JUNE 17, 2007...When Mike Spencer’s ride arrived at
the Santa Maria track on Saturday, they had to air up a flat to roll
it out of the trailer. That was the last time thing that didn’t go
their way this week. Mike drove the little red sucker from his 14th
starting spot in the 30 lap main event into second place by lap 26.
From there he just bided his time and blew by the leader for his
second win of the year. His ability to stay out of trouble, unlike
many of his competitors, and focus on getting to the front was
amazing. He avoided crash after crash as the main event was
elongated by yellow flags over and over.
The pics are ready Click
here.
Mike drove the Temecula Valley Pipe & Supply, Shaver
Specialties, Madera Produce # 50 like a veteran. His 3rd straight
podium came after he was 5th quick, but he missed the 8 car
inversion when he was 5th in his heat and started 14th on the grid.
When the name Pombo comes up, most have memories of an old
Super Modified driver that was honored with a race named for him at
Hanford for many years. But add Davey to the name and
memories are of his 360 exploits and occasional visits with the CRA
410’s. Most recently he has been doing well in his 360 car,
winning races and making his car owner, Glenn Crosssno proud. But,
finishing second to the mighty CRA this week will open some eyes.
His patience put him contention for a win and he was pressing
Spencer at the end. Although it is only one race, Davey might open
some more eyes with future visits to the CRA world. Driving the ITI
Performance # 38S, Davey was 16th quick and finished 2nd in his heat
before starting 10th and coming home strong in the main event.
Super Rickie Gaunt set fast time to start the night off,
but missed the inversion and had to start back in 9th place in the
main. It didn’t seem to bother him as he took the red M J B
Plating, Endless Powder Coating, Simpson Race Products towards the
front and beat his teammate, good for the old guys. Well actually,
he’s not old, but Blake is much younger and is doing well in his
team’s camp. Rickie did a great job avoiding the usual small track
ills and was proud to do well on the dry oval where he once won a
wing race.
There were many on the disaster list this week as some just
couldn’t catch a break. Local driver, Jeff Fiscus had a no
no and went out right away after an early “encounter”. Scotty
Weir wasn’t the author of his mangled crashed car, but was
done as well after an incident. Tom Stansberry led the
feature for 8 laps before having tire problems then some more help
to the sidelines. Danny Sheridan started on the front row and
dropped back immediately after the green flag flew. He then began a
charge that ended when he tried to cut under another driver going
into turn one, and just missed, getting the wall instead of the
wanted pass. He missed by inches of success and was going for the
win on his home track where he has had much success over the years.
There’s more! Jimmy Crawford was leading for six laps
late in the race until Showtime’s move, and he was out. Josh
Ford looked real strong early as he took the lead for ten laps
and then had a tire problem. Upon restarting in the rear, he somehow
got on his head and I missed the contact, if there was any, so he
went on the trailer early. The Cowboy, Tony Jones looked like
he was going to get this win, but had two separate incidents with
two other cars that sent his car sideways away from the groove. The
first he recovered quickly from and came back to challenge the
offending helper. The second knocked his drag link askew and he was
lucky they got it fixed quickly so he could return to the action. He
hung around with a badly beat up tire, until a red flag allowed a
change and his sixth place finish was the result. They call that a
“great save” for the point leader, a lot like a hockey goalie
makes when faced with a sure shot in front of him. Several others
had one stop that they recovered from where their crews were allowed
to save them, too.
Rodney Argo managed to escape several incidents, and led
twice during the 30 laps, getting a strong 4th at the end, his best
in a while. He was very racy on the slick track. Local driver Jesse
Mack gets cudos from me as he was the 4th fastest car and he ran
fifth in the main looking pretty smooth. Tyler Brown’s
return was good for him in one of Glenn’s cars and he made good by
running 7th.
Santa Maria sprint car racing for the CRA has always been a
success with the fans, but recent car counts there gives reason to
worry if we’ll be going back there much longer. There are reasons
for continuing the running there, and for not being worth it to the
promoter. The condition of the track this week was not even close to
the glory days when the mud flew over the fences and the racing was
always two grooved and exciting. Now it is more like a mini-Eldora
with the slick track making it a gamble if you want to pass, with
failure often enough, and it’s scary. The corners come up so quick
drivers have to get momentum involved and often they pull the
trigger and have no place to land, thus chaos happens, or SH for
short.
The 20 cars and packed stands makes you wonder how this keeps
working, but there were two other classes, and it does. Like always,
all the fans were not there to see the sprinters, as much as I hate
that. The car counts at SM have dwindled like everywhere else over
the last few years to an average more near 25 or 26 a race. Some car
owners don’t want this trip and the cost of bolt on stuff that
normally happens, so it makes some stay home. The whole atmosphere at Santa Maria is
so neat, it can’t be created or planned. It happened over the
years and my memories there are really good up until the last few
years of slick track racing originated by the outlaw demands on
track prep, none. I of course will complain about track prep, or
lack of it, because I remember how hard Doug Fort use to make his
track so wet and wonderful, and we have all forgotten those days.
The effort wasn’t there this trip with very little moisture on the
oval, and none after the cars arrived. It was going black slick as
soon as the sprinters spun a wheel, with only the stockers cutting
that off between CRA races. The qualifying times aren’t close tot
the days when the track record was set.
With that all said, the many crashes and smashes probably made
the fans OK with it and the racing was enjoyable for all those who
weren’t involved with a car that was whacked, so it was another
success. I like going there and hope that this current low car count
deal gets resolved thruout the CRA race locations, so we will see.
My trip from and back to LV was a total of 12 hours driving this
week, so I better love it. It was worth the trip as being with my
friends in racing gives me a lot of pleasure. A lunch at Jocko’s
was a tradition that some still enjoy and the coolness at the track
was a good thing. See you at the PAS on Saturday, be there!
FEATURE: (30 laps) 1. Mike Spencer, 2. Davey Pombo, 3. Rickie
Gaunt, 4. Rodney Argo, 5. Jesse Mack, 6. Tony Jones, 7. Tyler Brown,
8. J Hicks, 9. Rip Williams, 10. Tony Everhart, 11. Bill Jones, 12.
David Cardey, 13. Blake Miller, 14. Brian Camarillo, 15. Josh Ford,
16. Jimmy Crawford, 17. Danny Sheridan, 18. Tom Stansberry, 19.
Scotty Weir, 20. Jeff Fiscus. NT
FEATURE LAP LEADERS: Laps 1-2 Argo, Laps 3-10 Stansberry, Laps
11-20 Ford, Laps 21-26 Crawford, Lap 27 Argo, Laps 28-30
Spencer.
NEW LUCAS OIL USAC/CRA SPRINT CAR POINTS: 1-Jones-1,095;
2-Spencer-974; 3-Gaunt-944; 4-Sheridan-921; 5-Weir-790;
6-Williams-715; 7-Cory Kruseman-657; 8-R.J. Johnson-551;
9-Cardey-524; 10-Ford-483.
NEXT LUCAS OIL USAC/CRA SPRINT CAR RACE: June 23 – Perris (CA)
Auto Speedway
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