August 14, 2010 - Waterford, CT - (Saturday - Wings and Wheels
50)
Winner Chris
Perley (center) in Waterford Speedbowl Victory Lane Saturday night.
Perley is joined by second place Joe Scanlon (left) and third
place Dave Shullick, Jr (right). - Photo By Jim Feeney
CHRIS PERLEY IS TWO FOR TWO
AFTER WATERFORD ISMA 50
Waterford, CT –
“I’d rather be lucky than good,” said Chris Perley after his
Waterford Speedbowl win on Saturday night. It was a race he probably
should not have won. But, when you consider Perley’s achievements
over the years, the words luck and good are used together not as an
either/or. The Waterford ISMA 50 went straight green for 36 laps
over a time of 8+ minutes before a stop occurred for a bad wreck
that bunched the field. The restart set up an intense torrid battle
out front between Mike Lichty and Lou Cicconi that was a heart
stopper. Chris Perley was settling in for a third place finish when
on lap 44 the 84 and 10 came together off four, sending one into the
first turn wall and one into the infield, both heavily damaged.
After the cleanup and the speculation began as to what happened to
the front-runners, but the race was not over. For the remaining
seven laps, Perley pulled away from now second place runner Joey
Scanlon, to claim his second feature win in as many nights. He
became only the second repeat winner this ISMA season.
Perley jumped from
his Vic Miller 11 in front of the large, vocal cheering crowd, and
commented, “When Louie and Lichty were battling I really wasn’t in
there. I was trying to creep up on them and getting there was taking
me too long. I would have been proud to finish third to either one
of those guys and second to either one. They were putting on a great
race. I really don’t know what happened up there.”
He continued, “I
was more worried about when I almost spun myself out over there in
four early in the race. I don’t know how I saved that one. Then
when Vern hit, that was scary. I thought I was going to be in that
one. I was on the outside of the 88 when Vern hit the wall and
bounced back towards me. I lifted when he hit and then got on it
hard because he was coming at me. I just skipped him with my right
rear. That was lucky. We had a couple close calls, but we finished.
The crew just puts a car together that keeps on going. It’s awesome
all you guys came out here tonight. Looks like we have a packed
house. Hope we put on a good show for you. We couldn’t do it without
you and all the sponsors obviously. I love Waterford and love coming
here.”
Finishing second in
his best run to date in the Budnick 88, Joey Scanlon said of his
first podium finish, “We had a really good car. The crew did a
fantastic job putting a great car underneath me. I could put it
anywhere on the bottom. We had a really good run and we needed that.
It was really close out there when Vern hit. That was scary. I’d
like to thank all my sponsors – Eddie Shea from Shea Concrete
Products, Harrington Paving and to all the fans who support us; the
whole crew, car owner Bruce Budnick. We had one hell of a good time
tonight!”
Dave Shullick Jr.
admittedly was a little surprised to be third. “It was a good run.
We were just tight. We had a good car that was wicked tight. It
screwed the right front tire up from pushing so bad. We kind of
salvaged a third tonight, but it was probably a fifth place car.
We’ll just take what we got and move on.”
Ohioan Rich Reid
was back driving the Ohio-based Lehnert 92 and he took advantage of
his pole-starting spot to grab the lead. From the moment the green
flag dropped, there was no eye blinking as the lightning-fast pace
on the “Bowl” did not stop until fourteen laps from the end.
Charging very
quickly up from eighth spot was previous Waterford victor Mike
Lichty evidentially ready to pick up his second straight. He was by
Reid out back on lap six to take the lead. Reid, Dan Lane, Scanlon,
Shullick and Seitz tried to follow Lichty but Mike was on a mission
and fled.
On lap 10 the
aforementioned incident for Chris Perley occurred. The 11, deep in
the pack, came off four almost did a 360, corrected, drove through
some grass and was back on the pack before anyone thought of
dropping the yellow. This move alone probably helped his cause later
in the race.
Lichty continued
well out in front of Reid and Scanlon, but eyes were on the 10 and
11 who both appeared to be moving well through traffic. By midway,
Cicconi had put the Wentworth 10 into second ahead of Scanlon who
now had Perley at his back door. Reid, Shullick, Seitz, Wood and
Lane were next in the lineup.
At lap 35, Lichty
was slowed a bit by traffic but still had several lap cars between
his 84 and “Liquid Lou”. As Cicconi was moving by one of those lap
cars, Vern Romanoski, suddenly was into the second turn wall hard,
bouncing off that wall and out into the middle of the track. A quick
red dropped as cars, like Perley and Scanlon, just missed being
victims in the incident. Vern’s car was heavily damaged and
flatbedded off the track.
On the restart,
Cicconi now had a clear shot at the leader. Game on! The 10 pulled
outside of the 84 as the green fell and the duo brushed here in
four, continuing on. The leaders went at it all around the track,
sometimes side by side, sometimes nose to tail, but always amazingly
close considering the speeds. Perley, while the two battled, was
able to close up the gap a little and some speculated that the
master of the game would have the battle in front of him play into
his hands. On lap 44, it did just that, but not exactly the way
Chris had planned.
From his catbird’s
seat he described the scene in front of him. “I got up to third and
Cicconi and Lichty were having a heck of a fight up there. Cicconi
got on the outside of him once and they touched a little bit through
four. Then Lichty overdrove into one and Cicconi got under him. Then
I don’t know what happened in four. I know they touched but I don’t
know whether some one turned in or what. They usually race pretty
clean. They race hard, but clean. I just don’t know what happened.”
The second red of
the night dropped on lap 44 and the cleanup began. Later as the 84
was being lifted into the PATCO trailer, Mike described the incident
from his point of view, “It was a racing deal to start. Louie was
clearly quicker than me. He was on the outside of me a couple times
in one and two there. At times I was loose off, but I was tight in
the center. So I was kind of washing up the track. He was on the
outside of me and I had a whole bunch of wheel to it and I washed up
into him. I got into him. We were racing hard, banging some wheels.
When he cleared me down low or thought he cleared me, I probably
still had half a car length in there. He started coming up and at
that time I realistically should have backed out of there a little
because he was quicker and he thought he had the spot clear. It’s
unfortunate. I don’t wreck equipment. We definitely had a top three
car tonight and now we’re rolling it into the trailer on a dually. I
feel bad for Louie. But, again it’s a racing deal. We’ll go on to
Oswego and see what happens there.”
Unfortunately, the
obviously unhappy Cicconi had taken off right after the accident and
had left the speedway for his Aston, PA home, before his view could
be recorded. Car owner Rick Wentworth was able to give a brief
synopsis of what his driver had said before he left. “He (Lichty)
hit me three times - ran me up in the front stretch once, maybe
twice. Then when we got side by side, he actual turned into me and
put me in the fence.”
Perley gave his
thoughts later in an interview. “We still had seven laps to go. But
I didn’t figure I’d end up winning. second at best. The top three is
what we always shoot for and I would have been very proud to finish
third. Tonight we waited it out and we were the lucky ones. Two
wins, two nights. Yes, it’s a good start. We have missed a couple
races but I knocked the rust off last night and came back with a win
tonight. I’ll take it.”
Photos and videos
may allow a better assessment of the unfortunate incident with
Lichty and Cicconi, but nothing will change the outcome. What might
have been a fourth Waterford ISMA win for Cicconi or a second for
Lichty, turned out to be a third for Perley.
At the green for
the remaining laps, Perley was now the leader followed by Scanlon,
Shullick, several lap cars, then Ben Seitz and Russ Wood, Dan Lane,
Summers, Rich Reid, and Bob Bond.
And that’s the way
they crossed under the checkers at the finish.
Fourth place
finisher Wood was content with a second top five in two days. “The
car was pretty good. But, the other guys were a lot better. It was
tough racing in traffic tonight. The lap cars were hard to pass for
me. Those guys were running hard too. We just did what we could.
It’s been a good weekend for us – second and a fifth. We’ll take
it.”
Seitz, who has
shown marked improvement over the past 4-5 ISMA races, was happy
with his progress. “It was a good run. The car is getting better and
better each week. We had a tough night last night, but tonight is a
different night and we had a good car. Again I’d like to thank my
sponsors – S.M. Lorusso, Lorusso Heavy Equipment, Cape Cod
Aggregates; my crew, my wife, my parents, Bucky, who is not here
this weekend, my brother, and my car owner – everybody put a lot of
work into this weekend. Thanks also to R&R motors – the motor is an
excellent piece and it’s just a matter of getting it on the
pavement. I’d also like to thank Rollie Lindblad who built the car.
I’m really happy the way this race came out.”
Summary ISMA Event
#10
August 14, 2010
Heat 1: Mike Lichty,
Chris Perley, Rich Reid, Joey Scanlon, Eric Lewis, Jeff Locke,
Justin Belfiore
Heat 2: Ben Seitz,
Russ Wood, Lou Cicconi, Bob Bond, Jamie Timmons, Bobby Haynes Jr.
Heat 3: Dave
Shullick Jr., Danny Lane, Robbie Summers, Dave Duggan, Vern
Romanoski, Eric Emhoff.
ISMA WATERFORD
Wings and Wheels 50 1. Chris Perley (11), 2. Joe Scanlon (88), 3.
Dave Shullick Jr. (61), 4. Ben Seitz (17), 5. Russ Wood (29), 6.
Danny Lane (97), 7. Rob Summers (35), 8. Rich Reid (92), 9. Eric
Lewis (28), 10. Bobby Bond (25), 11. Jeff Locke (37), 12. Dave
Duggan (51), 13. Jamie Timmons (27), 14. Mike Lichty (84), 15. Lou
Cicconi (10), 16. Bobby Haynes Jr. (44), 17. Vern Romanoski (5), 18.
Justin Belfiore (98), 19. Eric Emhoff (2).
Scroll Down for ISMA
Waterford Speedbowl August Racing Action Photos 8/14/10 - By Jim
Feeney:
Two fine runs were
put in by these competitors. Rich Reid in the Lehnert 92 fights with
Joey Scanlon 88. Scanlon held on for a second place finish. Reid
would drift back a little to finish eighth. - Photo By Jim Feeney
Chris Perley 11
goes by a strong running Dan Lane 97, on his way to chase down the
leaders. Perley would “luck” into the win and Lane would finish
sixth. - Photo By Jim Feeney
Chris Perley 11
takes the high road out of the forth turn to pass Dave Shullick Jr.
Then it’s his turn to try and play catch up with Lichty, Cicconi and
Scanlon. - Photo By Jim Feeney
Lou Cicconi 10 goes
by Joey Scanlon 88 for second and tries to chase down the leader,
Mike Lichty. - Photo By Jim Feeney
Dave Shullick Jr
battles with by Ben Seitz 17 for a podium finish. Shullick would get
it with a third and Seitz finished fourth. - Photo By Jim Feeney
It looked like
this would be the battle for the feature win between Mike Lichty 84
and Lou Cicconi 10. They battled side by side for several laps,
until they came together on lap 44 and both crashed out of the race.
- Photo By Jim Feeney
Near the end of
the feature Russ Wood 29 tries to pick up a position from Ben Seitz
17, as the race on the front straight with Jamie Timmons. - Photo By
Jim Feeney
Late in the race,
Rob Summers 35 races Dan Lane 97 down the front straight. Lane was
able to hold Summers back to finish sixth, Summers was seventh. -
Photo By Jim Feeney
Chris Perley in Victory Lane at Waterford making it
an ISMA two for two for the weekend. - Photo By Jim Feeney
Scroll Down for ISMA
Waterford Speedbowl August Racing Candid Photos 8/14/10 - By Jim
Feeney:
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More 2010 Race Results and
Photos |