The Phoenix

Friesen survives 49-lap Melvin L. Joseph Memorial

- By Chris Moore For MediaNews Group

GEORGETOWN, DEL. >> A field of 46 Modifieds filled the Georgetown Speedway pit area on Saturday and after an event-filled 49lap main event, Stewart Friesen survived for a $6,949 payday.

Friesen, of Sprakers, N.Y., bested the 31car field and a race of tire attrition to win the Melvin L. Joseph Memorial in front of a packed house at the Sussex County oval to open the campaign on the Bob Hilbert Sportswear Short Track Super Series (STSS) Fueled By Sunoco.

Friesen edged rival Matt Sheppard to open the STSS Velocita-USA South Region with a Sunoco checkered flag.

With strong winds and bright sun, an abrasive track surface was in place for the opening round of the Velocita-USA South Region presented by Design for Vision and Sunglass Central.

Joseph Watson and Ryan Krachun started on the front row as New Jersey’s Krachun took the lead and had opened a sizable advantage over the rest of the field. However, after a yellow on lap eight, Krachun chose the outside, and Anthony Perrego, in his new Gary Simpson No. 12 STSS South Region ride, gladly took the bottom and took the top spot.

Drivers continued trying to make the top side work, and right around the halfway point, tires began deflating. Pole starter Watson brought out the yellow due to a flat tire; H.J. Bunting and Krachun both visited the pit area to change tires as well. One lap later, following another yellow, Billy Pauch (second), Stewart Friesen (sixth), and Ryan Godown (seventh) all went to the pit area on lap 25.

Things began to look like the ‘Blast at the Beach’ from last August with Anthony Perrego and Craig Von Dohren running first and second. However, they both fell victim to the flat tire wrath shortly after. By lap 29, all but six cars had been in the pits.

After Friesen’s tire change, he was able to pick spots off one-by-one, combined with overtaking drivers who went to the pit area.

By lap 30, Friesen’s Halmar Internatio­nal-backed DKM No. 44 was back to the lead.

“It’s a weird deal when it comes to a tire game like that,” Friesen said, reflecting on his ascent through traffic. “It wasn’t an artistic success, but we got the win and we will take it. I was definitely nervous about making it to the end.”

On lap 33, defending STSS Halmar Internatio­nal North Region driver Billy Decker flipped on the backstretc­h. At that point, STSS and Georgetown officials opted to offer teams the opportunit­y to refuel due to the amount of caution laps run.

Following the fuel stop, Matt Sheppard and Ryan Watt began to climb their way through the field, eventually getting to second and third, respective­ly, within the final five laps.

Sheppard and Watt chased Friesen across the line at the finish.

The win for Friesen was the 13th of his career with the Short Track Super Series.

“Stew is too good; he’s not going to mess up,” Sheppard said. “We threw everything at him that we could. We just ran out of tires.”

Sheppard had led the race at the lap-27 mark prior to giving it up due to a flat tire.

The defending winner of the Melvin L. Joseph Memorial race, Boyertown’s Watt started 18th, climbed fifth, got a flat, and drove all the way back for a third-place finish.

“We got to third, I thought we had something for those two (Friesen and Sheppard), but we ran out of tires and I just had to hang on,” the Boyertown driver said.

Billy Pauch Jr. of Frenchtown, N.J., nursed the Pascual Motorsport­s No. 3 to a fourth-place finish, edging Milford, Del.’s Jordan Watson, who recovered from his own tire misfortune to finish fifth in the family owned No. 1J.

Jeff Strunk of Boyertown, drove Glenn Hyneman’s Keystone Racing No. 126 from 29th to finish sixth, earning the $249 cash Hard Charger from Ad-Art Sign Company and a $50 VAHLCO Wheels certificat­e. Duane Howard of Oley, Pa., in Norm Hansell’s No. 357 finished seventh, followed by Craig Von Dohren of Oley, Pa., in the Dick Biever No. 14s; David Van Horn Jr. of Phillipsbu­rg, N.J., in Fred Vahlsing’s No. 323ov; and Sportsman graduate Alex Yankowski of Throop, Pa.

Sheppard was the Beyea Custom Headers Fast Timer at a lap of 19.213 seconds.

Heat winners were Sheppard, Bachetti, Krachun, Van Horn and Von Dohren. Wade Hendrickso­n, Ryan Godown and Mike Gular took the consolatio­ns.

Adam McAuliffe of Broadalbin, N.Y., put his name on the Georgetown Speedway win list, taking home the $1,490 top prize to open the six-race STSS Crate 602 Sportsman South Region. McAuliffe’s win came over a packed field of 53 Sportsman on hand for the opener.

Howard takes Sunday matinee

Following the war of tire attrition that took place Saturday night, many drivers and fans wondered what Sunday afternoon would bring at Georgetown Speedway.

The track crew at Georgetown answered the call and an outstandin­g daytime racing surface was prepared for the Sunday matinee, which had been postponed by rain from Friday night.

Oley, Pa.’s Duane Howard and the Norm Hansell Motorsport­s team continued their affinity for the Georgetown oval, topping the 30-lap Sunoco SmallBlock Modified event on Day No. 2 of the Melvin L. Joseph Memorial weekend. Howard earned $4,049 for his efforts in front of a healthy Sunday afternoon crowd.

Howard launched off the pole for the main event, but his victory was far from easy.

Howard led the field to the green flag. Fellow Oley, Pa., driver Craig Von Dohren was on the gas early. Von Dohren moved from his fourth starting position to second on the first lap before the yellow flag fell. On the ensuing restart, CVD took the lead from the outside and the chase was on from there.

“Racing through the traffic was really fun,” Howard said of the intense laps on the semi-banked half-mile oval. “We had a really good track to run on today.”

On the ensuing restart attempts got interestin­g. First, the problems occurred in row two, where Pauch Jr. and the Richie Pratt Jr. made contact, sending Pauch Jr.’s car over the edge of the track and outside the top-10.

Howard and Von Dohren then battled each other hard with Howard losing spots and showing displeasur­e with longtime rival CVD. However, due a spin in the back of the field, the lap and positions lost were nullified.

Howard powered into the lead on the next restart with 13 laps to go and was never headed for the remainder of the distance.

“It’s nice to get a win early,” Howard said afterward. “This team is poised for a really good year. I have to thank Norm (Hansell) for providing this equipment.”

Von Dohren’s Dick Biever-owned No. 14s, which had shown signs of smoke at times in the second half of the race, held on for second spot followed by Pratt of Woodbury Heights, N.J., in a solid effort for the Daniel Sommeling No. 51 team. Returning to the family owned No. 71 for the day, David Van Horn Jr. of Harmony, N.J., snagged a fourth-place result, with Frank Cozze of Wind Gap, Pa., completing the front five.

 ?? RICK KEPNER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Top 3 finishers Ryan Watt, left, Matt Sheppard, second from left, and race winner Stewart Friesen, right, pose for a photo after the STSS feature at Georgetown (Del.) Speedway last weekend.
RICK KEPNER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Top 3 finishers Ryan Watt, left, Matt Sheppard, second from left, and race winner Stewart Friesen, right, pose for a photo after the STSS feature at Georgetown (Del.) Speedway last weekend.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States