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Birkhofer Beats Out Lanigan in Firecracker 100

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By Kevin Kovac, WoO LMS P.R. Director

SARVER, PA – July 29, 2008 – Brian Birkhofer might hail from Iowa, but he had plenty of like-minded individuals to celebrate with after winning Tuesday night’s second annual Firecracker 100 presented by GottaRace.com at Lernerville Speedway.

The four-tenths-mile oval in western Pennsylvania, after all, is always crawling with Pittsburgh Steelers fans – and no one loves the NFL team more than Birkhofer, whose black racing helmet sports the familiar Steelers logo.

“This is a big deal for me,” said Birkhofer, who pocketed $41,419 (including lap money) for his first-ever victory at a track that’s located a short drive from the Steel City. “I’ve won big races before, but this one has some extra special meaning because this place is so close to Pittsburgh. I usually come out here a couple times a year to see Steelers home games, so it’s cool to finally win a big race out in this area.

“The only thing that could’ve topped off tonight was if somehow Troy Polomalu (the Steelers’ star safety) was here to present me the trophy,” he added with a smile – not long after waving a Steelers ‘Terrible Towel’ in Victory Lane.

Birkhofer, 36, of Muscatine, Iowa, employed a patient approach to capture the postponed World of Outlaws Late Model Series event, which had its final night of action rained out on both June 28 and 29. He calmly filled the role of pursuer until turning up the wick halfway through the A-Main, passing defending WoO LMS champion Steve Francis of Ashland, Ky., for second on lap 50 and points leader Darrell Lanigan of Union, Ky., for the lead on lap 70.

Lanigan, who led laps 1-69 after starting from the outside pole, finished a distant 4.226 seconds behind Birkhofer in second place. Shannon Babb of Moweaqua, Ill., advanced from the 13th starting spot to place third, with Francis settling for fourth and three-time WoO LMS titlist Billy Moyer of Batesville, Ark., placing fifth after overtaking Chub Frank of Bear Lake, Pa., on lap 97.

Driving his Daufeldt Transport Mars/Birkhofer car, the driver known as ‘Birky’ simply waited until the time was right to make his move.

“I had a long-race car,” said Birkhofer, who recorded his third triumph of the season and the seventh of his career on the WoO LMS. “I was just trying to maintain for the first half of the race and not wear the tires out, so if there was a late caution I could fire back up again.

“I’ve watched Scott Bloomquist (the winner of the inaugural Firecracker 100 in 2007) do it in a lot of 100-lap shows – just sit there and bide his time, and then at the end of the race he’s won again. I was able to do that tonight.”

Birkhofer, who started fourth, carefully measured Lanigan’s GottaRace.com Rocket machine before sweeping by on the inside to assume command for good with 30 laps remaining.

“I saw how he was driving the car,” Birkhofer said of Lanigan. “He had to drive the wheels off of it up there on the cushion, so I just figured, ‘He’s gonna have to keep making good laps to stay up there,’ which isn’t easy. Me personally, I know I couldn’t make that many perfect laps if I had a guy right there running second.”

Birkhofer was dominant once in front, pulling away to a commanding advantage during the 39-lap stretch of green-flag racing that closed the 100. His harder-compound Hoosier tire selection proved to be perfect for the event’s late stages.

“It was kind of a tire game for a couple hours before the feature,” said Birkhofer, who finished a quiet 13th in last year’s Firecracker 100. “I made my (compound) decision in hot laps and just stuck with it. You gotta have a car that can handle the tires too, but I think our tire choice was a big key to our success.”

Lanigan, 38, would certainly agree. He was clearly frustrated with the performance of his tires after leading 69 laps but falling short of a signature win for his amazingly steady season on the WoO LMS.

“We ran (the tires) you normally run here,” said Lanigan, shaking his head as he glanced at Birkhofer celebrating in Victory Lane. “These 1425s (Hoosier tires) almost always work here, but (Birkhofer) had on a little harder tire and that was the difference. He could stick a little better on the bottom and the middle.

“I just got too loose – tire-loose. About halfway through the race I knew I was in trouble. I was sliding too much getting in (the corners) and I had to run the top.”

Though $2,467 in lap money boosted Lanigan’s runner-up earnings to a robust $17,667 and his points lead continued to grow, he craved a victory.

“Any time you get up there and lead more than 50 laps, falling back to second kind of hurts,” said Lanigan. “You’d almost rather run second the whole race and not win it.”

Babb, 34, made a strong charge forward in his Traeger Grills/Chevy Rocket owned by NASCAR Sprint Cup star Clint Bowyer, reaching third place on lap 59. He never seriously threatened Lanigan for second, however.

“We passed some real good cars to get up there, so we’re happy,” said Babb, who did not enter last year’s Firecracker 100. “As the race wore on I got a little too tight, so I was just trying to maintain at the end.”

The 40-year-old Francis also suffered from a slight tight condition with his Dale Beitler-owned Reliable Painting/Valvoline Rocket. He challenged Lanigan for the lead just before the halfway mark, but he steadily lost ground over the race’s second half and crossed the finish line nearly eight seconds behind Birkhofer in fourth place.

Moyer, 50, was almost five seconds in arrears of Francis at the checkered flag in fifth place. He started ninth in his Victory Circle mount and ran around that spot for nearly three-quarters of the race before making a late surge.

Finishing in positions 6-10 were Frank, who reached fifth on lap 66 but couldn’t move any higher; Bloomquist, who earned the race’s $100 Hard Charger Award for improving from the 20th starting spot but made little headway for the final 80 circuits; Tim McCreadie of Watertown, N.Y., who raced as high as sixth; Earl Pearson Jr. of Jacksonville, Fla., who ran in the top five for the first half of the 100; and Tim Fuller of Watertown, N.Y.

Four caution flags slowed the event, including a lap-19 incident that effectively ended the hopes of pre-race favorites Josh Richards of Shinnston, W.Va., and Shane Clanton of Locust Grove, Ga.

Richards, who started from the pole position, made contact with Clanton in turn one as the pair battled for third place. The two cars hooked together and slid to a stop at the top of the track.

Clanton, who had just pulled a ‘slider’ on Richards in turn four to nose ahead for a moment, angrily climbed out of his car at the accident scene and leaned into Richards’s cockpit to offer his thoughts about the tangle. The two drivers exchanged words again after Richards exited his car.

“I wanted to bump him in the back and just let him know I didn’t appreciate (the ‘slider’),” admitted the 20-year-old Richards. “But my right-front wheel just caught his left-rear tire. It climbed up the side of his car and couldn’t come back down off it, and I ended up taking us both out.”

Richards continued to finish 12th, while Clanton raced on with left-side bodywork damage until retiring on lap 61 after he rode the homestretch wall.

Clanton, 32, refused to comment on the tangle or his discussion with Richards.

“Up until the accident I had a real good car,” said Clanton, who started fifth. “Then I hit the fence and took myself out. I was trying too hard.”

A huge crowd turned out for the completion of the Firecracker 100 weekend, which began on June 27 with a thrilling night of heat-race competition for 62 cars.

Jeremy Miller of Gettysburg, Pa., was the only qualified driver who did not return on Tuesday night. He was forced to skip the event after suffering a rash of engine problems in the preceding days.

Ken Schaltenbrand of Sarver, Pa., won Tuesday night’s C-Main, and the 20-lap B-Mains were captured by David Scott of Garland, Pa., and Bloomquist.

Mike Knight, 21, of Ripley, N.Y., pocketed $3,000 for winning the ‘Uncle Sam 30’ Non-Qualifiers’ Race. He grabbed the lead from Ron Davies of Warren, Pa., on lap nine and never looked back en route to his first-ever victory at Lernerville.

Dutch Davies of Warren, Pa., slid off the backstretch and rolled his car on lap eight of the Uncle Sam 30, but he escaped the accident without injury.

After contesting 13 events in eight states and one Canadian province over the past 20 days, the WoO LMS will be idle for more than two weeks. The tour’s next action is a Southeast doubleheader on Aug. 15 at Fayetteville (N.C.) Motor Speedway and Aug. 16 at Screven Motor Speedway in Sylvania, Ga.

Results of WoO Late Model Series ‘Firecracker 100 presented by GottaRace.com’ (Finishing Position/Start/Driver/Laps Completed/Money Won):

1. (4) Brian Birkhofer/100 $41,419
2. (2) Darrell Lanigan/100 $17,667
3. (13) Shannon Babb/100 $8,000
4. (3) Steve Francis/100 $6,000
5. (9) Billy Moyer/100 $5,000
6. (12) Chub Frank/100 $4,500
7. (20) Scott Bloomquist/100 $4,100
8. (18) Tim McCreadie/100 $3,500
9. (6) Earl Pearson Jr./100 $3,000
10. (11) Tim Fuller/100 $2,900
11. (19) Rick Eckert/100 $2,800
12. (1) Josh Richards/100 $2,800
13. (16) Chris Madden/100 $2,600
14. (27) John Blankenship/99 $2,500
15. (21) Vic Coffey/99 $2,650
16. (15) Gregg Satterlee/99 $2,900
17. (22) Dan Stone/99 $2,200
18. (10) Donnie Moran/99 $2,100
19. (25) Clint Smith/98 $2,050
20. (7) Coleby Frye/97 $2,000
21. (24) Matt Lux/81 $2,000
22. (28) Lynn Geisler/69 $2,000
23. (23) John Mollick/67 $2,000
24. (5) Shane Clanton/61 $2,000
25. (17) David Scott/50 $2,000
26. (14) Mike Blose/49 $2,000
27. (26) Alex Ferree/13 $2,000
28. (8) Brandon Kinzer/10 $2,000
Did Not Start: Jeremy Miller

Time of Race: 50 Mins., 20.102 Secs.
Margin of Victory: 4.226 Secs.
Yellow Flags: 4 (Lap 11, 19, 45, 61)
Lap Leaders: Lanigan (1-69); Birkfhoer (70-100)
Provisional Starters: C. Smith, Blankenship (WoO); Ferree, Geisler (track)
Rookie of the Race: Coffey ($250)
WoO LMS ‘Bonus Bucks’ Winner: Satterlee ($500)
Integra Shocks Crew Chief of the Race ($100): Jeff Roby (Birkhofer)
Chick Hawk Racing Hot Lap Award: Lanigan (half-off tire warmers)
Super Clean ‘Start of the Race’: Lanigan ($100)
Top Local Finisher: Satterlee ($100)
Hard Charger (sponsored by Ms. Area Auto Racing News Alyssa Sharman): Bloomquist ($100)
Hard Luck (sponsored by Ms. Area Auto Racing News Alyssa Sharman): Clanton ($100)

Uncle Sam 30 Non-Qualifiers’ Race Finish (30 laps): 1. Mike Knight ($3,000); 2. Ron Davies ($2,000); 3. Rick Briggs ($1,500); 4. Brent Rhebergen ($1,200); 5. Dave Hess Jr. ($1,000); 6. Russell King ($800); 7. John Flinner ($700); 8. Keith Barbara ($600); 9. Gary Lyle ($500); 10. Chuck Kennedy ($400); 11. Tony Burke ($300); 12. Clate Copeman ($300); 13. Bump Hedman ($300); 14. Todd Bachman ($300); 15. Chad Valone ($300); 16. Nick Reges ($300); 17. Jared Miley ($300); 18. Dutch Davies ($300); 19. Ryan Scott ($300); 20. Doug Horton ($300); 21. Robbie Blair ($300); 22. Ken Schaltenbrand ($300) – DNS: Davey Johnson ($200); Jimmy Owens ($200); Dane Laraway ($200)

B-Main No. 1 Finish (20 laps – Top 4 Transfer): 1. David Scott, 2. Rick Eckert, 3. Vic Coffey, 4. John Mollick, 5. Davey Johnson, 6. Dave Hess Jr., 7. Doug Horton, 8. Mike Knight, 9. Dutch Davies, 10. Chuck Kennedy, 11. Clate Copeman, 12. Todd Bachman, 13. Jared Miley, 14. Ken Schaltenbrand, 15. Robbie Blair, 16. Dane Laraway, 17. Alex Ferree

B-Main No. 2 Finish (20 laps – Top 3 Transfer): 1. Scott Bloomquist, 2. Dan Stone, 3. Matt Lux, 4. Ron Davies, 5. Rick Briggs, 6. John Flinner, 7. John Blankenship, 8. Brent Rhebergen, 9. Gary Lyle, 10. Russell King, 11. Chad Valone, 12. Tony Burke, 13. Nick Reges, 14. Keith Barbara, 15. Lynn Geisler, 16. Clint Smith, 17. Jimmy Owens

C-Main Finish (8 laps – Top 4 Transfer to B-Mains): 1. Ken Schaltenbrand, 2. Russell King, 3. Jared Miley, 4. Rick Briggs, 5. Ryan Scott, 6. Bump Hedman

Entered drivers who did not return for rescheduled date: Jeremy Miller, Danny Johnson, Sean Beardsley, Joe Isabell, Jason Covert, Bob Close, Josh McGuire

2008 World of Outlaws Late Model Series Point Standings as of July 29 – 31 A-Mains completed (rank/driver/wins/top-5s/top-10s/earnings/points/deficit to leader):

1. Darrell Lanigan 2-19-29-$98,817-4287 (-0)
2. (tie) Josh Richards 4-14-21-$97,160-4141 (-146)
2. (tie) Steve Francis 3-15-24-$127,450-4141 (-146)
4. Chub Frank 1-9-21-$64,480-4081 (-206)
5. Shane Clanton 1-14-22-$71,390-4069 (-218)
6. Shannon Babb 2-13-21-$89,500-4067 (-220)
7. Rick Eckert 1-9-20-$64,580-4031 (-256)
8. Clint Smith 1-10-18-$55,870-4015 (-272)
9. Tim Fuller 2-6-13-$56,200-3852 (-435)
10. John Blankenship 0-0-6-$32,870-3698 (-589)
11. Vic Coffey 0-0-7-$29,320-3217 (-1070)
12. Joe Isabell 0-0-0-$14,420-2745 (-1542)
13. Sean Beardsley 0-0-0-$9,030-2243 (-2044)
14. Danny Johnson 0-0-1-$13,620-2187 (-2100)
15. Tim McCreadie 1-7-12-$46,700-1983 (-2304)

LISTEN ONLINE: If fans can’t get to a track to see the World of Outlaws Late Model Series, they can experience the excitement of the nation’s premier tour live on DIRTvision.com through the DIRT Radio Network.

To listen to the free audio broadcasts, log on to www.dirtvision.com and click on the DIRT Radio Network logo.

Listeners will need Windows Media Player 9 or higher to listen to the DIRT Radio Network. For technical support or questions, e-mail [email protected].

The World of Outlaws Late Model Series is brought to fans across the country by several sponsors and partners, including Advance Auto Parts – the official auto parts store of the WoO LMS – and contingency sponsors Wrisco Industries, Chicken Hawk Racing, Crane Cams, Ohlins Shocks, Quarter-Master, Eibach Springs, Integra Shocks, Jake’s Custom Golf Carts, Qwikliner and Super Clean.

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