WoO Racing at Outlaw Speedway
WORLD OF OUTLAWS SPRINT SERIES: THE WEEK AT A GLANCE
Colorado Springs, CO — April 19, 2005 —
By Chris Dolack, World of Outlaws Senior Writer
WHAT
For the first time in the circuit’s history, the World
of Outlaws Sprint Series rolls into Outlaw Motor Speedway
Friday in Muskogee, Okla., for a $10,000-to-win event,
followed by a return trip Saturday to 81 Speedway in Park
City, Kan., for the $10,000-to-win Wichita Twister Showdown.
WHERE
• Outlaw Motor Speedway is on Highway 69 at the
Wainwright exit, 8 miles south of Muskogee and 11 miles
north of Interstate 40. For more information, go to
www.outlawmotorspeedway.com.
• 81 Speedway is north of Wichita on Interstate 135 at exit
16, then 0.7 miles west on 77th.
WHEN
• At Outlaw Motor Speedway, gates open at noon Friday
with qualifying at 6:30 p.m. and racing at 7:30 p.m.
• At 81 Speedway, pit gates open at 2 p.m. Saturday and
grandstands at 4 p.m. with hot laps at 6 p.m. and qualifying
and racing to follow.
TICKETS
• At Outlaw Motor Speedway, all access tickets are $45,
or $20 for children 12 and under.
• At 81 Speedway, with the event promoted by SLS Promotions,
reserved tickets are $32 and general admission tickets are
$30. Children 6-12 are $15 and reserved tickets for 12 and
under are $15. There also is a $35 pit combo, which includes
one general admission ticket plus one pit pass available
only for purchase in advance.
WEB SITES
• The World of Outlaws Sprint Series is at http://www.theworldofoutlaws.com.
• Outlaw Motor Speedway is at http://www.outlawmotorspeedway.com.
• 81 Speedway is at http://www.81speedway.org.
• SLS Promotions is at http://www.slspromotions.com.
ABOUT THE TRACKS
• Outlaw Motor Speedway is a 3/8-mile, 11-degree-banked
oval with three grooves.
• 81 Speedway 3/8-mile, semi-banked oval, where Steve Kinser
established the track record in an Outlaws event of 13.395
seconds on Oct. 16, 2004.
PREVIOUS WINNERS
The race Friday night at Outlaw Motor Speedway marks
the World of Outlaws Sprint Series debut at the facility.
World of Outlaws “A” Feature winners at 81 Speedway include:
2004 – Danny Lasoski on Oct. 16.
1992 – Mark Kinser on June 16.
TELEVISION THIS WEEK
• At 8 p.m. ET Wednesday (April 20), The Outdoor Channel
will broadcast coverage of the World of Outlaws Sprint
Series event from Eldora Speedway.
• All the action from Outlaw Motor Speedway can be seen at
9:30 p.m. ET on April 27 on a Dirtvision Cybercast. For more
information, go to http://www.dirtvision.com.
• Coverage of the race Saturday from 81 Speedway will be
broadcast May 4 on The Outdoor Channel.
STANDINGS, through Tri-State Speedway, Haubstadt,
Ind. (April 16, 2005)
Rank Driver Pts Pts Diff Wins Poles Top 5 Top 10 Prelim
1 Steve Kinser 1861 0 4 1 10 12 0
2 Craig Dollansky 1823 -38 1 0 8 11 1
3 Kraig Kinser 1739 -122 2 1 6 8 1
4 Jason Meyers 1723 -138 0 1 2 10 0
5 Donny Schatz 1722 -139 3 1 6 8 0
6 Danny Lasoski 1683 -178 0 0 3 8 1
7 Shane Stewart 1658 -203 0 1 1 8 0
8 Daryn Pittman 1607 -254 0 0 2 5 0
9 Joey Saldana 1602 -259 0 1 2 3 0
10 Paul McMahan 1586 -276 0 0 1 5 0
11 Tim Kaeding 1566 -295 0 0 3 4 0
12 Tim Shaffer 1565 -296 1 0 2 4 0
13 Jason Solwold 1453 -408 0 0 1 3 0
14 Jason Sides 1445 -416 0 0 0 2 0
15 Brian Paulus 1422 -439 0 0 0 1 0
16 Terry McCarl 1407 -454 0 0 1 3 0
17 Brooke Tatnell 1356 -505 0 2 4 4 0
18 Mark Kinser 1333 -528 0 0 1 5 0
19 Brandon Wimmer 1313 -548 0 1 0 2 0
20 Randy Hannagan 1186 -675 0 0 0 0 0
21 Sammy Swindell 932 -929 0 1 1 1 1
22 Chad Kemenah 889 -972 0 0 1 4 0
23 Danny Smith 844 -1017 0 0 1 2 0
24 Kevin Swindell 784 -1077 0 0 0 1 0
25 Natalie Sather 566 -1295 0 0 0 0 0
NEWS & NOTES
• Schedule expands: The World of Outlaws Sprint
Series has added a race May 9 at Tri-State Speedway in
Pocola, Okla., near Ft. Smith, Ark. The series has never
raced at this high-banked, 3/8-mile clay dirt track. This is
the 33rd year Tri-State Speedway has been racing, and among
its former track champions are NASCAR stars Rusty Wallace
and Mark Martin. Advance tickets are $30 and pit passes are
$45. For more information, go to http://www.tri-statespeedway.com.
• Hot streak: Kevin Gobrecht Rookie of the Year Award
contender Tim Kaeding admits he’s aggressive on the
racetrack. But that’s how he’s managed to finish in the top
five in the past four events, including back-to-back nights
at intimidating Eldora Speedway where he had only raced once
before. Kaeding’s run in the No. 83 Dennis Roth-owned
Beef Packers car began April 2 at I-55 Raceway with a
third-place run, then continued on Eldora’s high-speed
half-mile with a fifth-place finish in the preliminary
feature followed by a runner-up finish to Steve Kinser
in the main event. Finally, Saturday at Tri-State
Speedway, Kaeding put together another strong race to finish
fourth. What’s most impressive, though, is that Kaeding has
been able to move forward after starting in the middle of
the field with daring moves on the high side of the tracks.
• Unfamiliar surroundings: The race Friday at Outlaw
Motor Speedway in Muskogee, Okla., will be the first time
the World of Outlaws Sprint Series has raced at the 3/8-mile
oval. The race will mark the fourth time the Outlaws have
competed at a track this season for either the first time,
or the first time in more than five years. The others were
Volusia Speedway Park, where the series ran twice for the
first time since 1981; Bakersfield Speedway, where the
series had not raced since 1995; and Batesville Speedway,
where the series’ only other appearance was in 1993. In
those races, Jeff Shepard and Steve Kinser won
at Volusia, Craig Dollansky at Bakersfield and
Kraig Kinser at Batesville.
• Circle time: Each race this weekend — Friday at
Outlaw Motor Speedway and Saturday at 81 Speedway — is on a
3/8-mile oval. The series has raced three times this season
on tracks that size, at Pike County Speedway, Houston
Raceway Park and Batesville Speedway. Steve Kinser
held off Brooke Tatnell to win at Pike County,
Donny Schatz edged Steve Kinser at Houston and
Kraig Kinser dominated at Batesville.
• Advantage, Stewart: The race at Outlaw Motor
Speedway in Muskogee will be a first for nearly every driver
that tours with the World of Outlaws Sprint Series, except
for Kevin Gobrecht Rookie of the Year Award leader Shane
Stewart, who is from Bixby, Okla. Stewart has won at
Outlaw in an American Sprint Car Series event.
• Power planted: Wesmar Racing Engines, used by
Shane Stewart, Daryn Pittman and Terry McCarl,
is based in Bixby, Okla., and is expected to have quite a
few employees on hand Friday night for the World of Outlaws
Sprint Series debut at Outlaw Motor Speedway in Muskogee,
Okla.
• IROC & roll: Danny Lasoski and Steve Kinser
raced in Round 2 of the International Race of Champions
event last Friday at Texas Motor Speedway. After a wild
race, Lasoski, who won the event at Texas in 2004, finished
seventh and Kinser finished eighth. Champ Car racer
Sebastien Bourdais held off NASCAR star Mark Martin
to become a first-time IROC winner. Round 3 will be
Sept. 8 at Richmond International Raceway. IROC series
sponsor, Crown Royal, is running a contest to select the
IROC series’ all-time greatest drivers. Steve Kinser is one
of four open-wheel drivers to be included in the list at
http://www.crownroyalracing.com, where fans can vote for
their favorite IROC racer.
• Victory parade: Steve Kinser’s win last weekend at
Tri-State Speedway in Haubstadt, Ind., was his fourth
victory of the season. Next on win list is Donny Schatz
with three victories. Kraig Kinser was the hottest
driver on the circuit in early April, winning on
back-to-back nights at Batesville Speedway and I-55 Raceway.
He also has a preliminary feature win at Las Vegas. Craig
Dollansky has won a feature and a preliminary, while
Tim Shaffer and Jeff Shepard have each won a
feature.
• Looking back: While the World of Outlaws Sprint
Series races Friday at Outlaw Motor Speedway for the first
time, it will returns Saturday to 81 Speedway in an event
promoted by SLS Promotions. The series raced at 81 Speedway
Oct. 16, 2004, for the first time since 1992, and Danny
Lasoski picked up the victory in the 30-lap feature after
making a move on Tim Kaeding at the mid-point of the race.
• The Mean 15: The impressive 2005 edition of the
World of Outlaws Sprint Series’ Mean 15 racers includes
Craig Dollansky (No. 7 owned by Karavan Motorsports),
Tim Kaeding (No. 83 owned by Dennis Roth), Kraig
Kinser (No. 11k owned by Steve Kinser Racing), Steve
Kinser (No. 11 owned by Steve Kinser Racing), Danny
Lasoski (No. 20 owned by Tony Stewart Motorsports),
Paul McMahan (No. 11h owned by David Helm), Jason
Meyers (No. 14 owned by the Elite Racing Team), Brian
Paulus (No. 28 owned by Pender Motorsports), Daryn
Pittman (No. 21 owned by Titan Racing), Joey Saldana
(No. 2 owned by Woodward Racing), Donny Schatz
(No. 15 owned by Schatz Motorsports), Tim Shaffer
(No. 6 owned by Parsons Motorsports), Jason Sides
(No. 7s owned by Sides Motorsports), Brandon Wimmer
(No. 7tw owned by Wimmer-Luck Racing), and the No. 35 Rick
Wright-owned car.
• On tour, too: Several other drivers have committed
to running the bulk of the schedule with the World of
Outlaws Sprint Series in 2005 with hopes of earning a spot
in a future Mean 15: Australian Brooke Tatnell is
back in the series with the newly formed Rush Racing team.
Terry McCarl, who has won the past six 410 sprint
championships at Knoxville Raceway. Shane Stewart,
the current leader in the battle for the Kevin Gobrecht
Rookie of the Year title. Randy Hannagan, a long-time
Outlaws competitor is running with the series again.
Sammy Swindell, a sprint car legend and three-time
Outlaws champion. Kevin Swindell, 16, who became the
youngest driver to finish in the top 10 with the Outlaws
when finished sixth in the feature at Parramatta City
Raceway in January.
• Tune into the Web: If fans can’t get to Outlaw
Motor Speedway or 81 Speedway to see the racing this
weekend, they can experience the excitement of the World of
Outlaws Sprint Series live on Dirtvision.com through the
DIRT Radio Network, where announcer John Gibson keeps you on
the edge of your seat throughout the event. To listen to the
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. Companies who are interested in advertising on the
new DIRT Radio Network should contact Mark Noble, DIRT
MotorSports VP Sales and Marketing, at 719-884-2141. For
technical support or questions, e-mail webmaster@dirtvision.com.
• Hear it firsthand: RACEceiver is the Official
Driver Communicator of DIRT MotorSports. A compact radio
receiver that conveniently fits into a driver’s pocket, a
RACEceiver allows each driver to hear directions from series
officials, which greatly enhances the safety and timeliness
of events. A similar version available to fans will allow
RACEceiver users to hear what information series officials
are relaying to the drivers. For more information about
RACEceiver, visit www.raceceiver.com, call 866-301-7223, or
look for their sales trailers at various events.
QUOTABLE
Craig Dollansky, a Mean 15 racer from Elk River, Minn., who
is second in points and has a main-event win and a
preliminary feature victory this season
• On this racing this weekend: “Wichita is a real
nice racetrack. SLS Promotions does a real good job putting
that event on. Muskogee will be interesting to see what
we’ve got there and see what we can do.”
• On setting up for a new track: “You just try to
establish the size of the track and what kind of dirt you’re
dealing with. You just need to start off on the right foot
and try to make adjustments throughout the night depending
on what the racetrack does.”
• On racing back-to-back nights: “It’s very demanding
on the crews, for the most part. It’s tough for them to get
done with Friday night’s race and go to the car wash and get
things ready to go for the next day. Depending on how far it
is for them to travel, it’s a pretty short night for them.
It’s difficult for the crews, mainly, but in this series you
run so many races at so many different racetracks you pretty
much get used to it and just try to go in and establish what
you need to do at each track.”
• On a favoring one size speedway over another: “I
used to kind of like the big tracks but now I’m enjoying the
short tracks as much as the big tracks. Short tracks are a
lot of fun.”
Tim Kaeding, a Mean 15 racer from San Jose, Calif., who
is running for top rookie honors and has posted three
consecutive top-five finishes in the past four Outlaws
features
• On new racing at a new track: “It’s just like
most of these racetracks this year, we’re going there blind.
I’ve never been to a lot of these racetracks. It’s just a
learning curve every night we go out. We just need to make
sure we get a decent setup on the car at the beginning of
the night and just go from there. Hopefully we can
capitalize on a couple of people’s mistakes.”
• On his string of top-five runs: “We had a great run
at Eldora. It was only our second and third time ever going
there so to run fifth and second was great. I’ve seen a lot
of other guys go there and they either end up in the fence,
over the fence, through the fence … for us to go there I
think it suits my driving style, wide-open, get on the fence
and hold on. Everywhere we go now from here is just a
learning curve for us. We’re just going to go out, enjoy it
as much as we can and be as fast as we can every night.”
• On racing at shorter tracks: “I like the smaller tracks. I
like being able to race with guys, be racy, dicey … it’s a
good show for the fans, that’s the biggest thing. You get on
some of these big tracks, everybody checks out and there’s
no passing except for in the back. You get on some of these
shorter tracks and it just makes for great racing. The fans
are what we do this for and when you get on the short tracks
and have four or five races within one race it’s great for
the fans to be able to say, ‘Hey, this guy started 13th and
he ran second.’ It just makes it a little more enjoyable for
the fans on the shorter tracks.”
Kraig Kinser, a Mean 15 racer and the 2004 Kevin Gobrecht
Rookie of the Year Award winner from Bloomington, Ind., who
has two main event wins and a preliminary feature victory
this season
• On going to new tracks: “Last year I went to a
lot of tracks that I hadn’t been to. You just get there and
look at it and try to see what you can relate it to. I’ve
found myself relating a lot of tracks to different tracks.
It’s tough to go there when you don’t know how to start up
with your setup. You just try to put the basics in and go
from there. You just wait and see how the track goes.”
• On racing back-to-back nights: “Depending on how
far it is, usually the crew washes the car. If it’s a pretty
far haul they drive all night long. It’s real hard on the
crew guys because they’ve got to get up early and start
working on the cars. You feel the miles in between. If you
get a couple of days off you find ways to get in some
sleep.”
Steve Kinser, a Mean 15 racer from Bloomington, Ind., who
is coming off his series-leading fourth victory of the
season and will be making his first appearance at Outlaw
Motor Speedway
• On finishing eighth in the IROC race last Friday at
Texas Motor Speedway: “Everybody had some tight racecars
and had some trouble turning. It made for a lot of pushing.
Everybody was pushing the front ends and having trouble
getting them around there. It was a little bit different
than what it was when we tested there. … It is fun. You go
there to have fun, but when it comes down to racing
everybody gets pretty serious about it and wants to run
good.”
• On fellow touring Outlaws Daryn Pittman and Shane
Stewart racing in front of their crowd: “It’s always a
lot of fun to run in your own area. No matter what area it
is, it’s somebody’s area. It’s also nice to not have to
drive very far to the races and get to go home. All these
guys take every race one race at a time. Once we get inside
the gate, we don’t even know what state we’re in or where we
are. We just know we’re at another race.”
Danny Lasoski, a Mean 15 racer from Dover, Mo., and 2001
series champion who won the World of Outlaws Sprint Series
feature last year at 81 Speedway
• On finishing seventh in the IROC race last Friday
at Texas Motor Speedway: “In previous years it’s
basically been a one-lane racetrack on the bottom. Well, lo
and behold it was a two-lane track. There were times when it
was three- and four-abreast. It got to be pretty rough. I
made it to fourth and I was really pushing hard to get into
the top three because that’s where the bonus points are
paid. I kind of tried to knock the wall down. It was driver
error, I just pushed too hard. I went in and they put
another tire on. I went to the back and made it back to
fourth again when Kurt Busch wrecked. We started the race
over and I tried to go around Matt Kenseth on the top and
went from fourth to sixth and when I did Helio Castroneves
and myself hit the fence again. We ended up seventh and
still rolling so I guess that’s a victory in itself, not
parking it.”
• On racing at Outlaw Motor Speedway for the first time:
“We’ll go in there and try to compare it to somewhere we’ve
been. If not we’ll just roll the dice and put a basic setup
in this thing and see how it rolls around there.”
Paul McMahan, a Mean 15 racer from Nashville who powered
to a third-place finish Saturday at Tri-State Speedway
• On going to a new track: “You just go in with
your basic setup that you would run at most of the
racetracks and once you get there it will be like when we
went to Batesville this year, we really didn’t know anything
about it. You get there, look at the track and make a few
adjustments and go from there. They’re all round and have
dirt on them.”
Jason Meyers, a Mean 15 racer from Clovis, Calif., who is
fourth in points entering this weekend
• On racing at Outlaw Motor Speedway: “It’s just
like going somewhere for your first time. Typically, you go
in and compare it to another place we’ve been. The biggest
thing about going to a nice new place, which supposedly
[Outlaw Motor Speedway] is nice even though I’ve never seen
it, is that it’s good for the sport. I’ve heard a lot of
good things about it. Hopefully it is what people have said
it’s been. It’ll be good for the fans, the racers and even
the sponsors that are involved. It might be a nice new place
to help in bringing the Outlaws to the new frontier they’re
trying to go for.”
• On finishing strong at short tracks: “For us, it’s
been up and down all year. We started off real strong and I
thought things were going in the right direction. We haven’t
necessarily been terrible but we haven’t been as strong as
we started off. We’ve been searching a little bit, trying
some different things to get back to that baseline that
makes us good everywhere. Typically I’m better in the half
miles but in the last year or so it’s been on the short
tracks where we’ve got our wins. We try to be competitive on
all of them, whether it’s a half-mile or a short track.
Every week we’re just trying to get to where we can be up
front every night.”
• On racing back-to-back nights in different cities:
“It’s difficult on the crews. I got a great team that works
very, very hard and they are what makes that easy on me. As
a driver I’m going to another racetrack, but those guys work
really hard all night to get the car and everything ready.
They drive about four hours, get up and do all their
maintenance. Not a lot of sleep for the crew. I try to get
in there and help when I can, but pretty much they take care
of things. That’s what makes us competitive. That’s what
separates the experienced teams from the younger teams. The
experienced guys kind of know how to go through that and how
to pace themselves. They’re definitely not out having a good
time the night before a race. They know to get their rest
during the week so they’re ready for that.”
Brian Paulus, a Mean 15 racer from Mechanicsburg, Pa.
• On what to expect Friday night at Outlaw Motor
Speedway: “We were told that Muskogee is a pretty
wide-open fast racetrack. We have a couple of minor changes
that we make to the car and you pretty much just play it by
ear. You turn a couple of laps and you know what the car is
doing so you make an adjustment here or there and do what
you can. Hopefully we’re the fastest guy to catch onto the
new setup for that track.”
Daryn Pittman, a Mean 15 racer native to Owasso, Okla.,
about an hour from Outlaw Motor Speedway in Muskogee
• On racing in Oklahoma: “We used to race at
Tulsa Speedway, which is only about five miles from my
house. It was always exciting to go there and race. It’s
just good to get back and have people come watch you race
that never get to see us. There are a lot of sprint car fans
or people who race themselves in micros or other forms of
racing. It’s always good to go home and get to see those
people and let them come out and see what you’ve been doing.
I’ve never been to Muskogee, but I’ve heard it’s an awesome
facility and a really nice racetrack. Last year, I think the
closest we got to home was Oklahoma City. This is definitely
a lot closer. Any time we’re around that area it’s a lot of
fun and brings back a lot of memories.”
• On preparing to race in front of the home crowd:
“Same as you do any other time. It’s no different. Even when
we go back to certain racetracks, we carry over a few notes
but something’s always different. That’s the great thing
about dirt racing. The track and the dirt does something
different every time you go to a place. I generally I have a
pretty good track record for when we go to places for the
first time, or places where it’s probably going to be the
first time 95 percent of the people are going to be going to
it. Generally, we do pretty good and catch on pretty quick
it seems. I think Shane Stewart and maybe a few locals who
run pretty decent will probably be the only ones who have
actually been there and might have a little one-up on us,
but that’s why these guys are the best. It doesn’t take them
very long to get caught up and then be going as fast or
faster than anybody that’s ever been around there.”
• On Wesmar Racing Engines located in Bixby, Okla.:
“They’re excited about it. This is as close as they’ll get
to see any of their engines run around home. All their
employees are going out there. We’ve got a brand new one
we’re putting in for that weekend. They’re looking forward
to that, and all their employees coming out and seeing me
and Terry McCarl and Shane Stewart and other people who run
their engines go around the racetrack.”
• On added pressure racing in front of the home crowd:
“Not any more than any other night. I’ve got enough
weight on my shoulders trying to pay my own bills. It is a
lot of pressure, but it’s a lot of fun just to be able to be
in that atmosphere where you have that many people watching
it.”
Shane Stewart, a Bixby, Okla.-native who is leading the
race for the Kevin Gobrecht Rookie of the Year Award
• On racing in Oklahoma: “Anytime I can go home
and race in front of my friends and family it’s pretty
exciting. Oklahoma City was the closest I used to get to
home, Muskogee actually is a little closer. I’ve already
been told that there’s plenty of friends and family that are
coming, and [car owner] Kevin Rudeen is also coming.
Hopefully we can put a good show on for them. We’re excited.
We’re excited to be home.”
• On added pressure of racing at home: “No. I try to
give it 100 percent every night. Obviously when everybody is
there, people might think it puts more pressure on my
shoulders but it really doesn’t. I try to race each night to
my fullest. That’s just another race on our schedule, it
just happens to be closer to my home than any other
racetrack. Hopefully we can have a good showing in front of
all them and let them know the No. 26 Rudeen Motorsports car
is capable of winning a race.”
• On having Wesmar Racing Engines at the feature:
“They work really hard for our race team getting us motors.
To be able to put a good showing on for them will be
something that will definitely be on my mind. They’re a
really big benefactor to our team so having all of them
there supporting us will be exciting.”
• On racing back-to-back nights in Muskogee and Wichita:
“The thing that most people don’t realize is that the crew
is really what has to really go through the grueling
schedule. Not only do they have to race that night, but
they’ve got to go to the car wash and get everything cleaned
up and then travel four or five hours. Generally when they
get to bed it’s 3 or 4 in the morning, but then they’ve got
to get up and maintenance the car for the next race. There’s
a lot of time in there that the crew has to go through more
than the driver. The driver, he gets in his motorhome and he
might drive a couple of hours and pull into a rest stop and
rest. It wears on the whole team, but this part of our
schedule is not near as grueling as it will be in July and
August. Racing on the weekends is not too difficult on the
crew, but when we start racing a lot it can wear your team
down. I think that’s what makes Danny [Lasoski] and Steve [Kinser]
and those guys so good. They know where the good car washes
are, they don’t have to spend time searching around for
those. They know where they can stay where there is truck
parking at the motels. Little things like that people don’t
think about. We can’t just pull into a regular motel and go
park our truck, we have to have truck parking. Little things
like that, once you’ve been out here for quite some time you
learn the ins and outs of that and it saves you time.”
• On what to expect during his first time through the
complete schedule with the Outlaws: “I don’t know. I
raced all winter in Australia. I flew straight from
Australia to Florida to start racing our season here. I’m
crossing my fingers I hope I don’t hit a wall. I don’t think
I will because we’re so pumped up this being our first year
to do it. The main thing that’s been going on so far with
our team is just being consistent, and I think we’ve kind of
done that. Anytime you can consistently run in the top 10,
crack the top five a few times, hopefully you’ll get a
couple of wins. A couple of wins doesn’t sound like that
much, but when you’re out here racing with these guys a lot
it is.”
• On racing at short tracks: “Generally the car isn’t
such a big factor as much as the driver. The driver actually
plays a big part in racing on small racetracks. A driver is
a really big benefactor where you don’t have to rely on your
850-horsepower motor to get you qualified in the top 10 to
actually be able to race with these guys. I think the
smaller tracks definitely open up the door for news teams
like ourselves to have a better chance of winning the races,
but it goes back to Wesmar and we’ve got a good enough motor
that we’re competitive even on the big tracks.”
Joey Saldana, a Mean 15 racer from Brownsburg, Ind., who
finished fifth Saturday night at Tri-State Speedway in
Haubstadt, Ind.
• On approaching a new track: “For us, we’ve just
got to get our motors running. It doesn’t matter where we
go, we’ve still got to qualify. I heard the track is pretty
nice. If it’s nice as what I’ve heard, it should be a good
show. Last year, Wichita was awesome. It was real racy and
you could pass.”
Donny Schatz, a Mean 15 racer from Fargo, N.D., who has
three victories this season
• On racing at new facilities: “We do the same
thing virtually everywhere. You just hope you have good
conditions, hopefully they have a good facility, hope you
got a racetrack they have prepared very well. That’s about
all you can do. Until you can see it and get a couple of hot
laps on there, guys are kind of behind the eight ball. We
normally adapt to new tracks a little better than we do the
ones go to a couple of times because we try to go back to
the same thing we’ve done in the past and sometimes it
doesn’t work. That’s how it goes. That’s the part of racing
that makes it exciting and enjoyable and why you have a
different winner almost every night.”
Tim Shaffer, a Mean 15 racer from Aliquippa, Pa., who
earned a victory earlier this season in Tulare, Calif.
• On racing for the first time at a track: “It’s
pretty exciting because hopefully nobody else has been there
either. A new place like that is pretty interesting. I think
it makes it more fun for everybody because everybody is on
the same playing field.”
• On having new tracks on the Outlaws tour: “It’s
neat to go somewhere new. Shane [Stewart] will have a little
bit of experience, but he’ll be there with a different group
of guys now, too. You’re going to have 24 good cars running
on that thing so I don’t think he’s going to have an edge,
either.”
Brooke Tatnell, an Australia native and driver of the No.
8 Rush Racing car who started on the pole and finished
second last Saturday at Tri-State Speedway in Haubstadt,
Ind.
• On Muskogee and Wichita: “I raced there last
year or the year before, one of the first races they had. I
enjoyed the place. It’s a pretty awesome facility. It was
new when I went there. For Wichita, driving the No. 66 car
[last year], that’s basically their home track. I enjoy
short track racing, and I enjoy the half miles, too. Short
tracks are what I grew up on so I love the little bull
rings.”
• On getting settled for racing in the U.S.: “In
sprint car racing, does it ever settle down? The biggest
thing is that we never had a problem once I got off the
plane. Once we got past that hurdle everything’s been pretty
smooth for us. Our biggest thing is, we’ve run eight races
and had four top-fives, which is impressive and I’m happy
with that but the nights we haven’t been top five it’s been
like a roller-coaster ride, we’ve been up and down. It’s not
that we’ve been that far away, but it doesn’t take much to
lose five spots with these guys nowadays.”
• On his succeeding with a virtually new team put
together in the off-season: “We’ve got a lot of bonus
programs with this race team with sponsors and we’ve got to
pick up the pace to get them. We’re happy with it. We’re
really fortunate. The guys have been working really good.
Not many new teams have come straight out. I’ve worked with
my crew chief before but not with the other two guys. I
haven’t worked with the car owners. The motors are an
all-new program. The shocks are a new program. I’m really
happy with it. I think we’ve made a lot of people in the
past two years stand up and take notice. People are starting
to take notice that we’re not just a gimmick, we are
something to be reckoned with.”
UPCOMING EVENTS
The World of Outlaws Sprint Series closes out the month
by racing April 29-30 at historic Knoxville Raceway in
Knoxville, Iowa, before going May 6 to Lake Ozark Speedway
in Eldon, Mo., May 7 to Tri-City Speedway in Granite City,
Ill., and May 9 to Tri-State Speedway in Pocola, Okla.
2005 WORLD OF OUTLAWS SPRINT SERIES SCHEDULE
Date Race Track City, ST TV Date Winner
January 13 Outlaws Down Under Parramatta
City Raceway Sydney, AUS Kerry Madsen (P)
January 14 Outlaws Down Under Parramatta City Raceway
Sydney, AUS Danny Lasoski (P)
January 15 Outlaws Down Under Parramatta City Raceway
Sydney, AUS Donny Schatz
February 11 Volusia Speedway Barberville, FL Jeff Shepard
February 13 Volusia Speedway Barberville, FL March 2 Steve
Kinser
February 25 Thunderbowl Raceway Tulare, CA March 9 Tim
Shaffer
February 26 Bakersfield Speedway Bakersfield, CA March 16
Craig Dollansky
March 4 Cactus Classic Manzanita Speedway Phoenix, AZ Craig
Dollansky (P)
March 5 Cactus Classic Manzanita Speedway Phoenix, AZ March
23 PPD/rain to Oct. 11
March 10 J.D. Byrider World of Outlaws Nationals Las Vegas
Motor Speedway Las Vegas, NV Kraig Kinser (P)
March 11 J.D. Byrider World of Outlaws Nationals Las Vegas
Motor Speedway Las Vegas, NV March 30 Donny Schatz (2)
March 18 Pike County Speedway Magnolia, MS Steve Kinser (2)
March 19 The Texas Shootout Houston Raceway Park Baytown, TX
April 6 Donny Schatz (3)
April 1 Batesville Speedway Locust Grove, AR Kraig Kinser
April 2 I-55 Speedway Pevely, MO April 13 Kraig Kinser (2)
April 8 Eldora Speedway Rossburg, OH Sammy Swindell (P)
April 9 Eldora Speedway Rossburg, OH April 20 Steve Kinser
(3)
April 16 Tri-State Speedway Haubstadt, IN April 27 Steve
Kinser (4)
April 22 Outlaw Speedway Muskogee, OK
April 23 The Twister Showdown 81 Speedway Wichita, KS May 4
April 29 Knoxville Raceway Knoxville, IA
April 30 Knoxville Raceway Knoxville, IA May 11
May 6 Lake Ozark Speedway Eldon, MO
May 7 Tri-City Speedway Granite City, IL May 18
May 9 Tri-State Speedway Pocola, OK
May 14 K-C Raceway Chillicothe, OH May 25
May 20 Commonwealth Clash Lernerville Speedway Sarver, PA
May 21 Commonwealth Clash Lernerville Speedway Sarver, PA
June 1
May 24 Grandview Raceway Bechtelsville, PA
May 26 Williams Grove Speedway Mechanicsburg, PA
May 27 Williams Grove Speedway Mechanicsburg, PA June 8
May 28 Hagerstown Speedway Hagerstown, MD
May 30 Lebanon Valley Speedway West Lebanon, NY
June 1 Rolling Wheels Elbridge, NY June 15
June 3 Sharon Speedway Sharon, OH
June 4 Eldora Speedway Rossburg, OH June 22
June 9 I-96 Speedway Lake Odessa, MI June 29
June 11 Sheboygan County Fair Park Plymouth, WI
June 14 Kokomo Speedway Kokomo, IN
June 17 Eagle Nationals Eagle Raceway Eagle, NE
June 18 Eagle Nationals Eagle Raceway Eagle, NE July 6
June 22 State Fair Motor Speedway Sedalia, MO
June 24 NAPA Classic Knoxville Raceway Knoxville, IA
June 25 NAPA Classic Knoxville Raceway Knoxville, IA July 13
June 28 Husets Speedway Brandon, SD
July 1 Duel in the Dakotas Red River Valley Speedway West
Fargo, ND
July 2 Duel in the Dakotas Red River Valley Speedway West
Fargo, ND July 20
July 4 Cedar Lake Speedway Somerset, WI
July 6 Power Com Park Beaver Dam, WI
July 8 Route 66 Raceway Joliet, IL
July 9 I-55 Speedway Pevely, MO
July 13 Brad Doty Classic Attica Raceway Attica, OH July 27
July 15 Eldora Speedway Rossburg, OH
July 16 Kings Royal Eldora Speedway Rossburg, OH August 3
July 19 Don Martin Memorial Lernerville Speedway Sarver, PA
August 10
July 21 Summer Nationals Williams Grove Speedway
Mechanicsburg, PA
July 22 Summer Nationals Williams Grove Speedway
Mechanicsburg, PA
July 23 Summer Nationals Williams Grove Speedway
Mechanicsburg, PA August 17
July 25 Fulton Speedway Fulton, NY
July 27 Hartford Raceway Hartford, MI
July 29 The Princeton National Princeton Speedway Princeton,
MN
July 30 The Princeton National Princeton Speedway Princeton,
MN August 24
August 3 Lawrenceburg Speedway Lawrenceburg, IN
August 5 Eldora Speedway Rossburg, OH
August 10 Knoxville Nationals Knoxville Raceway Knoxville,
IA
August 11 Knoxville Nationals Knoxville Raceway Knoxville,
IA
August 12 Knoxville Nationals Knoxville Raceway Knoxville,
IA
August 13 Knoxville Nationals Knoxville Raceway Knoxville,
IA
August 16 Red River Valley Speedway West Fargo, ND
August 19 Billings Speedway Billings, MT
August 20 Billings Speedway Billings, MT August 31
August 26 Grays Harbor Raceway Park Elma, WA
August 27 Grays Harbor Raceway Park Elma, WA September 7
August 30 Cottage Grove Speedway Cottage Grove, OR
September 2 Harvest Classic Calistoga Speedway Calistoga, CA
September 3 Harvest Classic Calistoga Speedway Calistoga, CA
September 4 Harvest Classic Calistoga Speedway Calistoga, CA
September 14
September 8 Gold Cup Silver Dollar Speedway Chico, CA
September 9 Gold Cup Silver Dollar Speedway Chico, CA
September 10 Gold Cup Silver Dollar Speedway Chico, CA
September 21
September 13 Rocky Mountain Speedway Denver, CO
September 16 1/3 Mile Championship Eagle Raceway Eagle, NE
September 17 1/3 Mile Championship Eagle Raceway Eagle, NE
September 28
September 23 Jackson Speedway Jackson, MN
September 24 Power Com Park Beaver Dam, WI October 5
September 27 K-C Raceway Chillicothe, OH
September 30 Nationals Open Williams Grove Speedway
Mechanicsburg, PA
October 1 Nationals Open Williams Grove Speedway
Mechanicsburg, PA October 12
October 3 Lernerville Speedway Sarver, PA
October 7 Dodge City Raceway Dodge City, KS
October 8 Dodge City Raceway Dodge City, KS October 19
October 11 Cactus Classic (from March 5) Manzanita Speedway
Phoenix, AZ
October 14 Thunderbowl Raceway Tulare, CA
October 15 Thunderbowl Raceway Tulare, CA October 26
October 21 Las Vegas Motor Speedway Las Vegas, NV
October 22 Las Vegas Motor Speedway Las Vegas, NV November 2
P-Preliminary feature win; (#)-Indicates drivers’ total
victories.
WORLD OF OUTLAWS SPRINT SERIES SPONSORS
The World of Outlaws Sprint Series is brought to the
fans across the country by several sponsors and partners,
including series sponsors Hoosier Racing Tire, VP Racing
Fuels, Stacker 2®, and The Outdoor Channel. Promotional
Partners include AMB i.t., RACEceiver, HUMMERSGONEWILD.COM,
Zippo Lighters, The University of Northwestern Ohio,
Timberwolf, and Race Punk apparel. Slick 50 is an Associate
Program Sponsor and Contingency sponsors include DART
Machinery, MSD Ignitions, and Wrisco Industries.