Tag: Camping World Trucks

  • Trucks on the short track, where they should be!

    Trucks on the short track, where they should be!

    The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series visits the legendary Martinsville Speedway this weekend and that leads me to reminisce about “the good ole days”. The series began in 1995 and during that first season, the trucks competed primarily on short tracks. Venues like Saugus, Evergreen, I-70 and Mesa Marin are just a few of the fantastic short tracks that the trucks visited. They also visited Martinsville that first season as well, with Joe Ruttman taking the win that day. Fifteen of the twenty races scheduled that first season were short tracks, two races on road courses and just three on superspeedways. That is a great mix. There is just something amazing about seeing 36 trucks beating and banging around the great short tracks we have around the country. Obviously, the trucks at Daytona and Talladega are great, but it just doesn’t compare to a race at Portland or Tuscon.

    In the beginning, the truck series brought us back to the rough and tumble Saturday night racing we grew up with at legendary tracks like Hickory or Bowman Gray, yet had that appeal of the “big time”. The drivers had character flaws and attitudes, they weren’t polished and toned down. When a driver got interviewed after a wreck, their remarks were always unpredictable and exciting.

    While working in the pits on late models the weekends, we loved when a NASCAR touring series came to town. It was the big time, the series we wanted to be in someday. We admired these guys, despite the fact that they weren’t perfect, in fact, that may have strengthened our admiration. They were real people. This is the same feeling we had with the trucks series in it’s early years.

    In recent years, the series schedule has moved away from the small bullrings with imperfect surfaces and more toward following the Cup and Nationwide series on very nice raceways with new surfaces and no bumps. Those tracks are great and definitely have their place on NASCAR, but the trucks should be back on the bullrings where they started.

    Recently, rumors have been swirling that NASCAR is going to move the schedule back to the shorter stand alone tracks. The Kroger 200 at Martinsville this Saturday will be a look back to the past. Hopefully, the powers that be will be paying attention and see how great the racing action is and it will help push the trucks back to their roots.

  • Kligerman scores first career win in the Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola

    Kligerman scores first career win in the Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola

    [media-credit id=100 align=”alignright” width=”211″][/media-credit]Parker Kligerman won his first career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) victory in Red Horse Racing’s “magic truck” at Talladega Superspeedway on Saturday.

    “As you know, it’s been a long road to get to this victory. Two different teams and a lot of adversity, but today I was put with some of the best people I’ve ever worked with and some of the best people I’ve ever raced with. And, it starts at the top with Tom DeLoach (team owner) and this whole Red Horse Racing team. My crew chief Chad Kendrick right here and this entire team that we assembled mid-season to go after this championship when my situation changed.” Kligerman said.

    It wasn’t easy for Kligerman.  He battled through a bad pit stop, vibration and battery issues.

    “I can’t thank enough people for this win. There’s a ton of people that have made this possible to get to this point in my career. I can’t say enough about these guys. We fought every single possible thing you could fight. We had a vibration, we had a battery go down and had no alternator and we just went for it there at the end. Thank you to Johnny Sauter because he made that possible. That was pretty awesome. I can’t say enough about these guys. We’re going to go and fight for this championship for sure.” Kligerman said.

    This was the same truck that John King won with at Daytona International Speedway earlier this season. This was only Parker’s seventh start with Red Horse, but has been a threat to win each time out. Today also gave him his fifth top five in those seven starts.

    Kligerman started ninth and led once for two laps, the final two, the fewest led by a winner at Talladega.

    Johnny Sauter finished second, James Buescher third, Ty Dillon foourth and Timothy Peters finished fifth.

    After being released from the No.29 team earlier this year, Parker says he “…wasn’t sure if he would even still be in NASCAR” All of those worries are now over! He has made himself a solid championship contender in the NCWTS.

    Point leaders Ty Dillon and James Buescher seemed to be near each other all day and they finished the day with Buescher finishing third and Dillon finishing fourth, the points however remain the same showing Dillon with a one point advantage.

    Unofficial Race Results
    fred’s 250, Talladega Superspeedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/truckseries/race.php?race=18
    =========================================
    Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
    =========================================
    1 9 7 Parker Kligerman Toyota 47
    2 29 13 Johnny Sauter Toyota 43
    3 3 31 James Buescher Chevrolet 42
    4 1 3 Ty Dillon * Chevrolet 42
    5 8 17 Timothy Peters Toyota 40
    6 19 29 Ryan Blaney Ram 39
    7 6 18 Kurt Busch Toyota 0
    8 23 151 German Quiroga Toyota 36
    9 16 2 Tim George Jr. Chevrolet 35
    10 5 33 Cale Gale * Chevrolet 34
    11 32 39 Ryan Sieg Chevrolet 33
    12 15 99 Bryan Silas * Ford 32
    13 27 27 Cole Whitt Chevrolet 0
    14 11 22 Joey Coulter Chevrolet 30
    15 31 57 Norm Benning Chevrolet 29
    16 22 168 Clay Greenfield Ram 28
    17 30 176 Ryan Hackett Ford 27
    18 25 88 Matt Crafton Toyota 27
    19 21 32 Miguel Paludo Chevrolet 25
    20 2 23 Jason White Ford 25
    21 35 93 Chris Jones Chevrolet 23
    22 17 81 David Starr Toyota 22
    23 20 220 Rick Crawford Toyota 21
    24 13 6 Justin Lofton Chevrolet 21
    25 18 9 John Wes Townley * Toyota 19
    26 4 5 Aric Almirola Ford 0
    27 36 10 Jennifer Jo Cobb Ram 17
    28 10 9 Ron Hornaday Chevrolet 16
    29 12 84 Chris Fontaine Chevrolet 15
    30 24 1 Donnie Neuenberger Chevrolet 0
    31 14 30 Nelson Piquet Jr. Chevrolet 13
    32 34 7 Johnny Chapman Toyota 13
    33 7 11 Todd Bodine Toyota 11
    34 33 8 Ross Chastain * Toyota 10
    35 26 174 Mike Harmon Chevrolet 0
    36 28 225 Brandon Knupp Chevrolet 0
  • A Future Begins At The Track of Dreams

    A Future Begins At The Track of Dreams

    The brickyard has long been known as the place of dreams. It didn’t change today. Today it saw a young man who has struggled and fought the naysayers to chase his dream. He never lost his faith and his family never lost their faith in him. A familiar face moved that dream forward last fall when Richard Childress added team number 4. That addition to the legendary RCR stable would set up today’s dream come true for Paul Menard. Because today Paul Menard made his dreams come true with a win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    [media-credit name=”Brian Douglas” align=”alignright” width=”232″][/media-credit]Although Menard was a long shot to win. He did so with strategy and fuel mileage and consistency. He conserved when he had to conserve. He raced hard when he had to race hard. He over came the obstacles. He fought the temptation to be intimidated by the 24 of Jeff Gordon coming fast in his mirror. He stayed steady and he ran his line

    He won one of the crown jewels of NASCAR, by being Paul Menard. He was quiet on the radio. He was composed in victory lane. His emotions were his to share and he choose to share them with the people who got him there not the people who were undoubtedly surprised that he arrived. “This one is for my Dad.” He said calmly. When asked about the 24 in his mirror, he said, “Beating Jeff Gordon at Indy is a big deal”.

    It was a dream day for others as well. Teams that didn’t run well and haven’t run well, 6 in the top 10 had a below average day and yet the fuel strategy game fell their way. Teams like Kyle Busch, Mark Martin, Jamie McMurray, Greg Biffle and Matt Kenseth all benefited from late race fuel strategy calls.

    But the track of dreams also brings disappointments for some. It is inevitable after all. For everything that is gained something is lost. In this case it was a race that many who ran well all day ended up not a part of due to fuel mileage. Crew Chief Alan Gustafson commented on those who got good finishes because of the strategy, “You hate that running bad gives those guys an advantage.” Gustafson’s driver finished 2nd after making up 11 seconds in 12 laps.

    Tony Stewart led late only to have to stop for fuel. Jimmie Johnson who ran strong all day in the top 10 finished a disappointing 19th. Dale Earnhardt Jr who took the lead on pit strategy after over heating with debris on the grill and led the race for 6 laps midway but finished 16th. The list goes on.

    The one resounding comment that was heard from every driver was, “Congratulations to Paul and Slugger Labbe. They worked hard for it. It’s good to see it come their way.”

    The race itself was rather nondescript. It was intense for the final 19 laps or so. But it was not really exciting. The broadcast was well a bit over dramatized. The new anchor in the pit studio, Nicole Briscoe was over dramatic in her starring role debut. And the entire broadcast had the feel of theatrical production rather than a race.

    The whole weekend was somewhat that way. The Camping World Trucks normally exciting and fun to watch ran a snoozer on perhaps their final showing at LOR/ORP. But it had its bright spot. We got to see a champion behave like a champion.

    Truck Series winner Timothy Peter’s, however showed an extreme lack of judgment when he proceeded with his celebratory burn out while there were still two trucks on the front stretch. To his left, dead in the water and out of gas a few yards from the start finish line was Ricky Carmichael unable to go any further. To his left was Austin Dillon, trying to finish the race after contact with Todd Bodine. To continue with the burn out while putting others at risk was simply not acceptable. Granted he won the race and was entitled to his celebration but wait until the track is clear.

    The incident between Todd Bodine and Austin Dillon on the final lap was troubling. Todd Bodine ran Austin Dillon into the wall. He made no bones about it and took complete responsibility. He said, “I didn’t see him. If I were him, I would be mad at me too.” Austin Dillon showed his roots when he said, “I don’t know what happened there. I have to talk to Todd first.” How refreshing! A Champion who acted like a champion and a potential champion that acted like a champion, is it any wonder the Camping World Truck Series is so much fun to watch. But fun or not it doesn’t change the fact that Todd’s spotter obviously didn’t tell him that Austin was there. Fortunately, Todd Bodine has exceptional truck control and was able to prevent the situation from becoming more serious. This incident was only the beginning of the “unusual” happenings at LOR/ORP that could have had serious results in terms of driver safety.

    The Nationwide Series also ran at LOR/ORP. This race had perhaps the scariest incident of the year. Justin Allgaier lost a fuel line and the fire under the car grew with each passing lap. Crew Chief Jimmy Elledge called him in when he saw the fire on the monitor.

    The fire itself was scary enough. But what Allgaier’s wife reported happened next on Twitter was terrifying. “I’m so angry w/ the firefighters… Got to car & told crew “not my job” so crew guy took fire extinguisher and it didn’t even work!” she reported. “I’m thankful Justin was okay and for the 32 guys for pulling him out of car!” She concluded.

    So not only did the fire officials refuse to help Justin out of the car, they didn’t have fire fighting equipment that was functional to try to put out the fire. Surely, this incident did not get lost in all the confusion about lining up for the restart?

    The young man’s life was at risk. The oil in the engine was reportedly over 300 degree’s. The front of the car was a rolling ball of fire. Yes he had on a fire retardant suit. But there was no way for anyone to know at that point that the engine would not blow up or that the fire was not much wider spread than it appeared and it appeared severe.

    This situation was severe enough that NASCAR needs to step up to the plate and make their driver’s safety first initiative a mandatory requirement for all tracks. No driver should ever be at the mercy of help coming or not coming because of the location of the vehicle that is on fire. No driver should have to depend on his team or team mates to help out of a burning vehicle. It is simply unacceptable.

    Regardless of what happened on the track with the restart, Justin Allgaier should have been the primary concern of everyone on pit road. His safety and his exit from that car should have been the foremost thought and focus for everyone, officials and safety workers. Every one of those people within the reach of a fire extinguisher or him should have been there immediately to assist him out of the vehicle and to put out the fire.

    Officials wear fire suits too. Yes I understand that they are impartial. But saving or assisting a driver from harms way is part of their job. It’s why they monitor lug nuts and pit stall positioning. I will lay you odds that if Justin had been out of the box there would have been an official there to issue the penalty. Yet when he needed them to be proactive and help him, they were conspicuous by their absence.

    The hype and the spectacle that is Indy has come to an end. The bricks have been kissed. The trophy has been awarded. And the haulers have begun their trek homeward. The new week has begun. Crew Chiefs have replaced their notes with Pocono and the work begins in earnest to find the way to victory lane again, this time at the tricky triangle. For some this will be a night of celebration and champagne. For some it will be a night of if only’s. But one constant remains, on nagging thought on the minds of every driver and team. How do we squeeze a gallon from a drop and when will we race for the checkers again. Only time will tell and then only if NASCAR will allow the secret to be told.

    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ * * * * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

    Congratulations to Timothy Peters and his Red Horse Racing Team on their victory at LOR/ORP.

    Congratulations to Brad Keselowski and his Penske Racing Team on their NNS victory.

    And major congratulations to Paul Menard and his RCR team on their win of the Brickyard 400. It is always inspiring and uplifting to see someone make their dreams come true. Enjoy it Paul. You earned it. “Remember today, for it is the beginning of always. Today marks the start of a brave new future filled with all your dreams can hold.”

    That said, to all the competitors in all the series thanks for giving us everything you have to give, you are our heroes. Most importantly, thanks to all the families who shared their loved ones with us so we could cheer our favorite driver and favorite teams. You are the true heroes of the sport and we are forever in your debt.