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Dirt Racing

Macri WIns Thriller at Port Royal Speedway

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Photo: Paul Arch

PORT ROYAL, PA (Pittsburgh Racing Now – May 28, 2022): The final four laps of the feature on the opening night of the Weikert Memorial Weekend at Port Royal Speedway turned into a generational battle between The Hall of Famer, Lance Dewease, and a youngster, Anthony Macri. Macri came out on top after trading the top spot with Dewease no less than five times after the final caution. Two of those lead changes came on the last lap. Danny Dietrich, who led the first twenty-four laps, had a ringside seat for this battle and finished in the third position.

The win was Macri’s second victory against the All Stars Circuit of Champions at the Speed Palace this season, his third of the season on the tour, his fourth of the year at the track, and his ninth overall in the tough Central Pennsylvania area.

Macri broke from his usual pattern of running hard against the cushion in his drive for the win. He made a couple of inside moves on the wily veteran, Dewease to keep him guessing, but the ultimate winning move was classic Macri, flying around turns three and four high, wide, and handsome.

When asked about his late race strategy, Macri said he was trying to switch things up because “Lance (Dewease) is pretty smart and he knows where you are at and he knows how to take the air off of a car.” He acknowledged that either of them could have forced the issue by driving more aggressively, but he added “I have a lot of respect for him and I race people the way that they race me, so to pass him for the win is pretty special.”

Dewease had a slightly different perspective on things. He admitted that he dialed himself out of a possible win by pulling the wing back under the final caution. “I was really good and I messed the car up and I made it a little tight and he got by me. I was able to diamond off the corner and get back by him, but he carried a lot of speed (on the last lap).”

The third driver on the podium, Dietrich, also admitted to a couple of mistakes. “I guess I shouldn’t have gotten off the bottom after the restart,” which came on lap twenty while he was still in the lead. Dietrich pondered whether he could have maintained the advantage by running out front in the clean air before adding “but I was carrying a lot of speed and I went to the top.” That shift in lines may have led to his demise, for he banged the car off of the wall in turn four just before losing the lead to Dewease at the flag stand on lap twenty-five, and then he rapped the fence in turn one trying to regain the lead.

Justin Whittal had the pole as a result of a draw held for the top ten in points accumulated through the time trials and the heats. Dietrich was his wing man. Macri and Steve Buckwalter were in row two, with Dylan Cisney and Tyler Bear in the third. Dewease and Justin Peck were in row four. Brian Brown and Brent Marks were in row five. The sixth pairing was four-time champion and current points leader Logan Wagner and Giovanni Scelzi.

Whittal led the charge into turn one, but his time out front was very short. Dietrich pulled ahead coming through turn two and was scored as the leader of lap one ahead of Whittal, Buckwalter, Macri, Dewease, and Cisney. As the laps clicked away, Whittal started to slide back before tagging the turn one wall and losing a few more positions.

Meanwhile, Buckwalter moved into second while Macri, Dewease, and Peck were fighting for positions three through five. Dewease exerted himself and took control of the situation, grabbing third with a dozen laps in the books. Within the next three laps, both Dewease and Macri passed Buckwalter, who remained in the top five through the first caution, which came on lap twenty.

Three Rivers Karting

On the ensuing restart, the battle was for the lead between Dietrich and Dewease. Dietrich stayed low, in Dewease’s favorite line, and Dewease moved to the middle of the track. After a couple of laps, though, Dietrich went back to the high line and Dewease dropped into familiar territory.

Dietrich bobbled up top in turn four on lap twenty-four, and Dewease got a good run off the inside, nipping Dietrich at the scoring loop. Dewease drove hard into turn one, and Dietrich tried to mount a counter attack, but he banged the boards a bit too hard and wound up losing second spot to Macri.

Dewease seemed to have things well in hand until Buckwalter came to a halt on the front stretch with twenty-six laps completed. That set up a restart with Macri on the tail of the 69K machine.

Dewease got away cleanly, but he could not shake Macri. Macri tried high and low, but each time that he passed Dewease, Dewease was able to come right back. They ran side by side for half of the final lap. Macri had the momentum entering turn three and he surged ahead. As he rode the rim through the final two turns, Dewease charged hard on the inside of turn four, but he came up a couple of car lengths short at the checkers.

After Macri, Dewease, and Dietrich came Marks and Peck. Lucas Wolfe climbed from eighteenth to sixth in the final tally. Cisney, Logan Wagner, Whittal, and Zeb Wise completed the top ten.

Heat winners were Tyler Courtney, Jeff Halligan, Wolfe, and Bear. Bear was making his first start of the season in Tom and Fran Chiappelli’s 98 car. Cory Eliason won the B Main. Dewease was the fastest of the 41 cars that timed in, at 16.156.

Garrett Bard reached a familiar place, victory lane at the Port Royal Speedway. Bard, a frequent winner in the PASS/IMCA 305 Sprint Cars, wasted little time getting to the front in the twenty-lap nightcap. He went from eighth to third on the opening lap and was second soon thereafter. However, he could not overhaul Cruz Kepner for the lead until turn one on lap ten. Kepner fought back a couple of times, but could never regain the lead.

They crossed the finish line first and second, followed by track kingpin Kenny Heffner. Mike Alleman edged out Doug Dodson in the final laps for fourth. Positions six through ten went to Zach Rhoades, Larry McVay, Ian Detweiler, Mike Melair, and Scott Frack.

McVay, Bard, Erin Statler, and Dominic Melair won their heat races. Frack topped the B Main. There were 37-305 Sprints in the pit area.

Port Royal Speedway will cap off the Weikert Memorial Weekend with a $29,000 to win feature on Sunday evening. The Wingless Sportsmen will provide support. There will be a bonus feature to conclude the night for the 410 Sprints, as the balance of last weekend’s race will be spun off at the end of the night.

Dirt Racing

Checkmate for Bishop at Selinsgrove

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SELINSGROVE, PA (April 21, 2024): Austin Bishop dominated the second half of the 410 Sprint Car feature at the Selinsgrove Speedway to score his first victory of the 2024 season. It was the first win for his car owner, Charlie Sorokach, since 2012.

Bishop had to overcome a malfunctioning top wing to garner the victory. He explained that the wing was sliding back on its own and he was having trouble keeping the car straight entering the turns. He was able to fiddle with the controls during a caution period on lap eleven and he got the wing to hold in a preferred position for the remainder of the race. It made a drastic improvement in the performance of the machine.

T.J. Stutts and Bishop brought the field to the green flag. Freddie Rahmer, Jr. and Davey Franek were lined up behind them. Cameron Smith and Devon Borden made up row three. Callum Williamson and Justin Whittal were in the fourth row. Mike Walters, II, and Blane Heimbach were in the fifth row. The sixth consisted of Mike Thompson and Lucas Wolfe.

A handful of racers were unable to make the call, including Danny Dietrich who lost a motor while leading his heat race.

Stutts roared into the lead on the opening lap, with Bishop, Franek, Borden, Smith, and Rahmer following closely. While Stutts and Bishop set the pace, Borden was making progress early. He was third by lap five and second by lap seven. He was gaining on Stutts when the first caution was displayed, on lap eight, for Walters. Who came to a halt in turn one.

When the race resumed, Borden was pressing Stutts for the lead. Indeed, coming off turn two on lap ten, Borden pulled up next to Stutts, but he could not complete the pass. It may not have mattered, for on the next trip around the fast half mile, Borden coasted to a stop with an apparent engine failure. It was the second of the night for him, as he also lost an engine in qualifications.

Three Rivers Karting

It was during this interlude that Bishop made his critical adjustment to the top wing.

Whatever Bishop did to the car was just what the doctor ordered. On the restart, he was hounding Stutts. On lap fourteen, he moved to the outside coming off turn two. He blew by Stutts midway down the backstretch. Bishop dropped to the inside entering turn three to prevent Stutts from attempting a slider to regain the lead, but the precautionary maneuver was not necessary, and Bishop had several car lengths on his adversary.

Bishop had the superior car for the last ten laps of the race. He was able to build a lead of slightly more than four seconds.

Stutts remained in second, with Whittal closing in on him in the final laps. Franek and Rahmer completed the top five. Williamson logged his first top ten since taking over the controls of John Trone’s famed 39. Heimbach, Cameron Smith, Mark Smith, and Wolfe were the balance of the top ten. Thompson was the last car running at the finish.

Heat wins belonged to Borden, Rahmer, and Franek. There was no B Main. Two cars broke the single lap track record in qualifications. Stutts claimed the top honors with a lap of 15.428 seconds. Also breaking the old mark, which belonged to Anthony Macri, was Cameron Smith. His time was 15.509 seconds.

The Limited Late Models and Roadrunners provided support. Their heat races were completed, but the features were postponed to next Saturday due to a broken water main. Scoring heat wins for the Limited Lates were Trent Brenneman and Devin Hart. Scott Dunham, Jr. and Mike Goodwin prevailed in the Roadrunners. The next 410 Sprint Car show on the docket at Selinsgrove Speedway will be the Ray Tilley Classic on May 12. Super Late Models and Roadrunners will also be on the card that evening.

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Dirt Racing

Tim Shaffer Wins Herb Scott Memorial at PPMS

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Tommy Hein

IMPERIAL, PA (April 20, 2024) Aliquippa’s Tim Shaffer started on the pole position and survived several caution flags and restarts to win the Herb Scott Memorial Saturday night at Pittsburgh’s Pennsylvania Motor Speedway (PPMS).

“Boy I earned that one huh,” said Shaffer following the race.  “These wins just keep getting better and better. Herb Scott won a lot of features and I have a long way to go to catch him, but my career went on the road and it became hard to win races. It’s kind of back home racing now for me and it’s a lot of fun.”

Brock Pinkerous and Dave Hess Jr. staged an epic battle over the last several laps with Pinkerous scoring an emotional runner-up finish.

Three Rivers Karting

“Congrats to Tim on the win,” said Pinkerous, who hails from Ellenville, NY. “He’s really good at this track. Him and Dave are legends around this area. It’s really cool to battle with them; they raced me clean and I raced them clean. Even though we didn’t win tonight, this is for my uncle tonight who passed away about a month ago. I hope he’s watching over us tonight, and I really love you uncle Chris.”

“We were really good on those restarts,” said Hess, the 39-year-old Waterford, Pa. driver. “A little tweak to the car and maybe a gear change and we could have had something for the leaders. Once those two (Shaffer and Pinkerous) got rolling, they were a little better than I was.”

Kyle Lukon finished fifth and Logan Roberson rounded out the Top 5.

A Feature (30 Laps): 1. 45-Tim Shaffer[1]; 2. 555-Brock Pinkerous[4]; 3. 44-Dave Hess Jr[21]; 4. 184-Kyle Lukon[5]; 5. 17R-Logan Roberson[19]; 6. 10S-Joe Martin[16]; 7. 36-Cody Dawson[7]; 8. 3J-Jeremy Wonderling[10]; 9. 42-Daryl Charlier[6]; 10. 184C-Justin Chance[13]; 11. 21J-Jim Rasey[24]; 12. 184P-Cole Petrelle[20]; 13. 77-Tom Klein[23]; 14. 57-Charlie Sandercock[11]; 15. 36B-Colby Beighey[15]; 16. 18-Mike Wonderling[25]; 17. 29-Ryan Hare[17]; 18. 60H-Brian Huchko[22]; 19. 9R-Mike Reft[14]; 20. 25-Zachary Kane[9]; 21. 72B-Kassidy Kamicker[18]; 22. 75-Jared Miley[3]; 23. 60-Brandon Burgoon[2]; 24. 14AJ-AJ Miller[8]; 25. 14G-Jake Gunn[12]

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Dirt Racing

Macri Romps in Sterner Memorial; Hare Gets First Career Win on His Birthday

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Lincoln Speedway

ABBOTTSTOWN, PA (April 20, 2024): Anthony Macri made a triumphant return to the Keystone State. After spending a few weeks racing in the Midwest, Macri came back for some top-paying races in his own backyard. Weather claimed the first night of racing, at Williams Grove Speedway, but Macri made up for it by earning $20,000 in the 20th Annual Weldon Sterner Memorial at the Lincoln Speedway. It was his second victory of the season in the Pigeon Hills.

Macri, who was dominant running up near the wall in turns three and four, said “I think running out on the road made me more comfortable running up there, and running at that pace.” He did admit, though, that he did back off a bit in the late stages of the race in order to conserve his tires because this was the longest race he has run this season and he was not sure how the tires would hold up. “I was worried about tire wear. I had to run a good pace to make sure the tires would last.”

The luck of the draw put Macri on the pole for this forty lapper. Next to him was Aussie Ryan Newton. Billy Dietrich and Freddie Rahmer, Jr. were in the second row. Danny Dietrich was scheduled to start fifth, but a magneto problem forced him to pit just as the A Main was about to push off. The car could not be repaired in time to allow him to tag the tail of the field. So, Lucas Wolfe slid over to fifth and Troy Wagaman, Jr. became his dance partner. Cameron Smith and Kody Hartlaub were in row four. Behind them were Kyle Moody and Chad Trout, whose car was carrying the Sterner Cement wing to commemorate the event. Kyle Reinhart and Matt Campbell were in the sixth row.

Macri led Newton and Rahmer Jr. in the opening laps. Wagaman, Wolfe, Billy Dietrich, Moody, Smith, Campbell, and Hartlaub were next in line. A caution on lap three for Cory Haas bunched things up again, but the running order remained unchanged after the green lights came on again.

The first significant move occurred on lap twelve, when Rahmer Jr. worked the inside line to take over second. As Rahmer began his pursuit of Macri, Newton was busy keeping Wagaman and Wolfe at bay.

After a caution on lap sixteen for debris, Wagaman moved ahead of Newton, who struggled to stay ahead of Wolfe. In the second half of the race, Wolfe got stronger. He moved ahead of both Newton and Wagaman.

Macri continued out front, of course. Rahmer Jr. still held second, but Wolfe was closing in on him. Wagaman, Newton, and Campbell were battling for positions in the top five.

The final caution was displayed with seven laps remaining. Macri got away cleanly, and Wolfe resumed his attack on Rahmer Jr. As they contested the second spot, Macri began to pull away.

Three Rivers Karting

At the checkers, it was Macri ahead of Rahmer Jr. by over 2.4 seconds. Wolfe was a close third, followed by Wagaman and Newton. Billy Dietrich rallied in the closing laps to take sixth. Campbell, Devon Borden, Rinehart, and Brandon Rahmer completed the top ten.

Heat winners were Wolfe, Billy Dietrich, Macri, and Smith. Tyler Ross won the B Main. The evening’s fastest qualifier was Rahmer Jr., with a time of 13.768 seconds. He earned a $300 bonus for that accomplishment. Danny Dietrich received the hard luck award, worth $100. T.J. Stutts was the hard charger at plus eight. He, too, received $100 extra.

Ayden Hare will forever remember his sixteenth birthday, as he celebrated the occasion in victory lane after just his fourth 358 Sprint Car race. The teen drove a flawless race, leading wire to wire. “I am at a loss for words, I am so happy,” he said.

Scott Fisher had the pole, with Hare to his right. Behind them were Doug Hammaker and Frankie Herr. Row three consisted of Adam Carberry and Preston Lattomus. Jayden Wolf and Ashley Cappetta were in the fourth row. The fifth belonged to Mike Bittinger and Tyler Ulrich. Dylan Norris and Cody Fletcher claimed row six.

Hare won the race to turn one and he claimed the middle groove as his own. Fisher and Herr were side by side fighting for second, with Hammaker lurking in fourth. Carberry, Lattomus, Wolf, Bittinger, Cappetta, and Norris strung out behind the leaders.

Hare began to pull away from Fisher and Herr as they continued their struggle for second place.

A red flag on lap eleven for Wolf’s flip between turns three and four brought Hare back to the rest of the racers, but the teen had no trouble building his advantage up again in the final nine laps.

Hare, Fisher, Herr, Hammaker, and Carberry were the top five finishers. Bittinger, Cappetta, Norris, Lattomus, and Logan Rumsey were sixth through tenth. Wolf received the hard luck award and Jude Siegel was the hard charger, at plus seven. They each received $250.

Next week, Lincoln Speedway will present another 410 and 358 Sprint car doubleheader. The same two divisions will return on May 4. The World of Outlaws will be in for the Gettysburg Clash on May 8. There will be no racing on May 11, but the speedway will host the Hot Rod Annual for the Eastern Museum of Motor Racing.

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