Thursday, October 31, 2013

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Friday, October 25, 2013

BIG DIAMOND GOES WITH DIRTcar SANCTION

MINERSVILLE, PA- October 25, 2013- DIRTcar 358-Modified racing will have a Pennsylvania home on Friday nights next season at Big Diamond Speedway.
Big Diamond has a longstanding tradition of sanctioning its weekly divisions, but the 2014 season will mark the first time DIRTcar Racing has sanctioned a weekly program at the 3/8-mile track in Minersville, which is just off Interstate 81 between Harrisburg and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.
"DIRTcar Racing has a lot of momentum and good people behind it so we're excited to bring it to Big Diamond next year," promoter Jake Smulley said. "I'm looking forward to working with them and seeing how our racers stack up in DIRTcar's points program."

Big Diamond will continue to pay $2,750-to-win for their weekly DIRTcar 358-Modified program, which is one of the top "to-win" purses nationwide for weekly racing.

Big Diamond and DIRTcar management have a reached an agreement that will see the current rules package in place at Big Diamond phased into DIRTcar rules over a period of time, with management from both sides having input in regard to these regulations.

DIRTcar 358-Modified Series rules will remain intact for all Series events.

 This sanctioning will mark the first time a DIRTcar division has run at Big Diamond since Duane Howard won a Super DIRTcar Big-Block Modified Series race there in 2009. Brett Hearn in 2004 and Alan Johnson in 2003 also won Super DIRTcar Big-Block Modified races at Big Diamond. The Super DIRTcar Big-Block Modified Series will make an appearance at the popular facility on Tuesday, July 15, 2014.

"We're looking forward to building a solid foundation in Pennsylvania to continue growing DIRTcar Racing," said DIRTcar's Director of Series & Sanctioning Joe Skotnicki. "There is a lot of history at Big Diamond, and a lot of very talented racers, so we're excited to have the opportunity to partner with them."

Saturday, October 19, 2013

KING OF THE CAN RESULTS

Modified Feature Finish (50 laps): BILLY DECKER ($5,214), Matt Sheppard, Joey Grammes, Brian Weaver, Bobby Varin, Anthony Perrego, Pat Ward, Jeff Strunk, Kevin Hartnett, Mike Mahaney, Bob Henry, Elmo Reckner, Mike Colsten, Frank Cozze, Joey Colsten, Tom McGurrin, Danny Creeden, Nick Rochinski, Mike Clapperton, Craig Hanson, Mike Dougherty Jr., Brian Malcolm, Alan Rudalavage, Bob Trapper, Billy Van Pelt, Tyler Dippel, Chris Wood, Stewart Friesen, Mike Schane.
Did Not Qualify: Brent Wilcox, Steve Wren Jr., Ken Titus, Roy Shields, Adam MacGeorge, C.G. Morey, Shaun Walker, Jeff Schell, Butch Green, Christine Martin, Tommy Meier, Tyler Singleton, Steve Babicek, Richard Smith, Alan Johnson, Jim Mahaney, Justin Holland, Mel Schrufer, Jimmy Davis, Danny Tyler.
Crate 602 Sportsman Feature Finish (25 laps): RYAN OLSOMMER ($1,000), Alex Stanton, Tyler Boniface, Butch Green, Ed Dachenhausen, John Hargrave, Mike Nagel Jr., Josh Keesey, Cory Costa, Bob Buono, Mark Clauss, Jake Dgien, Rich Powell, Dillon Groover, Nick Branning, Jim Britt, Earl Rudy, Kyle Plumstead, Steve Wren Jr., Ray Bliss, Randy Gates, Shelly Stanton, Jamie Cortazar.
Street Stock Feature Finish (25 laps): JONATHAN CARPENTER ($650), Ted Morseman, Paul Harrington, Earl Zimmer, Randy Fox, Matt Spencer, John Hoover, Greg Krooker, Robert Hill, Kyle Stark, Shane Wolf Jr., Chad Stone, Rick Davis, Steve Wren Jr., Rich Green, Eric Boynton, Scott Reagan, Russ Morseman.

R.I.P. TOM HERBERT


Thursday, October 17, 2013

BILLY PAUCH JR (Bruce Thomas photo)

Billy Pauch Jr will be racing modifieds, URC sprint cars and ARDC midgets this coming saturday night at Grandview Speedway!

SYRACUSE 200 WINNER BILLY DUNN (Brent Smith photo)


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

SAXTON SIGNS OFF AT GRANDVIEW!

Saxton Signs Off At Grandview

Concludes 45-Year Announcing Career
By Paul Schaefer, NASCAR
October 9, 2013 - 3:00pm
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Ernie Saxton, the distinguished voice of one of America’s great clay ovals, has concluded a 45-year career behind the mic at Grandview Speedway.
Since 1968 Saxton, 71, of Langhorne, Pa., called all the racing action for generations of fans as the track announcer at the one-third mile oval in Bechtelsville, Pa.
Grandview is operated by the second and third generations of the Rogers family. Forrest Rogers built the track and opened it in 1963, and Saxton started working there in the late 1960s.
Based on a 22-week season over 45 years Saxton announced about 990 Grandview race nights. He said he missed no more than 10 events.
“Three of those nights were to attend White House Correspondents’ Dinners,” Saxton said. “You just can’t pass up those opportunities, and I did get to meet several presidents.”
He met a bipartisan trio of world leaders including presidents Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.
Saxton enjoyed almost every race night he ever announced, and didn’t retire from the booth because he lost enthusiasm for the job.
“Announcing is still fun,” Saxton said. “My back has been bothering me for some time. Climbing the steps to the tower and sitting on a stool behind the microphone for four hours has been taking a toll,” Saxton said.
Saxton said that from the beginning he enjoyed working with the Rogers family.
“Bruce Rogers and I talked about me coming to work for him and I started doing PR and writing press releases for Grandview in the late 1960s. I started out as an employee, but it came to feel like family. I felt appreciated,” Saxton said.
“Ernie always did a great job and played a big part of Grandview Speedway’s success,” said Bruce Rogers, son of the track’s founder and head of the family business. “He got the word out about the track by doing PR in addition to his announcing.”
“He’s been with us a long time and we’re good friends,” Rogers’ wife Teresa said of Saxton. “We’ve vacationed together. “We hate to see him go.”
While his final race as the full-time announcer was on Sept. 14, Saxton will remain available on a fill-in basis and will continue to maintain a weekly presence at the track.
Saxton announced his first race at the Atlantic City (N.J.) Speedway in the early 1960s. He was the publicist for the American Three-Quarter Midget Racing Association. The track announcer wasn’t familiar with the division and asked Saxton, who knew all the cars and drivers, to stand in for him.
“I hadn’t announced a race before and I was shy about public speaking. I was worried everyone would be looking at me. The track announcer convinced me that the fans would be watching the races and wouldn’t even know I was up there in the tower,” Saxton said. “Things were going OK and a side-by side battle for the lead developed. I was excitedly calling the action when a potato bug flew into my mouth. I choked and coughed for most of a lap. By the end of the day I did well enough that I announced another race the following week.”
Saxton and wife Marilyn also operate Ernie Saxton Communications Inc., a motorsports consulting firm. The Saxton’s company will continue to conduct Grandview’s media and public relations efforts and publish the track’s souvenir program, Grandview Groove.
Saxton was a 13-year manager of marketing at Chilton Book Company when he struck out on his own to focus fulltime on Ernie Saxton Communications in 1989. The company publishes Motorsports Marketing News, presents seminars on short track racing marketing and sponsorships, and consults with individual teams on sponsorship sales efforts. Saxton will also continue as columnist for Area Auto Racing News and several other motorsports and mainstream newspapers.
Saxton believes that even in the era of social media, a lot of short tracks today could improve their marketing and public relations efforts.
“It takes more than Facebook and Twitter to market and promote a track. To make it all work, a track needs to practice good public relations,” Saxton opined.
Saxton said the late Jim Hunter, a NASCAR vice president who led NASCAR’s public relations department for years, was the best when it came to PR.
“Jim preached that public relations efforts are built on personal relationships. He was an encyclopedia of NASCAR racing because he was in touch with people at every level including the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series. He could talk with Tony Stewart just the same as he could with any driver at Grandview Speedway.
“He’d pick up his phone and talk to promoters and racers and asked what was going on with them. He’d keep up with non-NASCAR tracks. He always wanted to see the big picture. He always found someone who knew something about whatever was on his mind.”
Hunter passed away two years ago this month. Saxton was among his closest friends.
“My greatest memory of Hunter is from February 2011. I received the Russ Moyer Media Award from the Living Legends of Auto Racing group during Speedweeks. Hunter was battling cancer, but he arrived at the event wearing a tux and went on stage to help present the award. Jim Hunter was an exceptional friend,” Saxton said.
Saxton said his own long-term success in multiple business platforms could not have been accomplished without the partnership and expertise of his wife of nearly 38 years. Their high quality Grandview Groove souvenir program is Marilyn Saxton’s project. Despite Grandview’s Saturday night race night, the next week’s souvenir program is taken to their longtime printer Bill’s Printing in Trenton, N.J. each Monday.
“Our work has gotten a little easier now that we’re both retired from full-time jobs,” Marilyn Saxton said. She was a travel agency consultant for about 25 years. “There are so many things to do and we always manage to make it work.”
Her step-father, Ed Darrell, was a car owner and promoter of the east coast-based American Racing Driver Club, so she’s a lifetime racer, too.

“I’d probably never accomplished anything without Marilyn,” Saxton said. “She’s a complete professional in what we do.”
“It’s been a good life,” Marilyn said. “We’ve seen and done things we never imagined because of Grandview Speedway.”
Her husband agreed.
“It’s been good.”

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

BPG FREEDOM 76 FANFEST (Steve Sabo photo)


JESSICA ZEMKEN

WE HAPPENED TO STUMBLE UPON JZ AND A CREW MEMBER STRUGGLING TO PUSH HER 410 SPRINT CAR INTO THE TRAILER AT THE MILE, SO WE WERE ABLE TO GIVE THEM A HAND!

Monday, October 14, 2013

SYRACUSE HIGHLIGHTS

BPG RACING CLOSE THEIR RACING OPERATIONS

CHAD SINON AND BPG RACING CLOSE THEIR RACING OPERATIONS AFTER LONG SUCCESSFUL EFFORT
BLUE BELL, PA October 13, 2013 . . . “I will miss it, the competition, the friends, the whole aspect of the sport,” said Chad Sinon as he announced that he closing his BPG Racing team operations after many successful years. “We had a great run with a lot of fantastic people involved.”
            Much of the BPG Racing team equipment has been sold and there are people looking at the rest. Everything is for sale.
            “We, my wife (Lauren) and I, have talked about getting out for the last couple of years,” said the 47-year-old Blue Bell, PA businessman. “It comes down to time available and wanting to do other things. We are very much involved with our son’s sailboat racing, and we always want to spend time with the kids. That is very important to us.”
            “The reason we stayed in the sport the last couple of years was because of the great relationship we had with our driver Duane Howard, crew chief Alan Finch and all the great team members. They are all a wonderful group of people to have worked with.”
            Sinon and Howard had a great season at NASCAR sanctioned Grandview Speedway winning nine 358 Modified feature races including the Forrest Rogers Memorial presented by Pioneer Pole Buildings. They also picked up more than $10,000 for winning the American Racer Cup championship.
            Over the years Sinon and his BPG Racing teams, with some very talented drivers, have been able to win titles at Grandview Speedway, Big Diamond Speedway, Bridgeport Speedway, DIRT Southeast Series Tour title, four BPG Racing Freedom 76 races, three Forrest Rogers Memorials, and the list goes on.
            “I have had some of the very best drivers as part of our team and they became like family members,” said Sinon. “Our relationships with Duane seemed to go on forever. It was such a successful combination. Sure we are going to miss it but it is time to devote more time to our family.”
            Sinon and his BPG (Brandon Products Group), headquartered in North Wales, PA, has been a huge supporter of the sport sponsoring many events and teams over the years. He had a great devotion to the sport for more than a dozen years having gotten started at the Penn Can Speedway with his late father.
            As much as Sinon will miss the sport, the sport will certainly miss Sinon and BPG Racing.

SUPER DIRT WEEK FINAL RESULTS

Syracuse 200 Results
Finish
Start
Driver
Laps
Status
Earnings
1
16
Billy Dunn
200
Running
$50,000
2
7
Larry Wight
200
Running
$25,000
3
30
Ryan Godown
200
Running
$15,000
4
11
Tim Hindley
200
Running
$10,000
5
23
Duane Howard
200
Running
$6,000
6
35
Rick Laubach
200
Running
$4,000
7
13
J.R Heffner
200
Running
$3,600
8
6
Carey Terrance
200
Running
$3,400
9
21
Danny Johnson
200
Running
$3,200
10
25
Bobby Varin
200
Running
$3,000
11
20
Jimmy Horton
200
Running
$2,800
12
4
Jeff Rockefeller
200
Running
$2,600
13
10
Tim McCreadie
200
Running
$2,400
14
22
Keith Flach
200
Running
$2,200
15
2
Brett Hearn
199
Running
$2,000
16
8
Rob Bellinger
199
Running
$1,900
17
12
Dave Rauscher
199
Running
$1,800
18
31
Kenny Tremont Jr.
198
Running
$1,700
19
33
Vic Coffey
198
Running
$1,700
20
1
Stewart Friesen
197
Fuel
$1,700
21
29
Dominic Buffalino
197
Fuel
$1,600
22
3
Jimmy Phelps
196
Fuel
$1,600
23
14
Tim Fuller
196
Fuel
$1,600
24
9
Matt Billings
196
Fuel
$1,600
25
15
Billy VanInwegen
195
Fuel
$1,600
26
18
Justin Haers
194
Fuel
$1,600
27
34
Dale Planck
194
Mechanical
$1,600
28
38
Billy Decker
191
Fuel
$1,600
29
41
Peter Britten
191
Accident
$1,600
30
28
Donnie Corellis
191
Accident
$1,500
31
27
Ronnie Johnson
191
Accident
$1,500
32
19
Andy Bachetti
191
Accident
$1,500
33
45
Vince Vitale
177
Brakes
$1,500
34
32
Chad Brachmann
147
Suspension
$1,500
35
37
Eddie Marshall
134
Mechanical
$1,500
36
43
Tim Currier
122
Mechanical
$1,500
37
36
Pat Ward
115
Engine
$1,500
38
26
Alan Johnson
88
Mechanical
$1,500
39
42
Rich Scagliotta
78
Engine
$1,500
40
39
JaMike Sowle
45
Mechanical
$1,500
41
5
Matt Sheppard
42
Mechanical
$1,500
42
44
Eldon Payne
40
Rearend
$1,500
43
17
Tom Sears Jr.
21
Mechanical
$1,500
44
24
Gary Tomkins
19
Mechanical
$1,500
45
40
David Hebert
0
Mechanical
$1,500
Margin of Victory: 8.875 seconds
Time of Race: 2 hours, 42 mins., 58.960 secs
Lap Leaders: Friesen (1-84); Coffey (85-109); Tremont (110-135); McCreadie (136-191);
Friesen (192-197); Dunn (198-200)
Caution flags: 9 for 27 laps; 1 red flag (lap 191)
Provisional starters: Britten, Scagliotta, Currier, Payne, Vitale
Rookie of the Race: Carey Terrance ($100 gift card - JE Pistons)
Pole Award: Stewart Friesen ($1,000 - Pole Position Raceway)
Outside Pole Award: Brett Hearn ($1,000 - Page Trucking)
Teo-Pro Halfway Award: Vic Coffey (Chassis & Body)
Sharon's Toy Hard Luck Award: David Hebert($1,000)
Sharon's Toy Hard Charger: Kenny Tremont ($500)
Sharon's Toy Fifth Place: Duane Howard ($500)
Sharon's Toy 10th Place: Bobby Varin ($500)
Sharon's Toy Lap 51 Leader: Stewart Friesen ($510)
Sharon's Toy 3rd Place at Halfway: Tim McCreadie ($500)
Finall Running Sharon's Toy Compound Driver: Brett Hearn ($500)
Highest Finishing NYSCCA Member: Larry Wight ($100)
Best Appearing Car & Crew: Tim Hindley (Gater Racing News Prize Package)