Saturday, July 23, 2011 - Airborne Speedway (NY) - (ISMA 50)
ISMA top three at
Airborne Speedway, third place Mark Sammut, winner Ted Christopher
and second place finisher Rob Summers. - Photo By Jim Feeney
TED CHRISTOPHER
NOTCHES THIRD ISMA CAREER WIN AT AIRBORNE SATURDAY NIGHT
Plattsburgh, NY –
Ted Christopher, long known for his exploits and achievements in
modified and full-bodied race cars, is beginning to make his mark in
the ISMA winged supermodified class. Before this year, the
Plainville, CT driver had picked up two previous wins in only two
previous supermodified outings that spanned a 12-year period of
time. This year he decided to make the supers more than a once a
year, once a decade outing. Saturday night at Airborne Speedway, he
put the Clyde Booth 61 into the lead around Rob Summers on lap 21
and never looked back. And, he’s just learning the cars and the
tracks that ISMA races on. His third-career win came at a track that
he’d wanted to race on too which made it all the better.
“ Airborne is such
a nice place. I’ve wanted to race here for a while. I’d come up
here and race every week if it weren’t so far. I’d really like to
thank Clyde Booth for putting up with me in this. We ran last night
at Oswego and were a little disappointed. Neither one of us ran as
good as either of us wanted to. It gets a little disappointing, but
he stuck with me. I don’t really know these cars that well. That
makes trying to relate to him what to do hard. But, he gave me a
great car tonight. So I really have to thank Clyde and Susan, my
friend Donnie, Larry the tire guy, and just everybody on this team
who helps out - VP Fuels, Marollo Motors, C&R Racing and the
Driveshaft Shop.”
Summers, whose
Holbrook 35 had struggled with some major problems at Oswego which
carried over to Airborne earlier in the afternoon, showed a strong
run out front before falling to Christopher.
“We had a good car
tonight. We were just a little too tight in the center there and
Teddy had a real good car. I can’t thank my team enough. They worked
their butts off all day - Brian, Jerry, and the whole JWJ team
worked nonstop from the time we got here from Oswego until the heat
races. We struggled with a problem that kept us out of warm-ups, but
the guys finally got it just before racing started.”
Mark Sammut was
behind TC and Summers for more than half the race but just couldn’t
catch up to the duo in the distance. “We had a good run until we got
into third. We started going away on both ends. The tires were worn
out. We weren’t as good as we were at the start for sure. I think I
would have had a better chance at catching them if that last yellow
hadn’t come out. I was making time on Rob – not a lot and I would
have still had to get by them. Hey considering how the rest of the
season has gone so far, we’ll take a third and fifth this weekend.
We’ll be heading for Ohio next week to the Hy-Miler. It’s neat to
travel to all these tracks in different places. That’s what makes it
fun and that’s what makes it ISMA. Hopefully we can get the car a
little bit better and maybe we’ll have a shot at next weekend.”
Chris deRitis and
Danny Lane sat on the front row of the Della Auto Group 50-lapper
and it was Lane grabbing the initial lead. But, Rob Summers only let
Danny lead three circuits before he took over on lap four. Summers
was able to move quickly away as Lane and deRitis held off a
charging pack of hungry supermodifieds.
Yellow fell on lap
15 for a Rich Reid spin with Reid pulling the 92 pit side and out
for the night. Previous night’s winner, Chris Perley, also left the
speedway for a quick pit stop.
Summers took off on
the restart with Lane in second. deRitis had fallen to Christopher
on the green, moving into fourth ahead of Sammut, but another yellow
flew just two laps later.
Just into lap 16,
Russ Wood came off turn four, but unfortunately, his rear tire flew
off and raced ahead of him into turn two, causing a melee behind
which would claim Jamie Timmons and Dave Duggan. Said the 2010 ISMA
champ Wood later,” The axle tube broke .. just sheared off. It
happens now and then. Then it’s all over.” Timmons and Duggan were
out for the night.
Pitting on the
cleanup were both Chris Perley and Mike Lichty, both struggling with
their cars. They would both return to sit at the tail of the field.
Both were not happy with the way the night and race were going. They
would be less happy when it was over.
Back in action,
Summers was out front but Christopher got the jump on second place
Lane and was heading for the 35. On lap 20, Christopher made a move
under Summers out back and claimed the lead as the clock ticked to
21. Summers tried to stay with TC, but the silver 61 was in command
now as Summers and then Sammut ran a distance from each other in the
top three.
The intense action
was just behind the top trio as Danny Lane, deRitis, Jeff Locke, who
had set a new track record earlier in the day of 13.867, Timmy
Jedrzejek and Ben Seitz were running precariously close, at times
three wide, each trying to gain top five spots.
The final race
yellow slowed the action on lap 31 when the 18 of Dan Bowes spun in
4. This bunched the field up but Christopher didn’t waste any time
fleeing the guys behind on the restart. Sammut was able to close up
the gap on Summers but that battle behind got even hotter. Lane
still held off deRitis but Timmy Jedrzejek was able to get Locke to
move into sixth, leaving Jeff to fend off Seitz.
On lap 35, a rare
sight took place. Chris Perley pulled off the track and out of the
race. Chris later replayed his night. A problem that actually had
been recurring and even had been happening in his Oswego win, had
not gone away. “We thought we had a motor issue. We changed motors
today because of that and now it turns out it’s not the motor, it’s
the fuel system. We can’t find it and it’s getting progressively
worse. So besides the car being a little too loose out there, every
single time I got a car length on somebody, I’d loose two car
lengths because the motor would fall on its face. I was just playing
catch up. I felt that there was no sense in risking the car by
trying to make up ground where I shouldn’t. So, I decided we should
pull it in and fix it. I hate doing that but I didn’t want to wreck
the car.”
Christopher was
making a home for himself on the Airborne oval as the race end
loomed ahead. With five to go, it was Christopher, Summers and
Sammut but that exciting battle behind just heightened between Lane,
deRitis, Jedrzejek, Seitz and Lane. And, it lasted until the
checkered flew.
As Christopher took
the checkered well ahead of Summers and Sammut, rookie deRitis was
able to grab fourth just ahead of Timmy J. to complete the top five.
Newcomer to the
supermodified deRitis was pleased with fourth, his best finish to
date. ‘My run went very well. Starting on the pole made it very
interesting for me. I really wanted to get out in the lead as quick
as possible. I knew I was probably going to fade back. Everyone was
really quick and this being only my fourth race, made it pretty
hard. Racing out with the big guys made it fun. Following them,
learning their lines, seeing how far to drive into the turns, really
taught me a lot. Halfway through the race I really started to get
tired. But, I kept my composure up and got a fourth place finish. It
was a lot of fun tonight and I learned a lot.”
Timmy J, new to the
Soule 32 team and new to a lot of the ISMA tracks this year, added a
fifth to his repertoire of finishes of a fourth and a sixth in the
four races he’s run to date. Said the Independence, Ohio driver,
“One spot better than last night. That’s good. We had a good car. We
were just not as good as the other four. But, we had a good race.
We’re building here. And, we’re excited about going to Sandusky next
week to Hy-Miler to see what we can do back on my home turf. It’s a
track we’ve got some laps on! Some of these tracks like Airborne are
new to me, but not Sandusky. It was a good night tonight. We’ll take
it, load up and make the long trip home.” Seitz, Lane, Paul White,
Eddie Witkum Jr. and Jeff Locke finished up in the top ten.
ISMA EVENT #5
Airborne Speedway, July 23, 2011
Heat 1: Mark Sammut,
Ted Christopher, Eddie Witkum Jr., Chris deRitis, Joey Scanlon, Rich
Reid, Mike Lichty
Heat 2: Ben Seitz,
Chris Perley, Danny Lane, Rob Summers, Paul White, Jamie Timmons,
Bob Dawson
Heat 3: Jeff Locke,
Russ Wood, Timmy Jedrzejek, Dave Duggan, Dan Bowes, Craig Rayvals
Airborne 50: 1. Ted
Christopher (61), 2. Rob Summers (35), 3. Mark Sammut (78), 4. Chris
deRitis (66), 5. Timmy Jedrzejek (32), 6. Ben Seitz (17), 7. Danny
Lane (97), 8. Paul White (16), 9. Eddie Witkum (9), 10. Jeff Locke
(37), 11. Joey Scanlon (88), 12. Craig Rayvals (04), 13. Danny Bowes
(18), 14. Mike Lichty (84), 15. Chris Perley (11), 16. Russ Wood
(29), 17. Jamie Timmons (27), 18. Dave Duggan (51), 19. Rich Reid
(92) Bob Dawson dns, torque arm
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Photos… by Jim Feeney:
Early in the
feature Ted Christopher 61 races Mark Sammut 78 in the top five at
the time. They both went on to podium finishes. - Photo by Jim
Feeney
On his charge to
the front Ted Christopher in the Booth 61 battles Dan Lane 97. -
Photo by Jim Feeney
Mark
Sammut 78 battles with Chris deRitis for a podium finish. Sammut
would get it with a third and deRitis just behind in fourth. - Photo
by Jim Feeney
Ben
Seitz 17 challenges Tim Jedrzejek 32 for a top five spot. At the
checkerds Timmy J got fifth and Seitz was sixth. - Photo by Jim
Feeney
Ted
Christopher 61 goes under Rob Summers 35 in the second turn at
Airborne to take the lead on lap 21. - Photo by Jim Feeney
Two
hard charges in the feature Dan Lane 97 and Chris deRitis 66 fought
for position for a number of laps. deRitis would go on to a good
fourth place finish and Lane would end up seventh. - Photo By Jim
Feeney
Chris deRitis 66
fights for a top five position with Tim Jedrzejek 32. - Photo
by Jim Feeney
Ted Christopher
in Airborne Speedway’s ISMA Victory Lane. - Photo by Jim Feeney
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Candid photos
from the Airborne event by Jim Feeney
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More 2011 Race Results and
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