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PASS South/National
Motor Mile Podium: Jay Fogleman
#4s,
2nd; Winner Ben Rowe #4n; and Andy
Loden #29, 3rd.
(Speed51
Photos) |
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PASS South Official Results -
Motor Mile
- 5/28/11 |
1) #4n Ben Rowe (150) 2)
#4 Jay Fogleman (150) 3) #29 Andy
Loden (150) 4) #115 Jody Lavender
(150) 5) #33 Roger Lee Newton
(150) 6) #39 Kenzie Ruston (150)
7) #04 Ryan Reed (150) 8) #91
Heath Hindman (150) 9) #2 Gray
Gaulding (150) 10) #56 Gus Dean
(150) 11) #62 Brandon Ward (150)
12) #91q David Quackenbush (150)
13) #26 Preston Peltier (150) 14)
#20 Steve Legendre (149) |
15) #98 Justin Wakefield
(147) 16) #30 Danny Bohn (143)
17) #10 Ryan Blaney (142) 18) #7
Daniel Johnson (138) 19) #07 Matt
McCall (136) 20) #48 John Batten
(129) 21) #29L Landon Cling (99)
22) #5 Spencer Wauters (97) 23)
#8 Cassius Clark (77) 24) #51n
Stephen Nasse (77) 25) #42 Tim
Pinion (73) 26) #129 Jeff
Choquette (50) 27) #23 Jimmy
Weller (13) |
Ben Rowe Wins PASS South /
National Event at Motor Mile
Speedway
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Fans Treated to Thrilling
Last-Lap Battle for the Checkered
Flag in VA |
The Pro All Stars Series
(PASS) South Super Late Models
returned to Motor Mile Speedway in
Virginia on Saturday, May 28th, for
the first time since the inaugural
race at the track in 2008. This
time, the event also marked the
second PASS National championship
race of the season. After 150 laps
of grueling competition, Ben Rowe
edged Jay Fogleman at the line to
win his first series race of the
year, making six different winners
in six races this season in PASS
South competition.
While 29
cars entered the weekend’s events at
Motor Mile, two had trouble on
practice day, leaving 27 cars to
battle it out for top honors in
qualifying. Fogleman stuck his
machine on the top of the charts
with a 15.350-second lap, earning
him the pole position as well as a
new track record at Motor Mile.
Stephen Nasse was second, followed
by Cassius Clark, Jimmy Weller and
Andy Loden. Matt McCall, Rowe, Ryan
Reed, Preston Peltier and Justin
Wakefield rounded out the top 10.
After the top 10 redraw,
Fogleman and Clark led the field of
27 to the green flag. Fogleman got
the edge, leading early with Clark
dropping in second. With most of the
front half of the field getting
single file, Nasse was the driver on
the move, using the outside line to
work his way from eighth to third by
lap 10.
At lap 20, Clark
worked his way into the lead on the
outside of Fogleman, bringing Nasse
with him. Fogleman dropped into
third with Wakefield and Rowe
rounding out the top five early.
The first yellow of the race
flew on lap 36 as David Quackenbush
spun in turn three. He was able to
get his car going the right way
without assistance. At the yellow,
the top five were Clark, Nasse,
Fogleman, Wakefield and Rowe.
On the restart, Nasse was able
to use the high lane to take the
lead with Clark dropping in second.
Wakefield moved up to third with
Fogleman fourth and Loden moving
into the fifth position.
Series points leader Ryan Blaney
attempted to move up through the
field from his 14th-place starting
position, but after some hard racing
with Jeff Choquette, contact between
the two sent Choquette’s car into
the inside wall on the front
stretch. Blaney was penalized and
put to the back of the field for the
incident, but the contact appeared
to have damaged his car as well as
he spent several laps in the pits.
After a few more yellow flags
for incidents on the track, the
battle for the top spot between
Clark and Nasse heated up. The two
battled side by side for a few laps,
but contact on the front stretch
sent both into the wall in turn one
and out of the race on lap 78. That
incident handed the lead over to
Wakefield with Lavender, Rowe,
Peltier and Hindman rounding out the
top five.
The front position
wasn’t the place to be late in the
race. Wakefield, while cruising out
front, had a tire go down, forcing
him to pit at lap 119. A few laps
later, Peltier, who worked his way
to second and had the lead once
Wakefield dropped off the pace,
looped his car in turn four while
trying to negotiate lapped traffic.
After a late-race yellow, Rowe
and Fogleman battled hard during the
last 10 laps for the top spot with
Loden lurking behind. Contact
between the two front runners kept
the fans on the edge of their seats,
but the two veteran drivers kept
their cars pointed straight with
Rowe crossing the finish line first.
“There is no better guy to race
like that than Jay Fogleman,” said
Rowe. “We hit a few times, but you
didn’t see either of us end up in
the fence. That is just good racing
with 10 laps to go. He was going way
down on the apron. I thought he was
by me once and I was about ready to
pull in behind him, but we motored
back up alongside him. It was a
blast racing him like that.”
Even though he wanted the victory,
Fogleman enjoyed racing with Rowe
over the final laps.
“Ben and
I have just been racing the last
couple years, but it is like we have
been racing each other all our
lives,” explained Fogleman. “I raced
him like he would race me. I mean, I
shook him around, but I wasn’t going
to turn him around. Ben is a good
racer. He took it and held his
line.”
Loden made it a
three-car battle for the victory,
but just couldn’t advance any
further than third, which wasn’t bad
considering he lost track position
early with a tire problem.
“We had a really good car,” said
Loden. “We got a flat left front
there at the beginning and had to go
to the back. We got it fixed and got
back to third, so it was a good
night.
“I was running all
over to see if I could find a way
around. I couldn’t get around Jay
because he was running where I
needed to be. It was a heck of a
race.”
Rowe entered the race
fourth in the National points, but
with the victory and the fact that
the next three National events are
up in his neck of the woods in the
northeast, Rowe was leaving Motor
Mile Speedway with more than just a
victory.
“We come down here
from Maine to race with these guys,”
said Rowe with a smile. “It is their
time to travel 16 hours and race on
my tracks. Hopefully I have the
upper hand and we will keep this
National points deal going.”
Lavender and Roger Lee Newton
rounded out the top five.
The
PASS South Super Late Model Series
will be back in action at Orange
County Speedway (NC) for the
sixth-annual “Orange Blossom
Special” on Saturday, June 4th. The
next PASS National Championship
event will take place on Thursday,
July 21st, at Thompson International
Speedway (CT). |
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