Though the conspiracy theorists certainly suggested that the points race in the PASS North Series was manufactured through a controversial call at Beech Ridge Motor Speedway a few weeks ago, Ben Rowe still survived to win his series-record 4th championship.
In a race won by Cassius Clark at White Mountain Motorsports Park on Sunday afternoon, Rowe finished 5th to lock up the title. Rowe earned the title by just 18 points over father Mike Rowe, who finished 2nd to Clark. Trevor Sanborn was 3rd and Johnny Clark was 4th.
Ben Rowe had 2/3 of his points lead wiped out with a penalty for rough driving at the D.J. Equipment 300 -- a race his father won to set up the championship showdown on Sunday.
Though it was Rowe's 4th title, it was his 1st while driving for Richard Moody Racing.
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I've been critical of so-called retirement tours in the past in the Nextel Cup Series (see: Mark Martin, who still hasn't retired, not really, and Bill Elliott, whose happy to hop into a car whenever some team needs a "past champion's provisional" starting spot), but I'm a big fan of the way Dale Jarrett plans on going out.
He's going to run the Bud Shootout (Or the Coors Light-ning Dash, maybe? NASCAR can feel free to use that name if they want, free of charge...), the 1st 5 points races and then the All-Star Challenge at Lowe's Motor Speedway in May. After that, he's going to give the seat of the No. 44 UPS Toyota over to David Reutimann.
An All-Star race is a great way for this former champion, and a solid ambassador for the sport, to go out. I'm just keeping my fingers crossed that Jarrett doesn't pull a Martin and advertise a big farewell tour (complete with $30 hats and t-shirts that the fans gobble up) and then change his mind.
Not that someone isn't entitled to changing their mind.
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I finally rode in a pace car, and, I've got to say, even Mr. Cynical himself walked away fairly impressed.
For my son's 4th birthday, I took him to the Long John Open at Unity Raceway. Part of that day included a ride in the pace car before the Teen feature. And, yeah, we almost fell out of the passenger seat when the car whipped off turn 4 and into the infield to start the race.
Fantastic.
And, 50 mph looks a lot slower when you're sitting in a press box. No wonder guys get hooked on this racing game...
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For that Long John Open, the track should be commended.
After a disappointing season of car counts perilously close to single digits for other Super Street open competitions, a full field of 30 cars showed for the Long John. It just goes to show that while racetrack after racetrack may have a hard time drumming up new interest in its offerings, tradition still holds people's attention.
When it comes to racing in central Maine, the Long John, now 19 years in the books, remains an event people want to be part of. It's that one last time on the track, and it's that one last time to go camp out for a weekend somewhere.
It may have been bigger and better in its heyday, but it's still a pretty good day of racing just the way it is now. And, 60 degrees under sunny skies on an October afternoon never hurts anything.
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The guy with the Nextel Cup hauler ought to win the PASS Modified championships, else it just wouldn't look right at all.
Chris Staples claimed his 2nd Modified title in as many years on Saturday in the 40-lap division by finishing 6th in a 50-lap "extra distance" feature at WMMP. Jason Taylor won the race.
Staples' teammate, Mark Lucas, landed 2nd in the final standings.
After Mike Fowler beat Matt Lee in the 100-lapper that night for the PASS Outlaw Late Models, Jimmy Rosenfield was named the division champion.
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Is it just me, or are we seeing the Jeff Gordon of the late 1990s, the one who couldn't lose no matter what he did?
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Oh yeah, and not that anyone cares, but it's awfully wrong to wait 5 hours for a game to be decided -- living and dying with every pitch -- only to have Eric Gagne give it away.
Hard not to remember how excited I was when the Sox got him at the trading deadline. Now, though, I'm wondering if we'll see him in another game (meaningful or otherwise) in a Boston uniform.
6 comments:
If you want to go for a fun ride in the pace car hop in some day with Racin Ron at OPS.I was riding with him one day a few years back.Were turning a few hotlaps to blow the speedy dry off the track. In back of us a whole feild of pro-stocks. Frank Snow was playing bumper tag with us at the same time.Super fun.
32 super streets started ....and would've been more if Terry Merrill hadn't detonated in practice. Didn't I have "fun" scoring that one.....
I can't find the Unity Raceway results posted anywhere, not even on the track's Web site.
Or am I looking in the wrong places?
Mike - I will tell you what I can remember.
Teens - Ricky Palmer, last lap pass on #14.
Mini - 50 Mike Hopkins
Super Streets - Brad Bellows, Rj Austin, Allen Moellar, ?, Dodge, Josh St.Clair
LMS - Josh St. Clair started last in a new car he had never sat in and came to the front in 15 laps and beat Grampa Dave. 15 Frank Moulton was third, Joe Allard fourth and I think Deane Smart 5th. The St. Clairs was 1-2-3 for a while until distributor issues took Puncin out of contention.
Hope this helps
Stacy Brown
Hmmm... going into Sunday's PASS action Ben led his father by just 13 points (thanks to some generous calls at Beech Ridge).....
They each won their heat.... Mike got 218 pts for his second place finish +5 for his heat win which = 223 for the day.. Ben got 212 for finishing 5th + 5 for his heat win = 217...
Thus his dad gained 6 points Sunday...
Meaning Ben won his 4th chamionship by a mere 7 points....
Of course if there were no "in the neighborhood" call or the caution had come out when Mike mugged Berry at the Ridge and he was sent back like it would have been had the shoe been on a lessor foot, it would not have been nearly that close!....now would it?
Don't you just hate it when "conspiracy theorists" can compile, add and subtract points correctly too!
Just rubbin yah Travis...
Hehe!
You know what? I did the math backwards in my head.
I guess that's what happens when I stay up until 1:30 in the morning to watch the Sox blow it.
Good work, Norm.
TB
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