Fun at Pevely; Landmark at Toronto; Tension Increases at New Hampshire

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(SRX at PEVELY)—Tony Stewart has finally won a race at Ken Schrader’s track in Pevely, Missouri.  Stewart won the main second heat and the main event to become the first driver to win twice this year on the Superstar Racing Experience (SRX) circuit.

The race was the first of the season or a dirt oval after four races on pavement.

Behind Stewart, several competitors finished with major parts of their cars in twisted piles in the pits, the result of ten cautions for track incidents in the 70-lap final.  Marco Andretti finished second for the third straight race.

Ryan Newman, who said his most recent experience on dirt was with his tractor on his farm, was fourth followed by track co-owner and NASCAR veteran Ken Schrader. Greg Biffle wrapped up the top five. Michael Waltrip, Ernie Francis Jr., Paul Tracy, Tony Kanaan, Hailie Deegan (the only woman driver in the series), Matt Kenseth, Bobby Labonte and Ryan Hunter-Reay finished out the field. Hunter-Reay, the winner of the 2014 Indianapolis 500, had never raced on a dirt track before.

The series finale will be on dirt next Saturday at Sharon Speedway in Hartford, Ohio, featuring the father-son duo of Dave and Ryan Blaney. Dave Blaney, who had a long career in dirt-track racing, is the cow-owner of the track. His son, Ryan, is a rising star in NASCAR for Penske Racing.

The championship points race has boiled down to a contest between Stewart, Labonte, Andretti, and Newman.

(INDYCAR)—Now only one driver has more INDYCAR wins than Scott Dixon.  Dixon climbed into a tie with Mario Andretti for second-most career victories with 52. It’s unlikely he’ll get to A. J. Foyt’s 67 wins in the series but he has moved closer to the points lead as he looks for his seventh series championship, which would tie Foyt.

 

Dixon pulled away from pole-winner Colton Herta on the last restart twenty laps left and crossed the line eight-tenths of a second ahead, ending a 23-race winless streak, the second-longest of his career.  Felix Rosenqvist, Graham Rahal, this year’s Indianapolis 500 winner, Marcus Ericsson, rounded out the top five.

The win extends Dixon’s record of eighteen seasons with at least one victory. He now has won at least once in 20 seasons, also a record.

Next up for INDYCAR are two races within driving distance of many Missourians.  INDYCAR will have a doubleheader weekend at the Iowa Speedway, a .875-mile high banked oval near Newton, Iowa.  The track was designed by former Missouri NASCAR champion Rusty Wallace. The races will be Saturday afternoon at 4 p.m., and Sunday afternoon at 3.

(NASCAR)—Christopher Bell has upped the stakes for winless NASCAR Cup drivers hoping to make the 16-driver playoff field with his weekend win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.  Bell became the 14th driver to win a race this year, staying in front for the last 42 laps and pulling away to an almost-six second win over last week’s winner, Chase Elliott.

Bell, who might not be mistaken for someone 27 years old, had to outrun Elliott, the hottest driver in the series in the last four weeks. Elliott has won twice and has finished twice. He had come into the race ranked last among the top 16 drivers but is now guaranteed a playoff slot.

If the race was big for Bell, it was a bitter pill for teammate Martin Truex Jr., to swallow. Truex started from the pole, led 172 of the 301 laps, and won the first two stages. But a two-tire stop with 100 laps left didn’t work out. He dropped to fourth and has replaced Bell as the last driver in the playoff hunt.

Truex is still waiting for his first win of the year, as is Kevin Harvick who is the first driver outside the playoffs. Both former Cup champions have six races left to get a win that could put them into the round of sixteen for a ten-race runoff for the title.  They’ll get their next shot next Sunday at Pocono.

For now, Ryan Blaney, who is third in overall points, has the fifteenth playoff position.  Truex is 37 points behind him for the last slot. Harvick trails Truex by 68 points and appears to need a win to make the top 16.  Harvick is ninth in overall points.

A fifteenth winner who is not one of those three would knock Truex below the cut line with Harvick.

Fourteen different winners in a year is far from the record.  Nineteen different drivers posted victories in 2001.  Eighteen did it in 2002 and 2011.  Seventeen did it in 2013.

(FORMULA 1)—F1 races next in the Grand Prix of France. It’s race 12 of 22 on this year’s schedule.   On the Circuit Paul Ricard, near Marseilles.

(Photo credits:  Stewart—SRX Racing/CBS; Dixon—Rick Gevers at WWTR 2021;Bell—Bob Priddy at WWTR, 2022)

 

Sports—Racing: Elliott wins at home; Leclerc brings it home; Schrader will race at home

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(SRX)—Next up for the Superstar Racing Experience drivers: Ken Schrader’s I-55 Speedway at Pevely, Missouri, the first dirt track they’ll drive on this year.  And Schrader finally gets to race in a series  he helped create.

Former NASCAR champion Bobby Labonte will be going to Pevely after winning the last pavement race in the short-track series at Nashville.  Labonte, who is 58, is the oldest driver to win an SRX race. He started from the pole and led every lap in the final heat, holding off a serious challenge from INDYCAR driver Marco Andretti. Another former NASCAR champion, Matt Kenseth, was third and former INDYCAR driver Paul Tracy came home fourth. Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves was fifth.

Two-time INDYCAR series champion Josef Newgarden, a native of nearby Henderson, won the first heat while driving his first race in a car with fenders. Local track favorite Cole Williams won the second heat but was only 12th in the 13-car field in the final.

Newgarden spun on the 49th lap of the 75-lap final heat but rallied back to finish seventh. He called the race “a big learning session…just how these guys drive. They’re very rough.”  But he wants to do it again.

Labonte’s win has moved him ahead of Ryan Newman in the SRX points standings. Andretti’s runner-up also moves him ahead of Newman.

The series finishes up with two dirt-track races, the first being next Saturday night at Pevely, a track owned by veteran NASCAR driver Ken Schrader.  Schrader, who helped develop the cars used in the series, will compete in an SRX race for the first time—as the home track “guest” racer.

Pevely is about a half-hour south of St. Louis on I-55.

(NASCAR)—Chase Elliott is the first driver to pick up three wins this year, and number three has come at Atlanta Motor Speedway, his home track.  Elliott is from Dawsonville, about an hour’s drive south of Atlanta.

The win was in doubt as Elliott and Corey Lajoie battled for the lead through the first two turns of the last lap. But Lajoie hit the wall trying to pass Elliott on the backstretch as Elliott moved to block him and the race ended under caution with Elliott in front. Lajoie took his injured car home in 21st place.

Lajoie’s crash produced the last of thirteen caution flags.  A dozen drivers contributed 27 lead changes in the 260-lap race.

Ross Chastain, whose reputation as a driver often in the center of incidents, added to his credentials before finishing second, his fifth top-two finish of the year. He was collected in a nine car crash near the halfway point of the race then tangled, again, with Denny Hamlin when both were running in the top ten, leaving Hamlin with a badly damaged car that limped to the end 25th.

Daytona 500 winner Austin Cindric, the leading Rookie of the Year candidate, was third. Erik Jones and Ryan Blaney rounded out the top five.

Elliott’s win ups his regular season points lead to 47 over Blaney. Chastain runs third, fifty points back.

(INDYCAR)—INDYCAR’s next race is in Toronto next Sunday.

(FORMULA 1)—Ferrari’s Charles LeClerc had to deal with throttle issues and with challenges from Max Verstappen to win the Austrian Grand Prix.  It’s LeClerc’s first win since the Australian Grand Prix in April. He’s been dogged by mechanical and strategy problems since.

He beat Verstappen to the line by about 1.5 seconds to claim his first podium finish after five failures and move to within 38 points of Verstappen’s lead in the standings.

LeClerc and teammate Carlos Sainz were headed for a 1-2 finish before an engine failure sent Sainz’s car afire with fourteen laps left.

(Photo Credits: SRX and Rick Gevers)

Sports: Racing—Newman still has it; Reddick, McLaughlin get it; Zhou survives it

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(SRX)—Three races, three winners for the Superstar Racing Experience, which brings NASCAR and INDYCAR competitors together in just two weeks on the dirt track at Pevely.  Series points leader Ryan Newman picked up his first win on the pavement at Stafford, CT during the weekend.

The point standings show four INDYCAR drivers and five NASCAR drivers in the top ten. Just behind Newman is series co-creator Tony Stewart, who was an INDYCAR champion before moving to NASCAR—the only driver to record that achievement.

Newman got past pole-sitter Marco Andretti after a competition caution with ten laps to go to win the third heat. Stewart was third with Bobby Labonte fourth and Hailie Deegan—a young woman from the NASCAR truck series—fifth.

The series races at Nashville next weekend before moving to Ken Schrader’s Federated Auto Parts Raceway near Pevely on the 16th, then wrapping up the season at Sharon Speedway in Ohio, owned by former NASCAR competitor Dave Blaney, father of current Cup driver Ryan Blaney.

(NASCAR)—Tyler Reddick has won his first NASCAR Cup race in a fierce battle with Chase Elliott at Road America.  Elliott had a narrow lead after the final pit stop with 18 laps left but Reddick got past Elliott two laps later and pulled away to win by 3.3 seconds. Kyle Larson was third, 21 seconds back.

Reddick is the fifth first-time winner this year and the 13th Cup driver to make it to victory lane.  His win means there are only three playoff spots left to fill in the next seven races. His victory pushed former champion Keven Harvick out of the top sixteen in standings, endangering Harvick’s chances of making the playoffs.  Harvick is tenth in points but fourth among non-winners.

The race is the third road course race of the year. Each has produced a first-time Cup career victory—Clay Chastain at Circuit of the Americas and Daniel Suarez at Sonoma.

(INDYCAR)—This one was for mom and dad.

Scott McLaughlin has on his second INDYCAR race of the season but it’s the first time his parents have seen him win since he moved from the Australian Supercar series two and a half years ago.  They came to the United States in May to watch him run the Indianapolis 500, the first time they had seen him since he came to the Northern Hemisphere.

McLaughlin had to hold off defending series champion Alex Palou for the last 17 laps and got to the finish line about a half-second before Palou. The best drive of the day, however, was by Will Power, who started 21st, spun on the first lap and recovered from the end of the field to snag third place.

Pole sitter Pato O’Ward led the first 28 laps before his car started losing power and quit entirely while coming out of the pits on the 54th of 80 laps.

The race was a disaster for the Andretti team and confrontations between teammates Romain Grosjean and Alexander Rossi resulted in a team meeting called quickly after the race.  Rossi, on the inside, ran Grosjean off the track by going wide on a turn and one lap later drove him straight off the course on another turn.  Grosjean called Rossi “an idiot” after the race before a team employee took him away from a television interview for the meeting.

Earlier in the race, Grosjean pushed teammate Colton Herta off the track and Rossi tangled with another Andretti teammate, Devlin DeFrancesco.  The four Andretti drivers finished 15th to 21st.

(FORMULA 1)—The Grand Prix of Britain started with a frightening crash and ended with a first-time winner.

You can see it from a grandstand view at:

Formula One salutes FIA and ‘halo’ for saving two lives at Silverstone (msn.com)

Ferrari’s Carolos Sainz got the win in his 150th F1 start.  Lewis Hamilton, who had his best finish of the year, in third, called the race “Formula One at its best.”  Sainz is only the second Spanish driver to win in the long history of Formula One.  Two-time F1 champion Fernando Alonso was the first.

The first lap was hardly racing at its best. It was, in fact, racing at its scariest.  The only Chinese driver to ever compete in F1, Guanyu Zhou, in an Alfa,  got upside down on the start after a bump from Mercedes driver George Russell as a crowded field headed to the first turn. His car skidded off the track, through a gravel area, and flipped over the SAFER barrier into a catch fence in front of dozens of fans. Several other cars were damaged in collisions in the melee and the race was stopped until rescue teams could get Zhou out of his car and onto a stretcher.

He later sent a message saying he was fine but gratified that Formula 1 had begun using a “halo” cockpit protection system that he thought saved his life. Doctors say he’s cleared to drive in the next race in the series.

The red flag at the start of the race might have prevented an even more tragic event seconds later as the cars roared down a straightaway.  Instead, they were going slowly enough to avoid a series of climate protestors reportedly from Just Stop Oil who had gotten onto the circuit and sat down on the track.  Police arrested five men and two women.

(Photo credits: Newman at Indianapolis 2019, Rick Gevers; Reddick and McLaughlin at WWTR, Bob Priddy)

The Fourth of July

This is a day of eloquent words.  The celebration of that eloquence is overshadowed by the festival this day has become.

We’re not talking only about the eloquence of the Declaration of Independence, approved by the Continental Congress on this day (but not signed by the 56 delegates for some time), but for the eloquence of a speech by a special man before thousands of admirers on this date.

This is the day in 1939 that Lou Gehrig, one of the greatest players and greatest people to play baseball, said goodbye—with words of courage and gratitude before a crowd of almost 62,000 people in Yankee Stadium who had come for baseball games but mostly to pay tribute to Lou Gehrig.

The words were spoken a little more than a month after a consequential trip to Missouri.

The most memorable line came at the beginning, not the end—as is the case with the Declaration’s most famous line.

“Fans, for the past two weeks you have been reading about the bad break I got. Yet today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of this earth. I have been in ballparks for seventeen years and have never received anything but kindness and encouragement from you fans.

“Look at these grand men. Which of you wouldn’t consider it the highlight of his career just to associate with them for even one day? Sure, I’m lucky. Who wouldn’t consider it an honor to have known Jacob Ruppert? Also, the builder of baseball’s greatest empire, Ed Barrow? To have spent six years with that wonderful little fellow, Miller Huggins? Then to have spent the next nine years with that outstanding leader, that smart student of psychology, the best manager in baseball today, Joe McCarthy? Sure, I’m lucky.

“When the New York Giants, a team you would give your right arm to beat, and vice versa, sends you a gift – that’s something. When everybody down to the groundskeepers and those boys in white coats remember you with trophies – that’s something. When you have a wonderful mother-in-law who takes sides with you in squabbles with her own daughter – that’s something. When you have a father and a mother who work all their lives so you can have an education and build your body – it’s a blessing. When you have a wife who has been a tower of strength and shown more courage than you dreamed existed – that’s the finest I know.

“So I close in saying that I may have had a tough break, but I have an awful lot to live for.”

As far as the trip to Missouri—

Gehrig had sensed something was wrong when he hit “only” .295 in the 1928 season with 29 home runs and 114 runs batted in—the kind of season most of today’s major leaguers would love to have.  But it lowered his lifetime batting average to .340 and left him 287 hits short of becoming the seventh player with 3,000 hits, an achievement he could have expected to reach in 1939 under normal circumstances.  It also left him seven short of 500 home runs and six short of 2000 runs batted in, both statistics he would have achieved in ’38 if he had had a normal year.

He was troubled at the start of the 1939 season by the fact that he was only four for fourteen in the World Series, all of the hits being singles, and going four-for-28—again, all singles—to start the year.  He didn’t hit a home run during spring training and his coordination in the field was off.  He played his last major league game on April 30, then told manager Joe McCarthy he was benching himself after 2,130 straight games.

But there would be one more game. Gehrig was still the Yankees’ captain, often the man who took the lineup card to the home plate umpire at the start of the game, as he did during a series in June against the St. Louis Browns. It was there that Gehrig told reporters he was going to the Mayo Clinic soon for some tests but expected to return to the playing field during the summer.  “I can’t help believing there’s something wrong with me,” he told them. “It’s not conceivable that I could go to pieces so suddenly. I feel fine, feel strong, and have the urge to play…I’d like to play some more and I want somebody to tell me what’s wrong. Usually a fellow slows up gradually.” But this year, he said, “Without warning…I’ve apparently collapsed.”

After wrapping up the series with the Browns, the Yankees went to Kansas City for an exhibition game against their best minor league team, the Kansas City Blues, team that matched rising Yankee star Joe DiMaggio against brother Vince, who played the same position for the Blues against the Blues’ up and coming double play duo of shortstop and future Hall of Famer Phil Rizzuto and second-baseman Jerry Priddy, who combined that year for 130 double plays, a league record. They were called up by the Yankees in ’41.

Lou Gehrig played his last game on June 11, 1939 in Kansas City. He played in great pain, but played errorless ball at first base. His last at-bat was in the third inning. He grounded out to Priddy.

While the rest of the team took a train to Cleveland for a series there, Gehrig and his wife, Eleanor (in this AP photo from 1936), flew to Rochester for tests on the 13th that she had arranged.  Six days later, the clinic’s Dr. Harold C. Habein issued a “Two whom it may concern” letter telling Gehrig he had been diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, an illness that “involves the motor pathways and cells of the central nervous system and in lay terms is known as a form of chronic poliomyelitis—infantile paralysis.”

The letter concluded, “The nature of this trouble makes it such that Mr. Gehrig will be unable to continue his active participation as a baseball player inasmuch as it is advisable that he conserve his muscular energy. He could, however, continue in some executive capacity.”

Gehrig took the letter to manage Joe McCarthy and team president Ed Barrow on the 21st.  They released the information to the media that day and announced that July 4th had been set aside for Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day at the stadium.

Gehrig admitted he was shocked by the findings. He told New York sportswriters, “Mrs. Gehrig and I are fully resolved to face the situation calmly” and he called the trip to the Mayo Clinic “the best move I ever made.” But he didn’t ignore the reality of his situation. “My friends tell me not to worry. They slap me on the back and say, ‘Don’t worry, Lou. Everything is going to be all right.’ But how can I help worrying.”

He was honored during a forty-minute ceremony held between games of a doubleheader against the Washington Senators.  There were a lot of gifts including a fruit bowl and two candlesticks from the New York Giants. The one that might have had the most meaning was a 21-inch silver trophy from his 1939 teammates, their names and a poem by New York sportswriter  John Kieran engraved on it.

To LOU GEHRIG

We’ve been to the wars together;
We took our foes as they came:
And always you were the leader,
And ever you played the game.

Idol of cheering millions:
Records are yours by sheaves:
Iron of frame they hailed you,
Decked you with laurel leaves.

But higher than that we hold you,
We who have known you best;
Knowing the way you came through
Every human test.

Let this be a silent token
Of lasting friendship’s gleam
And all that we’ve left unspoken.
Your Pals of the Yankee Team.

When Gehrig walked back to the dugout that day, the only one of the many gifts he took with him was that trophy.

Kieran said his poem was a “feeble interpretation” of how the players felt about Gehrig, who was his neighbor in the suburb of Riverdale, New York. Kieren often visited Gehrig as his health declined. One day, Kieran later related, Gehrig pointed to the trophy and said, “Some time when I get—well, sometimes I have that handed to me—and I read it—and I believe it—and I feel pretty good”

Lou Gehrig died, only 37 years old, On June 2, 1941.  Six months later, the Baseball Writers Association of America voted unanimously to ignore the traditional waiting period for admission to the Hall of Fame and unanimously elected him.

When Eleanor Gehrig died in 1984 she donated that trophy to the Hall of Fame. It and other Gehrig memorabilia are on display in Cooperstown.

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis is known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease. There still is no cure for it. Nor is there an effective treatment to stop it or reverse its progression.

July 4th.  A day we normally observe eloquent words.  Perhaps a few of us today will remember, too, words not only of eloquence but of courage in the face of a life to come and gratitude for the life that had been.

 

Sports: Racing—Tony Stewart Sends a Message: Chase Elliott Wins, Leads

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(SRX)—Drivers in the six-race made-for-TV Superstar Racing Experience Series have given Missouri racing fans an energetic preview of what to expect in three weeks when they race at a local track a few miles south of St. Louis.

Series co-founder Tony Stewart was steaming after the second heat of the weekend race at South Boston, Virginia and told his fellow drivers “Uncle Tony” was “about ready to get a dose of it that they don’t want…I know every dirty trick and got it in my bag…I’m done playing nice with everybody…Anybody who touches me, I’m touching back times five.”

Trans-Am racer Ernie Francis Jr., set off Stewart by bumping him to the inside as both were trying to avoid a spinning Paul Tracy in the second heat.  But there was plenty of other bumping and banging with INDYCAR driver Ryan Hunter-Reay and Tracy bumping each other into the wall and Michael Waltrip getting into it with RHR in another bumping incident. Waltrip and Tracy couldn’t finish the race.

In the final, Stewart bumped leader Marco Andretti several times before getting past him for the win. Andretti later spun out of contention while racing against runner-up Greg Biffle.

Stewart said after the race it’s time for a “dad talk” with the other drivers who have taken some bad habits from their regular series’ to the SRX short-track races. Among other concerns for him is the limited number of cars available for the remaining four races. About half of the cars need significant repairs before they can be shipped out Wednesday for the next race in Stafford Connecticut. The cars are identically prepared for each race.

The SRX show comes to Missouri on July 16th with a race at the I-55 Speedway at Pevely. The track is owned by NASCAR veteran Ken Schrader who will be the “guest” driver for the night.

(NASCAR)—Chase Elliott’s long day’s journey into the Nashville night has given him his second win of the year and boosted his points lead over Ross Chastain.

Elliott had to wait out two interruptions because of lightning near the track—the second delay stretching to more than two hours because heavy rain was included—before speeding into the lead with 39 laps to go and then holding off Kurt Busch by a half-second.

He joins Ross Chastain, Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin and William Byron as two-time winners this year. Elliott stayed out on old tires during the last caution period with seven laps to go. Several challengers gambled that pitting for fresh tires would give them the grip to catch Elliott, but the strategy backfired when the race was restarted with only four laps left, not nearly enough time for them to catch him.

Ryan Blaney, Kyle Larson, and Chastain took the rest of the top-five positions.

Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr., and Kyle Busch led 250 of the 300 laps but were among those who gambled during the last caution while Elliott and Kurt Busch and eight other drivers stayed out. Hamlin, who led a race-high 114 laps, could only get back to sixth. Kyle Busch, who led 54 laps, made it back to 21st and Truex, who led 62 laps, was 22nd.

Lightning in the area stopped the race the first time for more than an hour after the 41st lap. The checkered flag didn’t fall until after 10 p.m., because of red-flag time totaling three hours, eight minutes.

(INDYCAR and F1)—INDYCAR returns to action July 3 on the Mid-Ohio road course. Indianapolis 500 winner Marcus Ericsson head into the race as the championship points leader with teammates Will Power and Josef Newgarden trailing.

Formula 1 runs the British Grand Prix at Silverstone with Max Verstappen, winner of six of the nine races so far this year well ahead in points.

(Photo credits: SRX and Bob Priddy at WWTR)

 

 

 

 

Sports—Racing:  INDYCAR, NASCAR Stars to Race Each Other in Missouri

(Pevely, Mo)—A rare opportunity for Missourians to see Daytona 500 and Indianapolis 500 winners race each other comes up July 16 in Pevely, a small town south of St. Louis on I-55.

Winners of five Daytona 500s and two Indianapolis 500s will be racing in Tony Stewart’s SRX series at the Federated Auto Parts Raceway in Pevely. The field includes winners of five NASCAR championships and winners of four open-wheel championships for Indianapolis-type cars.

The Superstar Racing Experience, created by former NASCAR Champion Tony Stewart and championship crew chief Ray Evernham matches drivers from NASCAR and INDYCAR for a six-race summer series on paved and dirt oval tracks in identically-prepared cars.

Each race also includes a champion driver from the featured local track.

Scheduled to run at Pevely on July 16:

Matt Kenseth  2003 NASCAR Champion; 2009, 2012 Daytona 500 winner

Hallie Deegan, who drives in the NASCAR Truck Series

Tony Kanaan  2013 Indianapolis 500 winner; 2004 Indycar champion

Ken Schrader (guest)  1988 Talladega 500 winner; Started on pole for Daytona 500 three straight years.

Tony Stewart  2002, 2005, 2011 NASCAR champion; 1997 Indycar champion; 2005, 2007 Brickyard 400 winner;

Ryan Newman  2008 Daytona 500 winner; 2013 Brickyard 400 winner

Marco Andretti 2006 Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year; 2020 Indianapolos 500 pole winner; four top-3 finishes

Bobby Labonte  2000 NASCAR champion; 2000 Brickyard 400 winner

Paul Tracy  2003 CART champion

Michael Waltrip  2001, 2003 Daytona 500 winner

Ryan Hunter-Reay  2010 Indycar Champion; 2012 Indianapolis 500 winner

Greg Biffle 2000 NASCAR truck series champion; 2002 NASCAR Busch Series champion; 2005, 2006 Southern 500 winner

Schrader, who owns the Pevely track, helped develop the cars used in the series. He raced in NASCAR’s top series for 29 years and still competes at age 67 in the ARCA series and also on local tracks throughout the country.

The SRX races are televised on Saturday nights by CBS.  This year’s first race, run at steaming hot Five Flags Raceway in Sarasota, Florida, was won by four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves, who had not been scheduled to compete until sponsorship for his car came through on Friday.

.Castroneves won the second of two heat races and finished ahead of local driver Bubba Pollard—who won the first heat race—with NASCAR’s Ryan Newman taking the remaining podium spot.

The second race of the series is next Saturday night at South Boston Speedway in Virginia.

The first four races of the season will be on paved speedways.  The last two races, beginning at Pevely, will be on dirt. The track at Pevely is one-third of a mile oval with nineteen-degree banked corners that usually features various classes of stock car racing.  The absolute lap record on the track was set by current NASCAR champion Kyle Larson in 2020 with a lap of 9.995 seconds (119.94 mph) in a winged sprint car.

(NASCAR.INDYCAR)—Neither of the big series was in action last weekend.  NASCAR is at Nashville next weekend. INDYCAR returns July 3 at the Mid-Ohio Road Course.

(FORMULA 1)—Max Verstappen held off Carlos Sainz in the Grand Prix of Canada, run in Montreal, to pick up his sixth win of the year and build his championship lead to an impressive 175 points.  Sainz, who could close on Verstappen but not get past him, finished less than one-second back.  Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, who has endured a year of struggle and pain, was third after his car—and other F1 manufacturers—got some modifications designed to reduce bounding, or “porpoising” on high-speed runs.

Photo Credits:  SRX Racing; Bob Priddy (Castoneves at indianapolis 2022)

 

Sports: Racing—A million-dollar win; a first win; a painful finish

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(INDYCAR)—Josef Newgarden has won three times this year on the INDYCAR circuit and those three times have produced a million-dollar bonus.

Because he’s the first driver to win an oval race, a street race, and a road course race this year, he has turned a normal win into a big windfall for his team and for his favorite charity.  PeopleReady, an employment services company, sponsors a car for Christian Lundgaard, another INDYCAR driver, offered the bonus to the first driver to win on all three types of courses on the circuit this year.

Half of the money goes to the Team Penske and the other half will be split between SeriousFun Children’s Network and Wags and Walks Nashville, a dog rescue nonprofit.

Newgarden finished about 3.4 seconds ahead of Marcus Ericsson, the Indianapolis 500 winner. Ericsson now has four straight top-seven finishes and has replaced Newgarden teammate Will Power atop the points list. Alexander Rossi, who started from the pole was third, his second podium finish this month and this third straight top-five finish.

Newgarden got the jump on the final re-start. He led 26 of the race’s 55 laps on the Road America course.

INDYCAR is off next week before running at Mid-Ohio on July 3.

(NASCAR)—In the entire 65-year history of NASCAR only five drivers born outside the United States have won a Cup race.  Daniel Suarez finally put it all together to get his first Cup win after 195 starts, pulling away from Chris Buescher to win on the road could win on the road course at Sonoma.

Suarez, native of Mexico, led 47 of the 110 laps and beat Buescher to the stripe by almost four seconds to become the first Mexican driver to win at NASCAR’s highest level. He led the last 26 laps.  Michael McDowell got the third podium position with Kevin Harvick, Austin Cindric, Ryan Blaney, Clay Chastain, Chase Elliott, William Byron and Brad Keselowski rounding out the top ten.

Defending series champion Kyle Larson, who started from the pole, finished 15th after losing a wheel late in the race.

It has been almost a decade since the last victory in the Cup series by a foreign-born driver—Australia’s Marcus Ambrose’s victory at Watkins Glen in August, 2012. It was his second win in NASCAR’s top series. He also won at The Glen a year earlier. Colombia’s Juan Pablo Montoya also was a two-time winner—Watkins Glen in 2010 and at Sonoma in 2007.

Italian Mario Andretti won the Daytona 500 in 1967 and Canadian Earl Ross won at Martinsville in 1974.

Suarez is the fourth first-time winner this year and the 12th different winner in this season. His win increases the pressure on drivers who are 17th and lower in the points.  Only the top sixteen winners and non-winners with enough points will qualify for the playoffs after 26 races. Sonoma was the 16th points race of 2022.

The four non-winners still within the top sixteen are Ryan Blaney, Martin Truex Jr., Christopher Bell, and Aric Almirola. Kevin Harvick is barely out of the top 16 with Tyler Reddick and Austin Dillon next.

One other note: Teammates Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson combined to lead 52 laps, enough to give Hendrick-backed cars more than 100,000 miles led in NASCAR races, the first time in NASCAR’s 75-year history a team has reached that figure.

NASCAR is off next weekend, returning on the 26th at Nashville.

(FORMULA 1)—Defending F1 champion Max Verstappen won the Azerbaijan Grand Prix with teammate Sergio Perez following him across the finish line but two issues competed with the Red Bull team for attention in and after the race.

Red Bull’s closest competitor this year, Ferrari, again had reliability issues with number two driver Carlos Sainz pulling out of the race on the ninth lap with hydraulic failure and the lead driver, Charles Leclerc, sideline by an engine failure eleven laps later.

And Mercedes continues to struggle with the “porpoising” problems that have besieged Lewis Hamilton and George Russell all season long.  Russell salvaged a third place and Hamilton finished fourth but both complained that their cars started bouncing at high speeds. Mercedes has tried to solve the problem of cars bouncing at high speed all season long but still have had no success.

Hamilton complained of bouncing so severe that he was suffering severe back pains on the rough track during the race, which he called “the worst race ever, probably the most painful race I have experienced and the toughest battle with the car I have ever experienced as well.”

(Photo credit: Bob Priddy, Indianapolis 2021)

 

Sports—Racing: Penske Weekend Sweep

by Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(NASCAR)—Joey Logano has begun a new era for NASCAR in the St. Louis region by winning a last laps duel with Kyle Busch at Worldwide Technology Raceway.  The race with the Gateway Arch in view, at a track that almost disappeared eleven years ago after the apparent last NASCAR Cup race on October 23, 2010, marked the decade-long resurrection under owner Curtis Francois.

Francois bought the track two weeks before its grandstands were to be sold for scrap and its grounds cleared to make way for an industrial park for nearby Granite City and has turned it into a center for the major American auto racing series backed by the NHRA, INDYCAR, and now the NASCAR Cup series.

Logano did not get his first lead until the 208th lap of what turned into a 245-lap race, only to give it up to Kyle Busch twenty laps leader on a restart.  But he got another chance after one last yellow flag when he got a push on the restart from Penske teammate Ryan Blaney that put him back in front.  Busch got past him briefly on the backstretch before Logano got under Busch and back into the lead going into the final lap.

He finished 0.655 seconds ahead of Kyle Busch whose elder brother Kurt got between him and Blaney.

The race ended with some hard feelings, mostly caused by eighth-place finisher Ross Chastain, who confessed after the race that he had done a horrible job of driving and kept running into people.  The first one he hit was Denny Hamlin. Who went into the wall in turn two (that’s Hamlin at the wall and Chastain in car #1).  Hamlin’s car was never the same although he soldiered on going fast enough to meet minimum speed requirements. He finished 34th, eleven laps down.  He has indicated there will be retribution in some later race.

Chastain also caused a wreck when he tried to force his way between Chase Elliott (left) and Austin Dillon as they were running just outside the top 12 and forced Elliott to spin in front of the rest of the field.  Elliott got back underway but his day was spoiled. He finished 21st.

Chastain, who knows a racetrack woodshedding from Hamlin and Elliott will be administered in some future race told FOX Sports broadcaster Jamie Little, “I’m supposed to be better than that…I owe half the field an apology. I can’t continue to make the same mistakes. I’ll have to pay for it on the track.”

Logano joins Chastain, Hamlin, and William Byron as two-time winners of NASCAR Cup races this year. Elliott also has a victory this year.

The race was a sellout. Logano discussed events afterwards.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n406_Yz9gbk

(INDYCAR)—While the St. Louis area was celebrating a new beginning, Detroit was seeing an end to INDYCAR racing on the Belle Isle circuit. Penske driver Will Power, who suffered a heartbreaking loss last year, dominated this year’s race to win his 41st career INDYCAR victory.  But he had to hold off Alexander Rossi who launched a late race charge to the front for the second week in a row.

Pit strategy was a factor as Power stopped for tires and fuel only twice while Rossi made three stops. Power made his last stop with 19 laps left in the 70-lap race. He led by almost 16.1 seconds but was on tires that degraded faster than the tires Rossi was using.  He still led by 12.1 with ten to go.  But Power got behind slow-running Jack Harvey, the lead dropped to 7.7 seconds with five laps left, then to 6.5 with three laps left. It was only 2.8 seconds at the start of the final lap and when the checkered flag fell, Power was only 1.0027 seconds ahead.

“I think one more lap would have been really interesting,” Rossi said after the race. “But you’ve got to give credit to (Power’s pit crew) and Will.  That’s hard to do at the end, to hang on.”

Power’s win came a year after he dominated the Belle Isle circuit until the race was stopped because of a crash and his car would not restart before the race resumed.  He called his weekend victory “just redemption from last year.”

The win moves Power into the INDYCAR points lead by three points over Marcus Ericsson, who won the previous weekend’s Indianapolis 500.

INDYCAR is not leaving Detroit, just Belle Isle.  Next year, Power, Rossi and the others will race on a circuit through the streets of the city.

Rossi will be with a new team for next year’s race. He’s leaving Andretti Autosports and has signed with Arrows-McLaren for 2023.

(FORMULA 1)—Formula 1 is getting ready for the Grand Prix of Azerbaijan in Baku. Azerbaijan is a former member of the Soviet Union. It declared its independence in 1991.

(Photo credits:  WWTR—Bob Priddy; Power—Rick Gevers at Indianapolis)

 

Sports:  Racing—Memorial Day Mayhem at Indianapolis, Charlotte, Monte Carlo

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(RACING)—From the glamorous streets of Monte Carlo to the historic oval at Indianapolis, to NASCAR’s longest race in Charlotte, Memorial Day in traditionally auto racing’s biggest day (although the longest days are reserved for LeMans and Daytona 24hour races).  Let’s recap:

(INDYCAR)—Take the entire population of St. Louis (about 304,000 people) and put them into an area less than one square mile and then have 33 cars running 220 mph within that space—-and you have the 2022 Indianapolis 500.

Marcus Ericsson, a native of Sweden running his fourth 500, had the field covered with less than ten of the 200 laps left. And then NASCAR star Jimmie Johnson, a rookie in open-wheel racing’s biggest event, crashed with seven laps to go. Two laps later, the red flag brought the race to a halt so it could finish at speed.

The race resumed at full speed with only two laps left, locking Ericsson into an intense battle with Pato O’Ward, with five former winners—with 9 victories in the 500 among them—in the final scramble behind them.  Ericsson was holding off O’Ward when Sage Karam crashed on the last lap, freezing the field as it came around for the checkered flag.

The two crashes ended late race surges by former winners Tony Kanaan, who finished third in what might be his last 500; Alexander Rossi, who had charged from 20th to fifth at the end; four-time winner Helio Castroneves who had methodically worked his way from 27th to seventh; Simon Pagenaud, who was closely behind Castroneves, and two-time winner Juan Pablo Montoya, who started 30th and crossed the line 11th, less than eleven seconds behind Ericsson.

Twenty-two cars finished on the lead lap within 25.2 seconds of the winner including another former winner, Scott Dixon, who started from the pole, led 95 laps, and seemed able to withstand challenges from everybody else.  Dixon, however, was caught going to fast into the pits for his last stop on lap 177 and had to make a drive-through penalty that put him at the back of the leading-lap cars. He finished 21st.

It was no consolation to Dixon that he broke Al Unser Sr.’s record for most laps led in the 500. He has led 665 laps in his career, breaking Unser’s record of 644. Ralph DePalma, one of the pioneers of the sport, is third on the list now with 612 laps led.  Unser won the race four times. Dixon and DePalma each have only one victory.

Dixon also holds the record for leading the most laps in a 500 (6 times), led 12 times to up his record number of times leading the race to 70, and stayed even with Tony Kanaan for leading the most 500s (15).

Ericsson ran in the top five most of the day but led only 13 laps, the fewest since Juan Pablo Montoya led only nine in 2015.He is the second Swedish driver to win the race.  Kenny Brack won the race in 1999.

Ericsson has a unique history in INDYCAR competition.  He has won three races in the series.  In all three, the race was red-flagged late so it could be finished at speed.

His win brought him $3.1 million, the largest winner’s reward in Indianapolis 500 history, part of a total purse of more than $16-million, the largest payout ever in the event.

The average payout at last night’s victory banquet was $485,000.

One reason for the record purse was the attendance, estimated at 325,000, the first time the Indianapolis Motor Speedway has opened its gates with no Covid restrictions in three years.

Jimmie Johnson, who won four stock car races at the Speedway in his NASCAR days, was named rookie of the year for the 500, adding $50,000 to the $207,900 he earned for his 28th-place finish.

(NASCAR)—NASCAR’s traditionally longest race of the year became the longest race in its history, with Denny Hamlin outdueling Kyle Busch in two overtimes.  The race, a 600-mile Memorial Day tradition, covered 619.5 miles before Hamlin crossed the finish line a mere 0.119 seconds ahead of Busch.

His victory tended to overshadow an epic comeback by Kyle Larson, who had to start from the rear because of unapproved adjustments to his already-damaged car, then had three pit-road penalties that put him at the back again, sun off the track once, had a pit fire and still was leading the race with two laps to go when Chase Briscoe brought out the caution flag and forced the race into its first overtime.

Larson’s luck ran out on the first overtime effort when he became one of seven cars collected in the last wreck of the night. He still managed to bring his wrinkled car home ninth.

The same wreck also knocked Ross Chastain out of the running. He led 153 of the 413 eventual laps and was the next-to-last car on the lead lap, running 15th, when the race came to a merciful end after five hours, 13 minutes and eight seconds. The average speed was only 118.7 mph.

The race included 18 cautions that covered 90 yellow-flag laps.  It was stopped with 54 laps left in regulation when Daniel Suarez got sideways after contact with Chase Briscoe. Chris Buescher’s car was caught up in the wreck and did five carrel rolls through the infield, coming to rest upside down.  It took several minutes to get the car turned over and for him to climb out unhurt.

At the end of the night, seventeen of the 37 cars that started were in the garage area, unable to continue.

(FORMULA 1)—Heavy rain delayed the start of the Monaco Grand Prix just before the green flag fell and tire decisions by the teams trying to deal with wet/dry track conditions contributed to a race described by some as “chaotic.”

At the end of the day, Red Bull’s number two driver, Sergio Perez, became the first North American to win at Monaco since Canada’s Gilles Villeneuve in 1981. The win is his third career F1 victory, making him the winningest Mexican driver in Formula 1 history, breaking a tie with Pedro Rodriguez, who raced in the 60s and early 70s.

The race was a huge disappointment for Charles Leclerc, the lead driver for Ferrari, who started on pole and finished fourth, a setback on his home track. He now trails Max Verstappen of Red Bull by nine points in the championship standings after leading Verstappen by a wide margin in the early part of the season.

Several drivers admitted they were stunned by the crash that took Haas driver Mick Schumacher out of the race. His car crashed into two barriers with a force so hard that the rear wheels, including the transaxle, were torn from the chassis.  Schumacher climbed from the cockpit unhurt, however.

(Photo Credits: Rick Gevers and Bob Priddy)

 

 

 

 

 

 

When a Missourian won the Indianapolis 500

“Put in front or burn it up,” August Duesenberg told Joe Boyer midway through the 1924 Indianapolis 500.

And he did.

Joe Boyer is the only Missouri native to win the Indianapolis 500 although Missouri’s connection to The Greatest Spectacle in Racing is long and varied, stretching from its earliest days to today.  The story of his victory has been equaled only one other time in the 105 runnings of the race.  The 106th edition will be run Sunday.

The race had changed engine rules in 1923, cutting engine size by one-third to only 122 cubic inches.  The average speed of Tommy Milton’s winning car was about 3.5 mph slower than the winner’s speed in 1922.

But new technology powered Boyer’s car in 1924. It was the first 500 that allowed superchargers and the impact of them was immediate.  Motor Age magazine told readers, “The perfected and groomed 122 cu. in. racing cars not only thrilled the ardent admirers of motor car racing with a new and unexpected record for average mileage but brought them to the ecstasy of sheer joy by setting a pace that rolled the first five over the finish line at greater speeds than the old record.”

The eight fastest qualifiers for the race all ran more than 100 mph with Jimmy Murphy’s Miller Special leading the way at 108.037.  Boyer started fourth, the inside position of the second row, in the field 22 cars, at 104.84.

Joseph Boyer Jr., was 34 years old the day of the race. He was born in St. Louis, the son of the inventor of the first successful rivet gun.  Boyer senior helped one of his employees, William Seward Burroughs develop a “calculating machine” in the company machine shop. Burroughs put Boyer in charge of the American Arithmometer Company that then absorbed a competitor.  The Boyer family moved with Burroughs to Detroit when Joseph junior was 15. The company became the Burroughs Adding Machine Company and Boyer senior served as its president until his death in 1930.

The Boyer family was quite wealthy and Joe Junior soon got into boat and car racing. One day before his 29th birthday, Joe Boyer Jr., started 14th in his first Indianapolis 500.  He lasted only 30 laps before his rear axle failed. The next year, he was the second fastest qualifier but crashed out of the race eight laps from the end and finished 12th.  In 1921, he started fourth again but was sidelined by a failed rear axle again after only 74 of the 200 laps. He missed the 1922 race and Differential failure in 1923 left him 18th.

It appeared his fortunes were changing in 1924, at least for one lap. Reporter Clarence Phillips, in the press box, records, “As they pass the starter Murphy, in his gilded chariot, sprigs ito the lead. ‘Look at Murphy,’ I hear someone say excitedly. But Boyer shoots past Murphy like a streak and finishes the lap in first place…” But by the fifth lap he was “out of the immediate picture suddenly.”

A key was sheared in his supercharger. He could still run but not at competitive speeds.  His teammate, L. L. (Lora Lawrence) Corum (on the left), who started 21st because he was a late qualifier despite having the 16th quickest speed, had worked his way up to ninth at the 150-mile mark.  He was fourth at 200 miles.  Just past the halfway mark, the 109th lap, Corum made a pit stop. Boyer had turned his crippled car over to another driver shortly before and Duesenberg ordered Corum out, put Boyer in and issued his famous order.

He was third behind Murphy and Earl Cooper after 120 of the 200 laps. Twenty laps later he was a minute-25 seconds behind Murphy and Cooper. When Murphy popped a tire on the 146th lap and had to pit, Boyer moved to second and started to close the gap on Cooper and was only 52 seconds back at 375 miles.

The lead shrank to only 37 seconds with 100 miles to go, down to 30 seconds with 30 laps left.

And then on lap 178, “Cooper goes into the pit…, Boyer springing into (the) lead and crowding his supercharger for full benefit…Each time the leaders pass the stands now there is yelling…Cooper gains four seconds…”

Twenty laps left and Boyer has expanded his lead to a minute-to seconds.

“Only ten more laps for Boyer. If he has good luck and drives the rest of the way as consistently as now he’ll win handily.”

Lap 195: “’Boyer is increasing his lead. He wants to finish strong. The starter is getting the flags redy. In one hand he has the green flag and in the other the checker.  Boyer is given a big ovation on the next to the last lap. They know he is the winner unless he falls dead or some other calamity occurs.

“The checkered flag is waved in front of Boyer as he comes down the stretch. He wins.”

He finished the race in five minute more than five hours, an average speed of 98.24 mph, four miles an hour faster than the record set two years earlier.  Cooper finished second and Murphy was third.

Boyer and Corum were recognized as the first co-winners in Indianapolis 500 history. In three other races (1911, 1912, and 1923) the starting drivers had relief drivers for part of the race but they got back behind the wheels and finished the race. This was the first time a winning car started with one driver but finished with a second one in control.

The only other time it has happened in race history was 1941 when Mauri Rose relieved Floyd David on the 72nd lap and went on to win the race. Davis is the only driver in the race’s history to win without leading a single lap. Rose also won the race by himself in 1947 and 1948.

Bowyer remains the only driver to lead the first lap and the last lap of the Indianapolis 500 in different cars.

Boyer drove during an era when some tracks were made of wooden boards and had high banks and featured motorcycle as well as automobile races.  One of those tracks was the Altoona Speedway in Pennsylvania.

The annual Altoona Fall Classic, held about Labor Day, attracted the big names in auto racing.  Boyer again was trying to run down Jimmy Murphy when his car blew a tire and crashed into the guard rail at 125 mph.  Boyer was pinned in the car, his legs crushed.  Rescuers got him to a hospital where both of his legs were amputated and he received blood transfusions. But he died on September 2, 1924, four months after he became the only Missouri driver to win the Indianapolis 500.

Motor Age concluded its article about Boyer’s 500 win, “As a result of this race the talk that has been heard heretofore about the maximum speed of the rack having been reached has been dissipated and some of the experts now confidenty believe that more than 100 miles an hour can be maintained for the 500-mile circuit of the famous speedway.”

On the 97th anniversary of Joe Boyer becoming the first (and so far, only) Indianapolis 500 winner from Missouri Helio Castroneves, using an engine about the same size as the one in Boyer’s car, averaged 190.690 mph in winning his fourth Indianapolis 500.

(Photo credits: Corum and Boyer—Bob Priddy, taken at the IMS Museum; all other illustrations are from Motor Age magazine, June 5,1924)