCRA’s best. That is why the
race pays $30,000 to win and $100,000 overall. They count on that
purse to bring the crowds in and expect the big name drivers to show
as well. The Indiana based club is at best a stepping stone to big
$$$$$ racing, yet they continue to go it alone like they were the
only club, and schedule on top of other majors at many
opportunities. Don’t tell me it’s an accident, but perhaps they
are too “uninformed or otherwise got their head up their
proverbial butt” as they continue to step on anything the hard
core fans might prefer as often as they want. Why do fans support
that? Communication, something sadly lacking in racing with
promoters, racers, race leaders and clubs, is what we really need
now.
It appears that the PAS also has another
formidable big deal at a nearby parking lot race facility on the
same Oval Nationals date. The Big I place also has that stepitis
disease, scheduling some NASCAR whatever event that will make things
difficult for the track that has spent millions of dollars to give
the fans the best dirt racing facility possible in the Southland.
With the smaller crowds like they have had this season, and in this
economic crunched world, it is hard to believe the Kazarian's
continue to pour more money into this top facility and for what,
other clubs and promoters to step on them and fans to stay away. How
much longer can they fight to give sprint car fans what they want?
It likely that the PAS will announce this week
the moving of the Oval Nationals date up one week to allow all the
racers and fans a chance to reschedule and be part of the National
event that this has become. And another thing, I hope the PAS
schedules a sprint car race on Thanksgiving, maybe that would send a
message, and we would all support it, right? Perhaps that is a great
question because people in general are less than smart about
important things in this world and remember: the price of the shady
lady doesn’t change a thing, they are still what they are!
You all know what happens when the racing
product is not supported by the fans don’t you? The product is
replaced by something else. Will this mean the cheaper 360’s will
replace the 410’s as so many predict here in the southland? Or
will the modifieds, stockers and dwarf cars take over? Gawd, I hope
not, but the powers to be better start working on the grand plan to
make it work or you and I will be missing the SCRA 410’s in the
future as world wide wrestling or beer commercials will be the hot
item instead of what we love. Think about it, what is happening in
racing besides it is becoming too expensive for more and more
racers? And why is that? Lightweight pieces, more horsepower motors,
new fangled sway bars, illegal traction control is that what is
driving this bus?
With all that said, I guess you wonder what I
am thinking about it all? I know one thing for sure, we need to find
the marketing key that will allow our beloved 410’s to continue on
and the fans to pour in to support it. Most don’t believe it, but
the fans are what makes this sport go, not the sponsors whose money
is very much needed. It looked like last year the SCRA and the PAS
were at odds and the season in doubt. I am betting it will be a
worse negotiating time this year because of many things, with the
smaller attendance being one of the main ones. Remember,when
Baylands up North ruled the roost and NARC struggled because the big
dogs skipped NARC events on Saturday nights to race at Baylands.
NARC would have been gone sooner, in my opinion, if Baylands hadn't
closed. This could happen here if the PAS wants to start their own
"sprint car club" I.E. PRA! This is not a cheap sport, nor
will few racers make money at it, but they love it and we must work
on the future of our racing and not ignore the signs and be priced
out of it. Perhaps a general membership meeting like the SCRA used
to hold, at a hall where the car owners and sharp minded businessmen
can talk about what is really needed to keep moving forward and make
sure it can all be like normal in the years to come. Questions like
should the SCRA go on tour, shouldn’t there be more TV,
shouldn’t the business success of the SCRA support the club and
not the tour, Why not a fan club for SCRA, why are we not scheduling
Santa Maria, Hanford and Bakersfield, local tracks much closer than
Manzanita, have we priced the club too high now, will Ventura be on
the schedule next year, or even perhaps, this year, and the question
of the week “will there be a Wagsdash 2003?!!!!!” And with that,
I bid you goodnight.
2003 SCRA DRIVER POINT STANDINGS as of:
08/31/03
1. Richard Griffin 1748, 2. Troy Rutherford 1653, 3. Damion Gardner
1614, 4. Rip Williams 1465, 5. Mike Spencer 1090, 6. Steve Ostling
966, 7. Rickie Gaunt 886, 8. Mike English 838, 9. Tony Jones 799,
10. 4 Cory Kruseman 798, 11. Josh Ford 789, 12. Levi Jones 750, 13.
Adam Mitchell 699, 14. Alan Ballard 652, 15. J.J. Yeley 552, 16.
Verne Sweeney 503, 17. Jimmy Crawford 503, 18. Seth Wilson 482, 19.
Bryan Stanfill 462, 20. Charles Davis, Jr 419.
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