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Daily Dirt 11/23/2024 21:00:03

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January 14
Vado Speedway Park,
Vado, NM
Sanction: Unsanctioned Supers (Wild West Shootout) - $26,000
Information provided by: Kyle McFadden and track reports (last updated January 15, 12:01 pm)
Pierce's flat lifts Larson to first Wild West victory
Wild West Shootout
  1. Kyle Larson
  2. Mike Marlar
  3. Cade Dillard
  4. Garrett Alberson
  5. Stormy Scott
  6. Tyler Erb
  7. Bobby Pierce
  8. Jason Strand
  9. Brandon Sheppard
  10. Dustin Sorensen
  11. Ricky Weiss
  12. Chase Junghans
  13. Shannon Babb
  14. Kyle Beard
  15. Mikey Kile
  16. Sam Mars
  17. Morgan Bagley
  18. Clay Stuckey
  19. Drake Troutman
  20. Collen Winebarger
  21. Kaden Honeycutt
  22. Bricen James
  23. Jake Timm
  24. Cody Laney
presented by
Mike Ruefer/mikerueferphotos.photoreflect.com
Kyle Larson fires the guns as he celebrates his first career Wild West Shootout victory.
What won the race: Inheriting the point when Bobby Pierce suffered a flat right-rear tire on lap 43, fourth-starting Kyle Larson of Elk Grove, Calif., led the remaining circuits to win Sunday' 50-lap Rio Grand Waste Services Wild West Shootout presented by O'Reilly Auto Parts finale at Vado Speedway Park. Larson notched his first career miniseries victory, taking the checkers 2.823 seconds ahead of Mike Marlar for the $26,000 top prize.
Key notes: The third-starting Pierce, of Oakwood, Ill., changed the flat tire under cauiton and rebounded to finish seventh, clinching his second career miniseries points title. His four feature triumphs earned him more than $70,000 across the six days of racing action, including a $25,000 Penske Paydirt Jackport bonus that could have jumped to $100,000 if he had secured a fifth triumph. ... Pole-starting Cade Dillard placed third in the feature, leaving him second in the WWS points standings, 42 points behind Pierce.
On the move: Tyler Erb of New Waverly, Texas, started 12th and finished sixth.
Winner's sponsors: Larson’s K&L Rumley Enterprises Longhorn Chassis is sponsored by FloRacing, Hendrickcars.com, HotRod Septic Treatment, D&E Marine, Rumley Engineering, Senior Life Insurance Company, Mesilla Valley Transportation, American Racing Wheels, Valvoline, Sunoco Race Fuels, Wheeler Metals and Bilstein.
Points chase: Final: 1. Bobby Pierce (495); 2. Cade Dillard (453); 3. Garrett Alberson (414); 4. Tyler Erb (405); 5. Kyle Larson (396); 6. Mike Marlar (393); 7. Shannon Babb (384); 8. Dustin Sorensen (317); 9. Ricky Weiss (309); 10. Stormy Scott (258).
Current weather: Clear, 52°F
Car count: 37
Fast qualifier: Kyle Larson
Time: 14.765 seconds
Polesitter: Cade Dillard
Heat race winners: Bobby Pierce, Mike Marlar, Kyle Larson, Cade Dillard
Consolation race winners: Morgan Bagley, Kyle Beard
Editor's note: Results and race details are unofficial.
From staff reports

VADO, N.M. (Jan. 14) — Kyle Larson finally broke through for his first Rio Grande Waste Services Wild West Shootout presented by O’Reilly Auto Parts in Sunday night’s 50-lap finale at Vado Speedway Park.

But would the NASCAR Cup Series superstar have emerged triumphant if a flat right-rear tire hadn’t snuffed out Bobby Pierce’s bid for a fifth straight win — and a $100,000 Penske Paydirt Jackpot bonus — as the Oakwood, Ill., driver led the feature on lap 43?

Larson, 31, of Elk Grove, Calif., wasn’t sure if he could have overcome Pierce without the pacesetter’s twist of fate, but he was certainly ready to take his shot in the final circuits.

“I think it was getting ready to get good there down the frontstretch into (turn) one,” Larson said of the moments before Pierce’s tire gave up.

The battle didn’t happen, however, as Larson inherited the lead on the lap-43 restart following Pierce’s problem and controlled the remainder of the distance to secure the $26,000 first-place prize. He steered his K&L Rumley Enterprises Longhorn Chassis across the finish line 2.823 seconds ahead of Winfield, Tenn.’s Mike Marlar, who led laps 1-13 before fading as far back as fifth and then rallying to reach second following the lap-43 restart.

Cade Dillard of Robeline, La., who won Jan. 6’s Wild West Shootout opener, finished close behind Marlar in third. Garrett Alberson of Las Cruces, N.M., placed fourth for his fifth top-five finish in six events and Stormy Scott, also of nearby Las Cruces, N.M., completed the top five after running as high as second.

The 27-year-old Pierce saw the 100-grand bonus slip through his fingers after leading laps 14-43, but he managed to rally after pitting for a new tire and finished seventh to clinch his second career Wild West Shootout points title. He also collected a $25,000 bonus for his four victories in the miniseries.

Larson’s triumph put a satisfying cap on his otherwise difficult week at Vado, which saw him struggle to find the start-to-finish speed necessary to outrun Pierce and other contenders. He seemed more comfortable in his 22nd-to-fifth run on Saturday driving Kevin Rumley’s backup car — after the primary machine was sidelined in a heat-race tangle — and carried that strength into the finale.

“I’ve been qualifying so bad and then tonight I finally ran the middle and went (overall) quick time,” Larson said, “so maybe I was just running the wrong line all week.”

Larson conceded during his post-race interview that reaching his winning form was a process.

“Racing’s been good and fun, it’s just been a lot of work,” Larson said, praising Rumley and his team for all the hours they put in during the miniseries. “These are by far the toughest vehicles, most confusing vehicles, for me to figure out how to drive. I mean, a sprint car’s confusing to me on the mechanic’s side of it and they’re way simpler than these. I try even not to understand anything (mechanical) about these. I just try to focus on driving. That’s tough enough.

“They’re just so hard, and they’re such a challenge for me to try and figure it out. Honestly, that’s what I like and hate about (Late Model racing). I get so frustrated in these things more than any other car that I run, but, when you win, it’s also very satisfying, or when you have runs when you come from 22nd to fifth.”

Larson, who started fourth, came alive midway through the A-main, just after the first caution flag flew on lap 22 for Collen Winebarger slowing in turn two with a flat right-rear tire. He grabbed third on lap 23 and moved to second a couple circuits later.

Then Larson began his chase of Pierce, who started third and overtook Marlar for the lead on lap 14.

“I felt like just before the caution my tires were coming in good,” Larson said. “I had good traction at that point. The top was starting to come in as well in one and two.

“I was just making tons of mistakes behind Bobby trying to run really hard. I was trying to peak at the (score) board and see how many laps were left because I felt like we were on a long run there. He kept getting away, and then I’d get back to him.

“I think our tire selection maybe was better than his is all, but our car was good as well against the cushion,” he continued. “I didn’t feel great around the bottom early, but up top I was good.”

Larson nearly drew even with Pierce through turns one and two on lap 41 as the leader dealt with slower traffic. Two circuits later came the deciding moment of the race when Pierce slowed off turn four with a flat right-rear tire — directly in front of Larson, who actually made contact with Pierce on the homestretch and thought he might have caused Pierce’s demise.

“It’s cool to get in victory lane,” Larson said after climbing from his car. “I just wish it would’ve happened a little differently there off of (turn) four.”

When pit reporter Trenton Berry informed Larson that video showed Pierce was slowing with a flat tire before Larson hit him, the news was a relief to the former NASCAR Cup Series champion.

“Well that’s good to know, because I did get up underneath him a little bit and I just assumed it was my nose that cut his tire so I wasn’t too excited inheriting the lead like that,” Larson said. “That definitely makes me feel better.”

Pierce confirmed that Larson played no role in his misfortune.

“Kyle got into me here (on the homestretch), but that was after my tire was already going flat off the corner so I was slowing down,” Pierce said. “Nothing he did there. Just one of them deals, man.

“I think just, six races here, parts fall off cars, it gets knocked up in the cushion, and running up there … sometimes you’re just the unlucky one. We’ve been pretty lucky and fast all week. Right here at the end it bit us. I think I just ran something over and it went right away.”

Larson was excited to win, but he had sympathy for Pierce.

“I hate that for Bobby either way if I gave him the flat or not,” Larson said. “I wanted to race it out with him. He obviously had a lot of money on the line tonight too, and if I couldn’t win it would’ve been cool to see him take home that bonus money. But it’s always fun racing him. Him and I have very similar driving styles, and there’s not many guys that can hustle a Late Model like he can.”

Pierce accepted his heartbreak with a smile. He thought he was well positioned to capture a fifth win in six starts to bag a six-figure bonus but he had to be satisfied with four wins, a runner-up finish and over $70,000 in earnings for the week.

“I was pretty confident,” said Pierce, who pocketed $3,000 for his first Wild West Shootout title since 2017. “Around like, 20, 15 to go, I wasn’t really feeling pressured. Then I knew Larson was closing in on me, I saw the 6 on the board in second and my dad was telling me, ‘Get back up on the wheel.’

“I was feeling like I was getting pretty loose … I don’t know if my tires sealed up or what. I was really shocked the tires that (Larson) went with worked like that, but his left-rear, he could really abuse that thing and get it going running that cushion.

“All in all, we’re happy with our week,” he added. “I can’t thank my guys enough. If we would’ve won that first night out, and if we would’ve been going for six tonight (and a $300,000 bonus), I would’ve felt really bad. Maybe the insurance company (underwriting the bonus) won’t feel too bad now (that he fell short of the second-richest bonus). They don’t lose as much money, so hopefully they’ll come back and do it again next year and we’ll come back and win all six of ‘em.”

Notes: Runner-up Marlar remarked afterward that his Skyline Motorsports machine wasn’t quite strong enough to reach victory lane. “I felt like I did everything right,” he said. “I just ain’t got the speed right now. I’m just way too free and  loose.” … WISSOTA competitor Jason Strand ran inside the top-10 the entire distance and finished eighth. ... Brandon Sheppard ran as high as sixth on the lap-44 restart before losing two spots on the final lap and settling for ninth. ... Sunday's finale lasted 20 minutes, with 13 drivers completing 50 laps and 19 running at the finish.

Feature lineup

(50 laps)
Row 1: Cade Dillard, Mike Marlar
Row 2: Bobby Pierce, Kyle Larson
Row 3: Brandon Sheppard, Stormy Scott
Row 4: Ricky Weiss, Garrett Alberson
Row 5: Dustin Sorensen, Shannon Babb
Row 6: Jason Strand, Tyler Erb
Row 7: Drake Troutman, Jake Timm
Row 8: Mikey Kile, Collen Winebarger
Row 9: Morgan Bagley, Kyle Beard
Row 10: Chase Junghans, Kaden Honeycutt
Row 11: Bricen James, Cody Laney
Row 12: Sam Mars, Clay Stuckey

Consolation results

(10 laps; top four transfer)

First consolation: Morgan Bagley, Chase Junghans, Bricen James, Sam Mars, Jon Kirby, Don Shaw, Thomas Hunziker, Jimmy Whisler, Walton Kyle Jr., Kent Rosevear, Pete Vargas.

Second consolation: Kyle Beard, Kaden Honeycutt, Cody Laney, Clay Stuckey, B.J. Robinson, Rodney Sanders, Chance Mann, Terry Carter, Keko Perez, Ian Whisler.

Heat race recap

Second-starting Bobby Pierce took the point on the second lap and never looked back, winning the first heat race by 1.715 seconds over Brandon Sheppard. Dustin Sorensen settled for third after leading the first lap from the pole and fifth-starting Drake Troutman grabbed the fourth and final transfer spot. … Mike Marlar led all eight laps to win heat two by 2.1 seconds over Ricky Weiss. Fifth-starting Jason Strand finished third while Mikey Kile started and finished fourth. … Kyle Larson dominated the third heat, winning by 1.022 seconds over Stormy Scott. Shannon Babb and Jake Timm also held serve, finishing third and fourth. … Cade Dillard led green-to-checkered to win the fourth and final heat race by 0.762 of a second over third-starting Garrett Alberson. Tyler Erb finished third, with fifth-starting Collen Winebarger taking fourth. … All four heat races were completed without incident for the second consecutive night, as they combined to last just over 10 minutes.

Heat race results

(Eight laps; top four transfer)

First heat: Bobby Pierce, Brandon Sheppard, Dustin Sorensen, Drake Troutman, Jon Kirby, Morgan Bagley, Chase Junghans, Sam Mars, Kent Rosevear, Walton Kyle Jr.

Second heat: Mike Marlar, Ricky Weiss, Jason Strand, Mikey Kile, Don Shaw, Bricen James, Thomas Hunziker, Jimmy Whisler, Pete Vargas.

Third heat: Kyle Larson, Stormy Scott, Shannon Babb, Jake Timm, Kyle Beard, Clay Stuckey, Chance Mann, Terry Carter, Keko Perez.

Fourth heat: Cade Dillard, Garrett Alberson, Tyler Erb, Collen Winebarger, Cody Laney, B.J. Robinson, Rodney Sanders, Ian Whisler, Kaden Honeycutt.

Heat race lineups

First heat
Row 1: Dustin Sorensen, Bobby Pierce
Row 2: Brandon Sheppard, Jon Kirby
Row 3: Drake Troutman, Chase Junghans
Row 4: Morgan Bagley, Sam Mars
Row 5: Kent Rosevear, Walton Kyle Jr.
Second heat
Row 1: Mike Marlar, Ricky Weiss
Row 2: Don Shaw, Mikey Kile
Row 3: Jason Strand, Thomas Hunziker
Row 4: Bricen James, Jimmy Whisler
Row 5: Pete Vargas
Third heat
Row 1: Kyle Larson, Stormy Scott
Row 2: Shannon Babb, Jake Timm
Row 3: Terry Carter, Clay Stuckey
Row 4: Rodney Sanders, Ian Whisler
Row 5: Kyle Beard
Fourth heat
Row 1: Cade Dillard, Tyler Erb
Row 2: Garrett Alberson, B.J. Robinson
Row 3: Collen Winebarger, Cody Laney
Row 4: Keko Perez, Chance Mann
Row 5: Kaden Honeycutt

Time trials

Group A
Driver (car no.), hometown, time (unofficial)
1. Dustin Sorensen (19), Rochester, Minn., 14.811
2. Mike Marlar (157), Winfield, Tenn., 14.819
3. Bobby Pierce (32), Oakwood, Ill., 14.869
4. Ricky Weiss (7), Headingley, Manitoba, 14.882
5. Brandon Sheppard (B5), New Berlin, Ill., 14.901
6. Don Shaw (42s), Ham Lake, Minn., 14.919
7. Jon Kirby (11), Russellville, Ark., 14.993
8. Mikey Kile (25), West Lake, La., 15.027
9. Drake Troutman (7T), Hyndman, Pa., 15.126
10. Jason Strand (E85), Portland, N.D., 15.143
11. Chase Junghans (18), Manhattan, Kan., 15.217
12. Thomas Hunziker (38), Bend, Ore., 15.265
13. Morgan Bagley (14m), Longview, Texas, 15.312
14. Bricen James (13), Albany, Ore., 15.326
15. Sam Mars (28m), Menomonie, Wis., 15.346
16. Jimmy Whisler (28w), Otis, Ore., 15.559
17. Kent Rosevear (02), Yuma, Ariz., 15.678
18. Pete Vargas (777), Las Cruces, N.M., 16.580
19. Walton Kyle Jr. (250), Las Cruces, N.M., 16.663
Group B
1. Kyle Larson (6), Elk Grove, Calif., 14.765
2. Cade Dillard (97), Robeline, La., 14.832
3. Stormy Scott (2s), Las Cruces, N.M., 14.854
4. Tyler Erb (1), New Waverly, Texas, 14.900
5. Shannon Babb (18B), Moweaqua, Ill., 14.999
6. Garrett Alberson (58), Las Cruces, N.M., 15.015
7. Jake Timm (49), Winona, Minn., 15.120
8. B.J. Robinson (1r), Bossier City, La., 15.158
9. Terry Carter (6T), Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, 15.160
10. Collen Winebarger (14s), Corbett, Ore., 15.172
11. Clay Stuckey (15), Shreveport, La., 15.182
12. Cody Laney (32B), Torrance, Calif., 15.214
13. Rodney Sanders (73), Happy, Texas, 15.457
14. Keko Perez (3), Chihuahua, Mexico, 15.583
15. Ian Whisler (82), Otis, Ore., 15.782
16. Chance Mann (88), Newport, Ark., 15.787
17. Kaden Honeycutt (10), Bridge City, Texas, 15.952
18. Kyle Beard (86), Trumann, Ark., time disallowed

Sunday’s schedule

All times local
1 p.m.: Pits open
2:30 p.m.: Drivers’ meeting
3 p.m.: Grandstands open
3:30 p.m.: On-track activity
- X-Mod hot laps
- Modified hot laps
- Late Model group qualifying
4:55 p.m.: Opening ceremonies
- X-Mod heats (8 laps)
- Modified heats (8 laps)
- Late Model heats (8 laps)
Consolations
- X-Mods (10 laps)
- Modifieds (12 laps)
- Late Models (12 laps)
Feature events
- Late Models (50 laps)
- X-Mods (25 laps)
- Modifieds (25 laps)

Feature lineup

Row 1: Dillard, Marlar
Row 2: Pierce, Larson
Row 3: Sheppard, Scott
Row 4: Weiss, Alberson
Row 5: Sorensen, Babb
Row 6: Strand, Erb
Row 7: Troutman, Timm
Row 8: Kile, Winebarger
Row 9: Bagley, Beard
Row 10: Junghans, Honeycutt
Row 11: James, Laney
Row 12: Mars, Stuckey
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