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Bryan Clauson Competes in the Toyota Pro Celebrity Race During the Long Beach Grand Prix

Clauson, an open-wheel racer backed in part by K&N, ran into a tire barrier midway through the Toyota Pro Celebrity race during the Grand Prix of Long Beach. He didn't complete the entire 10 laps of the race, but he said racing at Long Beach was an opportunity he couldn't pass up.

"It's kind of a no-brainer to get the opportunity to be with super people and the personalities and everybody that's in this group is phenomenal," Clauson said. "To get the opportunity to be a part of it and to spend some time with these people has been amazing. You learn a lot about how to be successful in life when you're around successful people. It's been a lot of fun and we definitely had a great time."
Bryan will make his first trip to the Indianapolis 500 in May.
Bryan will make his first trip to the Indianapolis 500 in May.


Clauson was one of four pro drivers in a field of celebrity entrants that included Adrien Brody, Adam Carolla, Kim Coates and Brody Jenner. The pros had to start 30 seconds behind the celebrity drivers around the 11-turn street course. Carolla won the race. Clauson crashed near the end. The 22 year-old USAC driver said the group of drivers for the pro celebrity race had a lot of chemistry.

"I can't say there is anybody in the room that I didn't connect with," Clauson said. "Some guys, Cain Velasquez, Jim Jonsin, I was probably a little closer with. The guy I kind of buddied up to the first day was Brody Jenner; there are few guys that we kind of have our little pack there. Everybody gets along really well. It's been a lot of fun. We've not only been able to hang out in training, but go out afterward and hang out and become friends."

Part of winning the 2011 USAC National championship included a scholarship to put toward the Izod IndyCar Series and the Indianapolis 500. He won the USAC National championship in 2010 and used the scholarship he won that year to enter some Firestone Indy Lights races. He had the option of using the 2011 scholarship money in the Indy Lights Series or toward an entry in the Indy 500.

"At the time, there were only three Indy Lights ovals, and doing that again wasn't going to be that beneficial," Clauson said. "We were faced with two options, running the road course side of things or put it toward something on the Indy 500 side. The tough part with the scholarship programs is they're one-year deals. Money's not there again next year unless you win. Learning the road courses would have been great, but at the end of the day, if I won every road course I was in, I would still be facing trying to find funding to break into the IndyCar Series."

Clauson said he plans on racing in the USAC Midget, Sprint and Silver Crown series in addition to racing at Indianapolis. Because of the Indianapolis 500, he won't be able to race a full USAC schedule. His team uses K&N filters and products on its USAC Midget and Sprint car teams. "This opportunity with the 500 is a great opportunity," Clauson said. "There are always jobs that come around in May, so that's kind of the thought behind it. We feel like we got a pretty good handle on things. Hopefully in a few weeks here, we'll have things firmed up and be able to focus on the race itself."

Even though his day ended early in Long Beach, he said before the race that it would have been quite an accomplishment to win a race during the Grand Prix of Long Beach. "Probably behind Indy, it's the second-biggest race on the Indy car schedule," Clauson said. "There's a lot of history here. You walk through the pit area and everybody talks about wanting to win the Long Beach Grand Prix right after Indianapolis. It's definitely a race that carries a lot of clout. To be part of it in the Toyota Pro Celebrity race is a great opportunity."

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Derek Thorn Takes the Pole and the Win at the K&N Pro Series West Race in Lake Havasu

Derek Thorn and Dylan Kwasniewski racing nose-to-tail.
Derek Thorn and Dylan Kwasniewski racing nose-to-tail.
The NASCAR K&N Pro Series West made its first visit to Havasu 95 Speedway in Arizona and plenty of new faces came to the forefront.

Derek Thorn, a driver from Bakersfield, won his first K&N Pro Series West race, leading the last 42 laps in the Toyota/NAPA Auto Parts 150 presented by Gene Price Motorsports.

Thorn won the pole, another K&N Pro Series West first, and led a race-high 141 laps.

"I've got to pay a tribute to the Sunrise Ford team, (car owner) Bob Bruncati and (crew chief) Bill Sedgwick and all the guys at the shop," Thorn said. "It was really hard coming here to this track, because no one had raced here. It's hard to take something from practice and prepare yourself for a 150-lap race, because at 125 laps the car is doing something completely different than it was at Lap 50. It was a lot of guess-work, but the guys did an awesome job of putting an awesome car underneath me. I'm so thankful to be here and get this victory in the K&N Pro Series."

David Mayhew, the leader in the K&N Pro Series West standings after two races, was second. He passed Dylan Kwasniewski on the final laps to move into the runner-up spot, but was not able to chase down Thorn. "He drove a good race, made no mistakes and it was fun," Mayhew said, who started the race from the seventh spot. "To come out of here with a second after how it was looking is real promising for everybody."
Thorn won the pole, another K&N Pro Series West first, and led a race-high 141 laps.
Thorn won the pole, another K&N Pro Series West first, and led a race-high 141 laps.


Kwasniewski, a driver for Gene Price Motorsports, led nine laps, but fell back to third when the checkered flag dropped. "Derek did a great job of holding me off," Kwasniewski said. "I was trying as hard as I could. Believe me I was definitely trying."

A number of drivers were making their K&N Pro Series West debuts at Havasu 95 Speedway and turned in top-10 performances. Rookie Cameron Hayley was sixth. Austin Dyne, making his first K&N Pro Series West start, was seventh. Ryan Partridge, another driver making his West Series debut, was ninth. Braeden Havens, in his second K&N Pro Series West start, was eighth. Greg Pursley, the reigning K&N Pro Series West champion, was 10th.

The next K&N Pro Series race is the Utah Grand Prix at Miller Motorsports Park on April 28. The West Series teams have visited Phoenix International Raceway, a 1-mile oval, and Havasu 95 Speedway, a quarter-mile oval. Miller Motorsports Park is one of three road courses on the West Series schedule. "We'll get through the road course next week and that will show who's got the real package going from a big track to a short track to a road course," Mayhew said. "We're definitely going for it."

The Toyota/NAPA Auto Parts 150 presented by Gene Price Motorsports will be broadcast on Speed on May 10 at noon PDT.

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Burton Racing Ends Up with a Father-Son Duel in the Finals at Las Vegas Motor Speedway

Brad ran an 11.153 on his 11.14 dial and picked up his second NHRA National Event Wally.
Brad ran an 11.153 on his 11.14 dial and picked up his second NHRA National Event Wally.
There's not one racer who goes to an event not visualizing themselves winning or if nothing else, making their way to the championship round. As a team, with more than one car in the same class, that thought would then turn to the best case scenario of team cars together in the final, taking it all and if getting one car there wasn't tough enough, managing the feat of two with all the obstacles to overcome and 'planets to align' for it to happen, the odds against it happening are greater yet. For the Burton Racing team, which consists of father Scott and son Brad, they made the ultimate happen when they put their pair of K&N early '70s Formula Firebirds in the Stock final during the SummitRacing.com NHRA Nationals at "The Strip" at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

"Everything worked out perfectly and somehow we both ended up in the final. It was a way cool deal," said Las Vegas Stock Eliminator Champion, Brad Burton. "Our first goal is to always try to be on opposite sides of the ladder, that's the first step into making that happen is the qualifying game. As hard as we try, it's tough to make it to a final together and I think they said that was only the fifth time that a father-son had run in a final together like that."

Brad qualified his 455ci '72 Formula E/SA ride in at number eleven on the sheet and his dad Scott came in at number 4 with his B/SA '70 Formula and its 400ci motor. "It was pretty difficult for this race to get on opposite sides of the ladder," Brad confessed. "They were running class so everyone is changing everything on their cars and it just kept juggling everything around. More or less, if we can just avoid each other for two or three rounds then that is kind of a win. We try to qualify in the top ten and near each other and then that will usually work out with the way the ladder works that we can avoid each other for quite a few rounds. Being on the opposite sides of the ladder is quite a bonus, but it's nearly impossible to set yourself up for that every time."
Brad qualified his 455ci '72 Formula E/SA ride in at number eleven on the sheet.
Brad qualified his 455ci '72 Formula E/SA ride in at number eleven on the sheet.


The younger Burton, who is an engineer for Boeing and resides in Kirkland, Washington, had a really good feeling going into round one. "Well when the ladder came out and I saw I had a heads up run, I felt really good about it," he said. "My dad is our engine builder and he does a lot of R&D on our stuff so we were pretty confident going into that heads up race that we were going to come out on top."

Brad easily made his way past John Irving in the first round heads up race when Irving went for it on the tree and turned it red. That set him up for Boyce in round two, who also turned it way red and then Brad came out on the good side of a big double breakout in round three over another Jon Irving in his '78 Aspen Wagon. "With the weather and wind the way it was, being able to help each other out really helped," Brad pointed out. "Depending on who ran first, we could share the information about our runs to each other and hopefully that would help me or Dad make decisions about how we would run or dial our car for that round."

Over on the other side of the ladder, father Scott Burton, who is a pilot for United Airlines and based in Boulder, Colorado, was battling his way to the final when he took out Darrell Dietz, Paul Cannan and Randy Bursell in the first three rounds. "Every pass it was difficult to know how to dial the cars," said Brad. "The wind was gusting up and down and different directions and I mean from pair to pair, the wind was different. It was hard to put a number on there that you really felt comfortable with. Once I got past fourth round, which was fellow K&N racer Jimmy DeFrank, I thought to myself that hey this could happen."

Brad gave up the starting line advantage to DeFrank's nice .004 light in round four but drove his K&N Formula down the desert strip and put it right on his dial for the win and in the process earned the bye for the next round and right on into the semi-finals. "When all of these rounds just started coming together for me and my dad, it just started getting really exciting," he explained. "My dad had a chance at getting a bye into the finals and I knew our chances of being able to meet up were getting better and better."
The K&N air filter is definitely a very nice looking filter inside.
The K&N air filter is definitely a very nice looking filter inside.


Scott Burton, who finished number seven in the 2011 NHRA national Stock Eliminator points standings, pointed out a few rounds during the event where he was really glad he decided not to take the stripe. "Several rounds there where I would run up on the guys and think, 'oh I'm not going to go around this guy and just cut 'em loose and my win light comes on.' Round four was a pretty big round against Jeff Interlicchia and then beating Michael Brand in round five which got me the bye into the final. That was also another really big round. Anytime you come up on one of those rounds that is a potential two-round race like that one with Michael, you need to be able to rise to the occasion."

While they may have helped each other out all throughout the event, one must wonder how these teammates who know so much about the other car, the other driver and their racing "MO" would approach their round against each other. Not that they haven't faced each other before but this was, after all, a NHRA National event title on the line. "Yeah, we joked around in the lanes and were having a good time, but when we put the helmets on and get in the car, sure I want to beat him," Brad said of the final against his dad. "It does make it tough because he knows how I dial my car and how I drive and I know about him. We actually have similar characteristics in our driving, so [laughs] it was kind of like racing myself."

"When Brad and I went into that final together, well with being Dad, there was no way I could lose," Scott admitted. "I knew I was going to win no matter what on that deal. I was actually pretty relaxed going into that final. If it would have been somebody else over there I think I would have certainly been a little more up for it. I certainly didn't give it to him, that wasn't the intent. I was probably not as focused on that round as I could have been."

As the tree came down, Brad took a .028 starting line advantage and turned it into a good race at the stripe, running an 11.153 on his 11.14 dial and picked up his second NHRA National Event Wally, his first coming just earlier this year at the NHRA season opener in Pomona. "It was just a perfect weekend and a win-win situation for our whole family," said Scott of his son's win and his runner-up. "We have raced a lot over the years together with bracket races and everything else and we have ended up in the finals together quite a few times. We are five and six now. I've won five and he's won six. And you can bet the next time, I'll be working a little harder not to hand it to him," he added with a chuckle.

"You know Dad and I not only race very much alike, but we also have the same opinion when it comes to the products that we use and we always want to support the products and people that support us and our sport," said the newest NHRA Las Vegas Stock Eliminator champ. "K&N has always been great to the sportsman racer in every sense of the way. We run the K&N oil filters and air filters and even K&N fuel filter. K&N continues to innovate and always looking for ways to make their products even better and that is very important to us."

Scott, who takes care of building the teams engines, had this to add about their choice to make the move to K&N years ago. "We started playing around with filters years ago. I dyno engines and I started cutting these oil filters apart, you know, to look for metal shavings or whatever to make sure the health of the engine is good. When you start looking at the insides of these filters and you realize that a lot of them are not very well constructed. The K&N oil filter is definitely a very nice looking filter inside."

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Swedish Racer Linus Sundström Starts 2012 with a Win in Coventry, England

2012 marks the third season that Linus Sundström has donned the K&N colors.
2012 marks the third season that Linus Sundström has donned the K&N colors.
Swedish speedway racer Linus Sundström signed on with the Peterborough Panthers, the Sky Sports Elite League of racing in 2009, becoming, at age 18, the youngest rider to ever don the Peterborough colors. Sundström continues to impress his team(s) and pretty much everyone else by kicking off the 2012 season with a hugely impressive victory in Coventry, a borough in the county of West Midland England. It was an incredibly tough and competitive Elite League first event featuring five Grand Prix riders, including 2011 World Speedway Champion, Greg Hancock and three-time World Champion Nicki Pedersen.
Sundström impressed everyone with a colossal season opening victory in Coventry, England.
Sundström impressed everyone with a colossal season opening victory in Coventry, England.


"In my first meeting at Coventry I enjoyed one of the best nights of my career so far, and to win the meeting in front of 6000 people made it even more special," remarked Sundström. "It was a perfect way to start the season and I hope I can keep the momentum going!"

Sundström started out racing 80cc speedway bikes at age nine, then stepped up to the 500cc bikes when he was 16. But his love of two wheels really began when his dad bought him a motocross bike when he was just five years old. One day when the motocross track was in no condition for riding, they headed over to the speedway track instead, and the rest, as they say, is history.
Heading into the 2012 season Sundström's goals include earning a place into the coveted 2013 World Championship series, finishing in the top-four in the Swedish finals, and collecting as many points as possible for the clubs and sponsors he represents.
CaHeading into the 2012 season Sundström's goals include earning a place into the coveted 2013 World Championship series, finishing in the top-four in the Swedish finals, and collecting as many points as possible for the clubs and sponsors he represents.


He was been riding as a professional since his breakout year in 2009. "That's when I first went to the UK to race in the Premier League with the Rye House Rockets," says Sundström. "Today I represent five different clubs in four countries, which include Piraterna and Masarna in Sweden, Grindsted in Denmark, Lodz in Poland and the Peterborough Panthers in Sky Sports Elite League in the UK."

Avesta, Sweden, roughly 150 kilometers north of Stockholm is where Sundström was born and still resides. "When I'm in the UK I stay with a great family in a small village called Puckeridge, just outside Hertford," explains Sundström. "They help me out with all my racing when I'm there and they mean a lot to me. This coming season I will compete in between 90 to 100 events and my season runs between March and October."

2012 marks Sundström's third season of wearing the K&N colors along with his other palette of clubs and sponsors. "Don Marshall first helped me out during the winter of 2009," says Sundström. "I'm proud to be a part of such a big and professional company as K&N and it means a lot to me. But it means even more to my engines, since they remain cleaner inside; they perform better and with longer intervals between servicing."

"My goals for this coming season are to fight for a place in the 2013 World Championship series and to finish in the top four in the Swedish final. I also want to continue to be an important team member and score as many points as possible and help my clubs to earn medals and success."

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Bryce Menzies Shows San Francisco Giants' Tim Linecum The Ropes of Off-Road Racing

We've had a long off season to say the least.  I'm ready to get back behind the wheel and go racing.
We've had a long off season to say the least. I'm ready to get back behind the wheel and go racing.
It's not often professional athletes get to share their sport with a superstar from another sport. So when Red Bull approached 2011 TORC Pro 2WD champion Bryce Menzies about sharing his trophy truck with fellow Red Bull athlete and two-time National League Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum, Menzies jumped at the opportunity.

The two got together at Firebird International Raceway in Chandler, Arizona, while Lincecum and the San Francisco Giants were in nearby Scottsdale for spring training, and Menzies took "The Freak" for a ride around the ultra-fast track before handing the controls over to Lincecum for a few laps.

"Red Bull approached us with the idea at the beginning of the year," Menzies said. "Our team thought it would be an amazing opportunity to reach others who might not know much about off-road racing and also give Tim an opportunity he might never get again."
Charlotte was pretty good to us last year, between the crazy racing and the ecstatic fans, we can't wait to kick the season off there.
Charlotte was pretty good to us last year, between the crazy racing and the ecstatic fans, we can't wait to kick the season off there.


A video of the event, produced by Red Bull, has made its round on the Internet, and Menzies was right when he said Lincecum was a fast learner. The World Series champion jumped right in and appears fearless behind the wheel. "Tim was an easy going guy," Menzies added. "When he got behind the wheel, it all came pretty naturally to him. Red Bull thinks of some fun things to do with their athletes and this worked out really well for the team and me."

Menzies and his team are on their way to Charlotte Motor Speedway for the season opening rounds of the 2012 TORC season, where Menzies Motorsports will attempt to improve on an incredible 2011 season which saw Menzies himself capture a championship and also featured a championship performance from Ricky Johnson in Pro 4WD. "We've had a long off season to say the least," Menzies said. "I'm ready to get back behind the wheel and go racing. Charlotte was pretty good to us last year, between the crazy racing and the ecstatic fans, we can't wait to kick the season off there."
Tim was an easy going guy.  When he got behind the wheel, it all came pretty naturally to him.
Tim was an easy going guy. When he got behind the wheel, it all came pretty naturally to him.


The biggest challenge for Menzies and Johnson has to be not letting their 2011 success get in the way of their 2012 goals, and Menzies knows that. "I always set high expectations for myself but by no means am I going into the season thinking I'm better than anyone else just because I have the number one plate on my truck (awarded to the defending series champion). Everyone is going to be trying to take that away from me, so I need to be on my game again this year."

Menzies isn't sure if winning in 2011 puts more pressure on or relieves some of the stress heading into Charlotte. "I haven't figured that one out yet. I guess after we get the first race out of the way, I'll know. I need to see what everyone else is bringing to the table first."

Menzies was quick to thank K&N for their support of his team, stating, "We have been running K&N for over five years now in both our trucks and buggies. Without a doubt, they have helped out team succeed and consistently be on the podium."

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