Christopher
Wins World Series 150
Perley
& Fornoro Earn Winged Wins at Thompson
Silk,
M. O’ Sullivan, T. O’Sullivan & Barnett Weekly Series Winners
Gentes,
Foster & Adams Sunday Outlaw Winners
Ted
Christopher of
A
last lap pass found Chris Perley of
Ronnie
Silk of
Other
winners included Larry Barnett of
Ted
Christopher jumped out to the early lead in the Whelen Modified Tour 150;
relinquishing the lead when he headed to pit road for tires after a caution lap
82. He restarted the event inside the top ten and began to meticulously pick
his way toward the front. He took the lead on a number of occasions only to
have the caution come out to negate the passes.
He took over the top spot for the final time from Lia on lap 131.
Ryan
Preece recovered from an incident with Todd Szedegy on lap eight to run in the top three for the final half of the event. Doug Coby came on
strong late to become a contender. In
the end, Christopher sailed to the victory. Preece settled for the second
position followed by Coby. Lia wrapped up his championship with a fourth place
finish. Rowan Pennink rounded out the
top five.
Chris
Perley of
Sammut
had led the lion’s share of the main event holding off the likes of Mike
Litchey, Dave Shullick, Jr. and Russ Wood before a right front wheel sheered
off his #78 in turn two on lap 42; only eight laps shy of the finish. Following
the incident, Shullick inherited the lead with Wood
in second. Perley laid in wait until the late stages of the event pouring it on
with less than 10 laps to go. The “Rowley Rocket” had moved into the third
position and was hunting Wood for second. He took over second position on lap
47. Perley had caught the back bumper of Shullick with two laps to go. On the
final lap, Perley made the pass for the lead in turn two to score the victory.
Nokie
Fornoro of
Russ
Stoehr had enjoyed a comfortable advantage in the early stages before a high
flying Jeff Horn was able to take over the top spot. Jim Miller was having a
great run in the third spot. Fornoro
began picking off cars after the race hit the halfway maker. Fornoro passed
Miller; Stoehr headed to pit road. Cole Carter had worked his way into the fourth
position before giving way to his teammate Cabral.
The
first and only caution of the event flew when the mount of Erica Santos came to
rest in turn two. The yellow erased the sizeable lead Horn had enjoyed. The
lightning fast Fornoro lined up to the outside of Horn. Fornoro bolted out to
the lead on the restart leaving Horn in second followed by Cabral. The top five
positions would not change over the final dash to the checkers with Fornoro
taking the win over Horn, Cabral, Carter, and Miller.
Ronnie
Silk of
Christopher,
who had been involved in an incident earlier in the event, was on the march and back into the top-ten with 10 laps in the books. During
the long green flag run the second position was being hotly contested between
Sullivan and Marvin. The battle for fourth spot was heating up between Danny Cates,
Kerry Malone and Timmy Solomito. The battle hit a boiling point when Malone
went spinning into the infield to bring out the caution. Cates ducked down pit
road under the caution as well.
Once
back to green at halfway, Silk was able to maintain his lead. But the man on
the move was Christopher; who ran in third. On a lap 15 restart Teddy bolted by
Sullivan to take over the second spot. A single lap later, Christopher was the
new leader. Silk drifted up into Christopher in turn one. The contact sent both
cars sliding. Christopher gathered it up to retain his lead. Silk lost a position
to Sullivan.
A
hard wreck involving Eric LeClair brought out the caution on lap 17. On the ensuing restart, Silk was able to get
back around Sullivan to take over second. Silk then did the cross-over move on
Christopher to take the lead back once again. The two swapped grooves and the
top spot several times before Silk settled into the lead on lap 20. The battle
allowed Marvin to join the battle for the top spot. Woody Pitkat recovered from
an earlier incident to run fifth.
The
front duo was able to pull a few car lengths ahead of Marvin making it a
two-car race for the win. Christopher was stuck to the back bumper of Silk as
the laps wound down. Over the final two
laps, Silk; however, was able to get away from Christopher. Silk ran under the
checkers for the victory a car-length ahead of Christopher. Marvin settled for
the third over Sullivan and Pitkat.
Mike
O’Sullivan of
By
halfway, Ramstrom was beginning to look racy again, diving to the inside of
Fuller. The battle for third was heating up as well with Wrenn pressuring
O’Sullivan. The top five ran nose-to-tail looking for running room. Ramstrom
could get alongside Fuller while Wrenn could get a fender below O’Sullivan.
Neither could make the pass.
Despite
a trio of cautions, the running order in the top four remained unchanged. The
battling allowed Larry Gelinas to join the mix. Contact between the lead duo of
Fuller and Ramstrom opened the door for O’Sullivan, who went three wide in the
outside groove to take over the lead on lap 25. The contact between Fuller and
Ramstrom continued in turn four. Ultimately, Fuller went spinning. He did not
continue in the event. Ramstrom was able to keep going in third.
O’Sullivan
was in command with Norm Wrenn in tow. The battle for the third position was
fierce between Ramstrom and Gelinas. Coming off turn four, Gelinas' #48
appeared to scrape the wall resulting in a flat tire. Gelinas limped around the
speedway as O’Sullivan was taking the victory. Wrenn came home second. Ramstrom
survived the fireworks to finish third. Jim Banfield and Rob Murphy completed
the top five.
In
the Late Model feature event, Tommy O’Sullivan of
A
restart picked up the battle for the second spot between Materas and Hutchings.
Contact that involved Trudeau ended Materas’ 2009 championship season with his
#73 in the outside wall in turn four. Hutchings sustained damage but was able
to continue. Trudeau was also able to continue.
O’Sullivan
was able to pick-up where he left off with the race back under green. Woody Pitkat ran in second followed by Mark
Oliveira and Ryan Posocco. O’Sullivan was able to withstand a number of
restarts to retain his place at the head of the pack.
In
the closing laps, O’Sullivan was able to gain some distance over Pitkat. The
man on the move was Hutchings. Despite some damage to his #36 he passed cars
one-by-one. At the end, O’Sullivan earned another victory for his family.
Pitkat ended his triple duty with a second place finish in the Late Models.
Hutchings stormed to a third place finish ahead of Mark Oliveira and Ryan
Posocco.
Larry
Barnett of
Joe
Arena and Chris “Moose” Douton ran side-by-side only feet behind the side-by-side
battle for the lead. Barnett used a lapped car as a pick exiting turn four on
lap nine to gain the lead. Only a few laps later, Monahan dropped off the pace.
Barnett enjoyed a sizeable advantage over now second Douton and Josh Galvin. Barnett
cruised to the victory over Douton, Josh Galvin, Joe Arena, and Paul Coutu, Jr.
Sean
Foster of Middletown, CT, bested a strong and varied mix of competitors from
tracks around New England to score the victory in the Outlaw Strictly Stocks,
who were the first to take to the race track for feature action on World Series
Sunday. The event, which went 25 cars strong, saw Sean Foster and Andy Brooks, Jr. battle side-by-side in the opening laps
before Foster gained the advantage.
Foster
had his hands full with Thompson regular Mike O’Sullivan before mechanical woes
sidelined the Springfield, MA, driver with only two laps remaining; leaving
Foster to run unchallenged to the checkers.
Sean Thibeault, Ryan Lineman, Anthony Crimaldi III, and Chris smith
rounded out the top five.
Beth
Adams of
Leonard
was able to assert himself into the second spot with McTaggart in tow. McTaggart was all over the back bumper of
Leonard over the final stages of the event. Thompson regular Scott Michalski
had moved up from his 20th starting position to run inside the top
five but watched his good run come to an end with a spin in turn three as the
field approached the final lap.
Rick
Gentes of Woonsocket, RI, turned in a commanding performance to score the
Outlaw Late Model victory. He had built up a straight away advantage over a
budding battle for second between George Rego and Dennis Botticello. The battle cooled when Botticello fell off
the pace losing several positions. Gentes was in a groove as he went on to take
a dominating win by nearly a half a lap advantage over Rego, Jimmy Rosenfield and
Nick Gravel and Daryl Stampfl.
In
the Pro-Four Modifieds, Rob Richardi, Jr. of
The
track will be silent but there will still be action on the grounds of the
Thompson International Speedway with Don Hoenig’s Original Automotive Swap Meet
and Flea Market on November 7&8, 2009. For more details
visit www.thompsonspeedway.com.
Look to the track’s official website for news about the 2010 season.
Whelen
Modified Tour 150 Finishing Order (Top Ten): 1. Ted Christopher,
ISMA
Super Modifieds Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Chris Perley,
NEMA
Midgets Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Nokie Fornoro,
Sunoco
Modifieds Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Ronnie Silk,
Super
Late Models Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Mike O’Sullivan,
Late
Models Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Tommy O’Sullivan,
Limited
Sportsman Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Larry Barnett,
Outlaw
Late Models Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Rick Gentes,
Outlaw
Strictly Stocks Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Sean Foster,
Outlaw
Mini Stocks Feature Finish (Top Ten): 1. Beth Adams, Winchendon, MA; 2. Bill
Leonard, Wood River Junction, RI; 3. Chris McTaggart, N. Swanzey,
NH; 4. Ian Brew, Wood River Junction, RI; 5. Joseph Kendall, Winchendon, CT; 6.
Mark Panaroni, Ivoryton, CT; 7. Nick Maniatis, Hooksett, NH; 8. Tony Kumiega,
Palmer, MA; 9. Derek Bergquist, Warwick, MA; 10. Jeff Moffat,
Pro-Four
Modifieds Feature Finish (Top Five): 1. Rob Richardi, Jr.,