July 30, 2006....I have to admit going
to the Midwest is always many types of excitement, but this year’s
trip was short, sweet and with some sadness. The racing is usually
outstanding wherever the non-wings run, but since I am in the middle
of a remodel, the trip interrupted some of that.
Here are my pics from Indiana click here to see.
The first four races of the Indiana Sprint Week were hot, racy,
hot, humid, exciting, hot and worth every moment of it. The North
Vernon Twin Cities race track started things off under threat of
rain, as was the forecast for the next seven days, with some clouds
and a lot of heat in the afternoon sun. Over 50 sprinters made
things interesting as a number of West Coast based racers began
their search for success in the Indiana heat. I doubt any of them
came home with visions of great accomplishment because it was a
school of hard knocks for them all
Damion Gardner went there with high hopes of making a
splash in a new Maxim owned by Pace Electronics. His first night was
the best finish of them all, a tenth, but he had some glimpses of
brilliance along the way. Damion didn’t have all his normal crew,
so those that were there worked their tails off to make the
unfamiliar car work. North Vernon saw him use patience and get a lot
out of the car for his only main event finish of the five races. In
Bloomington he transferred to the heats from a last chance
qualifier, but missed the main. At Hausbstaud, he won his heat, but
went out after a three car incident and finished 18th. Up to that
incident, he had fought his way from 13th to 5th. On the last race I
saw, at Kokomo, he was moving forward in his heat when another car
basically took him out and he couldn’t repair in time for the
semi. He closed out the 5 race shortened series by missing the
feature. It wasn’t what he came for, but under the circumstances,
it will be considered some success. Like all Californian’s going
to the Midwest, experience is what it’s all about.
Cory Kruseman was the best of the westerner’s, but his
week wasn’t up to his defending champion brilliance. He started
the first night with a crash in qualifying that brought out a
back-up car that only netted him 21st after some problems in the
main. He was 13th at Bloomington after a 4th in is heat. At
Haubstadt he won his heat and got 5th in the main for his best of
the week. He was 12th at Kokomo, but missed the main at Gas City to
end the deal. Not a great time, but he was in the wrong place at the
wrong time several times.
Alan Ballard came east with a new hauler courtesy of his
grandpa’s will, but as hard as he tried, he didn’t make a main,
yet ran strong every race and was so close at times. Josh Ford
was 16th in the first main, missed the next main, then 16th, plus
21st and missed the last feature as he too struggled thru it all. Johnny
Rodriguez first trip to Indiana was frustrating as he and his
crew worked hard thru a tough trip with little to show for it. Danny
Sheridan made the Haubstad feature, getting 19th for his best
finish in Bob Price’s car from Arizona. Chad Boespflug came
for the experience and he got some. He was 18th at Haubstad for his
only feature appearance, but was driving hard every time he hit the
track. They all learned something along the way, but will it be
enough to bring them back next year, and will they be waiting for
the two USAC national points race at the end of the year to get
even?
My Indiana travel companion, Mike Clark, reported that the two
rainouts weren’t from rain, so what’s up with the promoter’s
who let racers and fans down, after they travel to support what has
become a real competitive week? If you have a plane ticket you can
get your money back, what does that say for those who are not
willing to stand up for what’s right? This isn’t new, but it
might change travel plans for some who do travel next year.
I liked the racing as it was the best I’ve seen in my many
Speed Week trips, but the weather was tough for most. The tracks
seemed to have some water on them, especially Haubstad, but only the
tough survived. Jon Stanbrough was the class of the field,
winning the title in a lesser sponsored car, getting three wins of
the five races run. He was second and 11th in the other two and
looked like he could have won the first one, he was coming fast. I
was lucky to have moved on for the second week, but missed seeing
Gas City and Terre Haute.
I knew Damion Gardner would be strong when he came home to Perris
for two reasons. One, he had a tough Indiana run and two, his crew
chief Bruce Bromme Jr was with his wife Pam who was fighting for her
life. Bruce took her home from the hospital on Monday, July 24th,
and she passed away before midnight. It was a long hard battle. A
celebration of Pam’s life will be held on Aug 27 at the Bromme
Residence in Templeton, CA at 24 Dear View Lane from noon on. Any
donations are to be sent in her name to: Woods Humane Society Animal
Shelter at 875 Oklahoma Ave, San Luis Obispo, 93405. This will be
the weekend of the CRA’s visit to Santa Maria and everyone is
invited.
Damion won the July 22nd Perris CRA race and went to Skagit and
made it two in a row. He had a little problem in the main on
Saturday with two stops and finished 18th or something. Jayme Barnes
winning, and running second the first night, was amazing because he
has little non wing experience. Congratulations to him, I can’t
wait to read the race report whenever I can find it.
Jan Gaffney, CRA champion car owner in 1988 with Rip Williams
driving, was inducted into the Surfer Walk of Fame in Huntington
Beach this week with five others. She still has a sandwich shop in
Huntington Beach, This courtesy of Dave Ondo, former CRA & USAC
scorekeeper.
So, you might wonder what I have been doing since I got home last
week from Indiana and Missouri. I came in late Friday night with the
intention of heading to Perris in the morning like normal,
but……. I found out the Travertine we ordered would be installed
starting Monday morning. Lets see, I had about 20 hours of pulling
out the carpet, the tack strips, the kitchen floor laminate and the
tile underneath it (surprise), plus remove all the furniture,
including the stove, and I realized I couldn’t go racing. Most of
Saturday and from 7 am until midnight on Sunday was spent doing the
above back breaking work everywhere but the bedrooms, with the help
of my grandsons. This included getting every little smidge of glue
and mortar bits up from the concrete floor for a smooth install. The
install was completed today, seven days later, and now the new
baseboard and other wood frames around some French doors, plus the
carpet install of the bedrooms must be done before the painting
begins. Ah remodeling, what a joy. Since I am doing none of the
skilled work, it’s like managing a project and getting all the
subs in to do their share in a timely manner. In the meantime we
have been without a stove and a washer and dryer for a week, so
tomorrow will be catching up day before the contractor comes back on
Tuesday. I promise I will be at Perris, but probably pooped. I
missed Skagit for the second year in a row, but the time to work on
the Wagsdash is next on my itinerary.
7/28/06 FEATURE: (30 laps) 1. Damion Gardner, 2. Jayme Barnes, 3.
Rick Ziehl, 4. Josh Ford, 5. Cory Kruseman, 6. J Hicks, 7. Rick
Becker/Mike Spencer (#67), 8. Robby Vaughn, 9. Evan Suggs, 10.
Michael Harris, 11. Alan Munn, 12. Cory Chamberlain, 13. Danny
Sheridan, 14. Shaun Rice, 15. Blake Miller (#16), 16. Brock Lemley,
17. Rip Williams, 18. Alex Hantel, 19. David Cardey, 20. Tony Jones,
21. Mike Spencer (#44), 22. John Tharp. NT
7/29/06 FEATURE: (40 laps) 1. Jayme Barnes, 2. Cory Kruseman, 3.
Brock Lemley, 4. Rick Ziehl, 5. David Cardey, 6. Tony Jones, 7. Mike
Spencer, 8. Evan Suggs, 9. Robby Vaughn, 10. Alan Munn, 11. J Hicks,
12. Cory Chamberlain, 13. Michael Harris, 14. Blake Miller, 15. Josh
Ford, 16. Tony Thomas, 17. Danny Sheridan, 18. Damion Gardner, 19.
Rip Williams, 20. Roy Blumenhagen, 21. Alex Hantel, 22. Jason
Bloodgood, 23. Ernie Seager, 24. Colton Heath- NT
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