(From track press release)
WEST HAVEN -- It's only fitting that a Green Mountain Boy won the first Modified feature run on the new asphalt surface at Devil's Bowl Speedway.
Former track champion Don Scarborough of Brandon dominated an impressive field on Sunday afternoon to win the 50-lap Tri-Track Series race, the first Modified event of the 2010 season at the Bowl.
Scarborough made a smooth transition to the new surface at the Bowl and came away with his 31st career Devil's Bowl victory, which pitted competitors from Devil's Bowl, Albany-Saratoga Speedway in Malta, N.Y., and Airborne Speedway in Plattsburgh, N.Y. The victory was Scarborough's first at the Bowl since opening night in 2007; he was the track champion in 1998.
Airborne invader Patrick Dupree of Saranac Lake, N.Y., finished second, with Keith Flach third, defending track champion Ken Tremont, Jr., fourth, and Mike Bruno fifth. Tremont kept the fans on their feet for most of the race, coming from 18th at the start.
Don Miller of Wells picked up his second-straight win in the Sportsman division, leading Paul Dunham, Chris Johnson, Alex Bell, and Marc Hughes to the finish line.
David Emigh, a regular competitor at Albany-Saratoga, made the holiday haul to Vermont pay off by picking up the victory in the Renegade feature. Cody Benoit, the opening day winner, had to settle for second, with Jonathan Miller third.
Chad Brown was victorious in the Bomber Warriors feature for the second week in a row, and Andy Smith took the checkered flag in the Duke stock feature.
OFFICIAL RESULTS -- Chittenden Bank 50
Modified Tri-Track Series -- Devil's Bowl Speedway, West Haven, Vt.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
(Pos.-Driver-Hometown)
Modified
1. Don Scarborough, Brandon
2. Patrick Dupree, Saranac Lake, N.Y.
3. Keith Flach, Glemont, N.Y.
4. Ken Tremont Jr., West Sand Lake, N.Y.
5. Mike Bruno, Bomoseen
6. Jason Durgan, Morrisonville, N.Y.
7. Vince Quenneville, Jr., Brandon
8. Leon Gonyo, Chazy, N.Y.
9. Greg Atkins, AuSable Forks, N.Y.
10. Tim Laduc, Orwell
11. Scott Duell, Ballston Spa, N.Y.
12. Ron Proctor, Charlton, N.Y.
13. Derrick McGrew, Ballston Spa, N.Y.
14. Andy Lindemann
15. Jeremy Markle
16. Jason Bruno, Morrisonville, N.Y.
17. Mike Perrotte, Plattsburgh, N.Y.
18. Marc Johnson, Guilderland, N.Y.
19. Jimmy Ryan, Whiting
20. Frank Hoard III, Manchester
21. Jim Introne, Granville, N.Y.
Sportsman
1. Don Miller, Wells
2. Paul Dunham
3. Chris Johnson
4. Alex Bell
5. Marc Hughes
6. Hunter Bates
7. Kevin Wright
8. Jared McMahon
9. Joey Trudeau
10. Kevin Elliott
Renegade
1. Dave Emigh
2. Cody Benoit
3. Jonathan Miller
4. Bill Duprey
5. Frank Monroe
Bomber Warrior
1. Chad Brown
2. Brent Warren
3. Nathan Woodworth
4. Michael Devino, Sr.
5. Justin Lilly
Duke Stock
1. Andy Smith
Showing posts with label Andrew Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Smith. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Monday, August 31, 2009
Stone Wins, Tremont Consistent on Wild Night at Devil's Bowl
Six flips highlight long night at West Haven track
WEST HAVEN -- Todd Stone sure knows how to make things interesting.
On a wild, wrecked-filled night with double features that could make or break the Middlebury driver's hopes to win his second-straight 358 Modified championship at Devil's Bowl Speedway in West Haven, Stone looked, with eight laps in the books, broken.
The scene was set perfectly for the large crowd in attendance: three championship contenders battling each other for a title, running tightly together in heavy traffic on a rough but fast race track. Tremont, of West Sand Lake, N.Y., entered the race with an 11-point advantage over Orwell racer Tim LaDuc, with Stone jsut 13 points back. As the trio raced hard, even three-wide for a moment, LaDuc and Stone got together in Turn 3 eight laps into the first feature. LaDuc spun, but had no damage. Stone, on the other hand, had a broken shock tower on his right-front corner.
Thanks to back-to-back caution periods, Stone made a couple of lengthy trips to pit road for repairs. As the field took the green flag to restart the race, Stone was not on the track. Finally, he barrelled out of the pits just in time to stay on the lead lap as the race resumed, more than a half-lap behind the leaders. But again, because of caution flags, he was able to catch the pack and pick off cars one by one over the final 22 laps, finishing an impressive seventh. But Tremont and LaDuc were third and fifth, respectively.
Now facing an even bigger deficit, Stone had his work cut out for him in the second 30-lap feature. So to work he went, slicing his way through the field from 12th starting position into seventh by lap 4, then avoiding a huge pileup on a lap 5 restart that sent fourth-place driver Don Mattison flipping as the cars of LaDuc, Brian Whittemore, Marc Johnson, Scott Duell, and others slammed into each other. Stone passed his father, Gardner, for third on the ensuing restart, and Chris Vernold for second one lap later. Vince Quenneville, Jr., the runner-up to Ray Hoard in the opening feature, held Stone off for nine more laps before bobbling in Turn 4. Stone took the lead on lap 16, then buried the field by nearly a quarter of a lap for the win. Tremont again finished third behind Quenneville, with LaDuc recovering for fourth.
"I think the first feature, to be honest with you, I had a real good car in the first feature," said Stone. "I don't know if we could have won it, but I know we could have had a [better] run. The shock tower broke, then my right-rear brake bleeder broke off, so I had no rear brakes. Everything was going wrong, I was just like, 'God, let's get this over with.' Luckily, they had a lot of cautions. A lot people were having bad nights, [otherwise] we wouldn't have made it back out. The crew worked really hard, if it wasn't for them we wouldn't have been out at all. They did a good job."
All told, Tremont stretched his lead -- barely -- to 17 points, unofficially, over LaDuc and Stone, tied at 614 points to Tremont's 631. The final point-counting event, a 50-lap feature, is next week.
"Kenny's still quite a ways out, he's got to really have a bad night next Sunday night," Stone lamented about his chances for the title. "I don't think it's over, but Kenny's been at this a long time. He's good, he's smart, he knows what he needs to do. He's not going to over-run his car to maybe try to win the race, and if it comes to him, fine. But he's smart, you know, he knows what he's doing. They said that we were pretty fast, but sometimes I wonder if he's not showing it all."
Frank Hoard, III of Manchester was the winner of an outstanding 25-lap Budget Sportsman feature early in the evening. Middlebury youngsters Hunter Bates and Justin Comes were involved in the battle for the lead throughout the race, first with polesitter Anthony Marro, then late with Hoard. Unofficially, the lead changed hands six times at the start/finish line among the four drivers, although the were many more changes in the corners and on the backstretch. Hoard only led the final few inches of the race, powering out of Turn 4 as the checkered flag waved to beat Bates by two ten-thousandths (.0002) of a second, according to official timing and scoring. Point leader Derrick McGrew of Ballston Spa, N.Y. dominated the second 25-lap Budget Sportsman feature after passing teammate Marc Hughes for the lead on lap 11. Tim Hartman, Jr. and Jack Swinton got past Hughes late in the race to finish second and third, respectively.
Cale Kneer of Troy, N.Y. swept both Pro Street Stock features, beating Jeff Washburn of Benson in the first 20-lap race and Fred Little of Salisbury in the second event. Bill Duprey of Hydeville matched Kneer's feat in the Limited division, winning both 20-lap features. Between the two Limited features, Joe Ladd, Randy Alger, and Chris Murray each got upside down. Travis Tromans of Clifton Park, N.Y. won the Mini Stock feature, while Andrew Smith of South Glens Falls, N.Y. was the Duke Stock winner. Don Harvey dominated the 20-lap Empire Lightning Sprint feature over Ralph Utter, Jr., Mike Kiser, Doug Norrie, and Justin Phillips.
UNOFFICIAL RESULTS -- Weekly Championship Series
Devil's Bowl Speedway, West Haven, Vt.
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Pos.-Driver-Hometown
358 Modified Feature #1 (30 laps)
1. Ray Hoard, Granville, N.Y.
2. Vince Quenneville, Jr., Brandon
3. Kenny Tremont, Jr., West Sand Lake, N.Y.
4. Marc Johnson, Guilderland, N.Y.
5. Tim LaDuc, Orwell
358 Modified Feature #2 (30 laps)
1. Todd Stone, Middlebury
2. Vince Quenneville, Jr., Brandon
3. Kenny Tremont, Jr., West Sand Lake, N.Y.
4. Tim LaDuc, Orwell
5. Ray Hoard, Granville, N.Y.
Budget Sportsman Feature #1 (25 laps)
1. Frank Hoard, III, Manchester
2. Hunter Bates, Middlebury
3. Justin Comes, Middlebury
4. Anthony Marro, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
5. Frank Hoard, Jr., Whitehall, N.Y.
Budget Sportsman Feature #2 (25 laps)
1. Derrick McGrew, Ballston Spa, N.Y.
2. Tim Hartman, Jr., Schenectady, N.Y.
3. Jack Swinton, Hudson Falls, N.Y.
4. Marc Hughes, Ballston Spa, N.Y.
5. Frank Hoard, III, Manchester
Pro Street Stock Feature #1 (20 laps)
1. Cale Kneer, Troy, N.Y.
2. Jeff Washburn, Benson
3. Fred Little, Salisbury
Pro Street Stock Feature #2 (20 laps)
1. Cale Kneer, Troy, N.Y.
2. Fred Little, Salisbury
3. Jeff Washburn, Benson
Limited Feature #1 (20 laps)
1. Bill Duprey, Hydeville
2. Randy Alger
3. Mike Clark, Benson
Limited Feature #2 (20 laps)
1. Bill Duprey, Hydeville
2. Mike Clark, Benson
3. Garrett Given
Mini Stock Winner
Travis Tromans, Clifton Park, N.Y.
Duke Stock Winner
Andrew Smith, South Glens Falls, N.Y.
Empire Lightning Sprints (20 laps)
1. Don Harvey
2. Ralph Utter, Jr.
3. Mike Kiser
4. Doug Norrie
5. Justin Phillips

On a wild, wrecked-filled night with double features that could make or break the Middlebury driver's hopes to win his second-straight 358 Modified championship at Devil's Bowl Speedway in West Haven, Stone looked, with eight laps in the books, broken.
The scene was set perfectly for the large crowd in attendance: three championship contenders battling each other for a title, running tightly together in heavy traffic on a rough but fast race track. Tremont, of West Sand Lake, N.Y., entered the race with an 11-point advantage over Orwell racer Tim LaDuc, with Stone jsut 13 points back. As the trio raced hard, even three-wide for a moment, LaDuc and Stone got together in Turn 3 eight laps into the first feature. LaDuc spun, but had no damage. Stone, on the other hand, had a broken shock tower on his right-front corner.
Thanks to back-to-back caution periods, Stone made a couple of lengthy trips to pit road for repairs. As the field took the green flag to restart the race, Stone was not on the track. Finally, he barrelled out of the pits just in time to stay on the lead lap as the race resumed, more than a half-lap behind the leaders. But again, because of caution flags, he was able to catch the pack and pick off cars one by one over the final 22 laps, finishing an impressive seventh. But Tremont and LaDuc were third and fifth, respectively.
Now facing an even bigger deficit, Stone had his work cut out for him in the second 30-lap feature. So to work he went, slicing his way through the field from 12th starting position into seventh by lap 4, then avoiding a huge pileup on a lap 5 restart that sent fourth-place driver Don Mattison flipping as the cars of LaDuc, Brian Whittemore, Marc Johnson, Scott Duell, and others slammed into each other. Stone passed his father, Gardner, for third on the ensuing restart, and Chris Vernold for second one lap later. Vince Quenneville, Jr., the runner-up to Ray Hoard in the opening feature, held Stone off for nine more laps before bobbling in Turn 4. Stone took the lead on lap 16, then buried the field by nearly a quarter of a lap for the win. Tremont again finished third behind Quenneville, with LaDuc recovering for fourth.
"I think the first feature, to be honest with you, I had a real good car in the first feature," said Stone. "I don't know if we could have won it, but I know we could have had a [better] run. The shock tower broke, then my right-rear brake bleeder broke off, so I had no rear brakes. Everything was going wrong, I was just like, 'God, let's get this over with.' Luckily, they had a lot of cautions. A lot people were having bad nights, [otherwise] we wouldn't have made it back out. The crew worked really hard, if it wasn't for them we wouldn't have been out at all. They did a good job."
All told, Tremont stretched his lead -- barely -- to 17 points, unofficially, over LaDuc and Stone, tied at 614 points to Tremont's 631. The final point-counting event, a 50-lap feature, is next week.
"Kenny's still quite a ways out, he's got to really have a bad night next Sunday night," Stone lamented about his chances for the title. "I don't think it's over, but Kenny's been at this a long time. He's good, he's smart, he knows what he needs to do. He's not going to over-run his car to maybe try to win the race, and if it comes to him, fine. But he's smart, you know, he knows what he's doing. They said that we were pretty fast, but sometimes I wonder if he's not showing it all."
Frank Hoard, III of Manchester was the winner of an outstanding 25-lap Budget Sportsman feature early in the evening. Middlebury youngsters Hunter Bates and Justin Comes were involved in the battle for the lead throughout the race, first with polesitter Anthony Marro, then late with Hoard. Unofficially, the lead changed hands six times at the start/finish line among the four drivers, although the were many more changes in the corners and on the backstretch. Hoard only led the final few inches of the race, powering out of Turn 4 as the checkered flag waved to beat Bates by two ten-thousandths (.0002) of a second, according to official timing and scoring. Point leader Derrick McGrew of Ballston Spa, N.Y. dominated the second 25-lap Budget Sportsman feature after passing teammate Marc Hughes for the lead on lap 11. Tim Hartman, Jr. and Jack Swinton got past Hughes late in the race to finish second and third, respectively.
Cale Kneer of Troy, N.Y. swept both Pro Street Stock features, beating Jeff Washburn of Benson in the first 20-lap race and Fred Little of Salisbury in the second event. Bill Duprey of Hydeville matched Kneer's feat in the Limited division, winning both 20-lap features. Between the two Limited features, Joe Ladd, Randy Alger, and Chris Murray each got upside down. Travis Tromans of Clifton Park, N.Y. won the Mini Stock feature, while Andrew Smith of South Glens Falls, N.Y. was the Duke Stock winner. Don Harvey dominated the 20-lap Empire Lightning Sprint feature over Ralph Utter, Jr., Mike Kiser, Doug Norrie, and Justin Phillips.
UNOFFICIAL RESULTS -- Weekly Championship Series
Devil's Bowl Speedway, West Haven, Vt.
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Pos.-Driver-Hometown
358 Modified Feature #1 (30 laps)
1. Ray Hoard, Granville, N.Y.
2. Vince Quenneville, Jr., Brandon
3. Kenny Tremont, Jr., West Sand Lake, N.Y.
4. Marc Johnson, Guilderland, N.Y.
5. Tim LaDuc, Orwell
358 Modified Feature #2 (30 laps)
1. Todd Stone, Middlebury
2. Vince Quenneville, Jr., Brandon
3. Kenny Tremont, Jr., West Sand Lake, N.Y.
4. Tim LaDuc, Orwell
5. Ray Hoard, Granville, N.Y.
Budget Sportsman Feature #1 (25 laps)
1. Frank Hoard, III, Manchester
2. Hunter Bates, Middlebury
3. Justin Comes, Middlebury
4. Anthony Marro, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
5. Frank Hoard, Jr., Whitehall, N.Y.
Budget Sportsman Feature #2 (25 laps)
1. Derrick McGrew, Ballston Spa, N.Y.
2. Tim Hartman, Jr., Schenectady, N.Y.
3. Jack Swinton, Hudson Falls, N.Y.
4. Marc Hughes, Ballston Spa, N.Y.
5. Frank Hoard, III, Manchester
Pro Street Stock Feature #1 (20 laps)
1. Cale Kneer, Troy, N.Y.
2. Jeff Washburn, Benson
3. Fred Little, Salisbury
Pro Street Stock Feature #2 (20 laps)
1. Cale Kneer, Troy, N.Y.
2. Fred Little, Salisbury
3. Jeff Washburn, Benson
Limited Feature #1 (20 laps)
1. Bill Duprey, Hydeville
2. Randy Alger
3. Mike Clark, Benson
Limited Feature #2 (20 laps)
1. Bill Duprey, Hydeville
2. Mike Clark, Benson
3. Garrett Given
Mini Stock Winner
Travis Tromans, Clifton Park, N.Y.
Duke Stock Winner
Andrew Smith, South Glens Falls, N.Y.
Empire Lightning Sprints (20 laps)
1. Don Harvey
2. Ralph Utter, Jr.
3. Mike Kiser
4. Doug Norrie
5. Justin Phillips
Monday, June 29, 2009
Mattison Breaks Through at Devil's Bowl
From CVRA press release
WEST HAVEN -- Don Mattison was the surprise winner on Sunday night at Devil's Bowl Speedway in West Haven, taking his first 358 Modified victory of the year; Mattison's best finish of the season before Sunday was 12th place on May 31. Mattison, of Wells, and Manchester driver Frank Hoard, Sr. stayed in close proximity at the front of the pack throughout the race, but Mattison never faltered and held on for the win. Tim LaDuc of Orwell finished third. Kenny Tremont, Jr. of West Sand Lake, N.Y. was unsuccessful in his bid for three consecutive victories, coming home in fourth place. Defending champion Todd Stone of Middlebury was fifth.
D.J. Brindige of Mechanicville, N.Y. took his first Budget Sportsman win of the season in a caution-marred event. Frank Hoard, Jr. of Whitehall, N.Y. finished second, with Schenectady, N.Y.'s Tim Hartman, Jr. in third place. Dennis Pennock and Jack Swinton completed the top-five.
Veteran Fred Little of Salisbury and Lori Langevin of Londonderry finished in a near dead-heat for the Pro Street Stock win, but electronic scoring awarded the win to Little by 0.026 seconds. Walt Brownell, Mike Paquin, and Cale Kneer rounded out the top-five finishers.
Mark Burch of Fort Edward, N.Y. took his first Limited victory of the year over Dave Emigh, Mike Clark, Jon Miller, and Paul Braymer.
Kayla Bryant of Rutland won the Mini Stock feature, with Andrew Smith of South Glens Falls, N.Y. winning in the Duke Stock class.

D.J. Brindige of Mechanicville, N.Y. took his first Budget Sportsman win of the season in a caution-marred event. Frank Hoard, Jr. of Whitehall, N.Y. finished second, with Schenectady, N.Y.'s Tim Hartman, Jr. in third place. Dennis Pennock and Jack Swinton completed the top-five.
Veteran Fred Little of Salisbury and Lori Langevin of Londonderry finished in a near dead-heat for the Pro Street Stock win, but electronic scoring awarded the win to Little by 0.026 seconds. Walt Brownell, Mike Paquin, and Cale Kneer rounded out the top-five finishers.
Mark Burch of Fort Edward, N.Y. took his first Limited victory of the year over Dave Emigh, Mike Clark, Jon Miller, and Paul Braymer.
Kayla Bryant of Rutland won the Mini Stock feature, with Andrew Smith of South Glens Falls, N.Y. winning in the Duke Stock class.
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