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Benjamin Wins K&N Pro Series East Finale at Dover

Kyle Benjamin after winning NASCAR K&N Pro Series race in Dover, Delaware

Kyle Benjamin won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Dover International Speedway

Kyle Benjamin won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East season finale at Dover International Speedway in Delaware in a green-white-checkered flag finish.

Benjamin won his third K&N Pro Series East race of the season. He won at Iowa Speedway, the highest finishing driver from the East Series, and at Greenville Pickens Speedway in South Carolina. He won three of the final five races of the K&N Pro Series East season.

“Really cool to get a win at Dover,” Benjamin said. “It’s a place you always want to win at, especially, this is probably the coolest track on the K&N schedule. Real neat to win here.”

Rain washed out qualifying, putting Justin Haley, the leader in the K&N Pro Series East standings entering the Dover 125, on the pole. He led the first 42 laps of the race.

Kyle Benjamin in Victory Lane at Dover International Speedway

Kyle Benjamin celebrates after winning the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race in Dover, Delaware

“The clean air was huge today,” Haley said after the race. “When you get that taken away, it’s hard to get it back.”

Benjamin, who started on the front row with Haley, passed for the lead on lap 43. Benjamin stayed out front for the remainder of the race, including the final restart on lap 123. A crash brought out the sixth caution flag of the race and extended it an extra lap.

“It’s nerve-racking because you don’t know what they’re planning to do behind you,” Benjamin said. “They could jack you up. I’ve had a restart at one of these places where I got wrecked at the start-finish line. I didn’t even get going. That was in the back of my mind too. Anything can happen, so you’re always looking out for it.”

Justin Haley leading at Dover International Speedway

Justin Haley leads the field in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Dover International Speedway

Haley dropped to fourth place at the end of the race. It was his 13th top-five finish in 14 K&N Pro Series East races. He won the K&N Pro Series East championship by 22 points over Benjamin. Benjamin had nine top-five finishes and 11 top 10s.

“We’ve had a great year,” Benjamin said. “It’s had its ups and downs. We had a lot of good races and a lot of bad races on the races that were good races. I wouldn’t change any of it at this point. We’ve had a great season, a lot of consistent cars.”

Benjamin and his team used the same car throughout the K&N Pro Series East season. He said after the race that the team will probably continue to use the car in the 2017 K&N Pro Series East season.

Kyle Benjamin doing a burnout at Dover International Speedway

Kyle Benjamin does a burn out after winning the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Dover Speedway

“It’s been a great car, it’s been a fast car,” Benjamin said. “It’s been pretty consistent all year. We’ve been able to run all the races with it and not really destroy it.”

Jesse Little was second in the race at Dover, followed by Dominique Van Wieringen in third. Haley was fourth and rookie Ruben Garcia came in fifth place. It was Van Wieringen’s third top-five finish in a row.

Haley, Benjamin and other top drivers in the K&N Pro Series East will be celebrated at the NASCAR Night of Champions Touring Awards ceremony in Charlotte, N.C., on Dec. 10.

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Julia Landauer Moves up the Ranks in K&N Pro Series West

Julia Landauer sitting in her #54 Toyota Camry

Julia Landauer was runner-up in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West race at Meridian Speedway in Idaho.

When Julia Landauer was the runner-up in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West race at Meridian Speedway in Idaho in September, she made history. She matched the highest-finish for a woman driver in K&N Pro Series West history. She was joined by another woman driver on the podium. Nicole Behar was third, marking the first time in NASCAR K&N Pro Series West history two women drivers finished on the podium.

Landauer, a driver for Bill McAnally Racing and the only women in the NASCAR Next program, posted her best result of her rookie season at Meridian Speedway. She benefited from some late crashes in the race, but was able to maneuver around the mayhem and work her way to second place.

The significance of having Behar finish behind her did not escape Landauer. She and Behar are in a select group of women drivers in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West. Landauer is the only woman driver in the NASCAR Next program. Behar is a NASCAR Next alum, one of the few women to be selected for that program.

“It’s really showing. You’re seeing more women in the developmental series who are being supported by their parents – that’s the big thing right? – your parents let you do it or not,” Landauer said. “Seeing more women do that, it’s just so cool. I don’t race the women any differently. My job and my goal is to beat everybody. It doesn’t matter. But it is just really, it’s encouraging to see that women are being competitive.”

Landauer is in an even more select group than NASCAR women drivers. She has a degree from Stanford in science technology and put her NASCAR career on hold until she finished college. The 24-year-old is back in a race car and resuming her climb up the NASCAR ladder.

“My story is a little different,” Landauer said. “I’m from New York City. I don’t come from a racing family. But my parents always liked racing. They really wanted to find an activity that their two girls could compete against boys in. They got us started in go-karts. I fell in love with it right away. It told them, ‘Whether or not you like it I really want to be a race car driver when I grow up.’”

She switched from go-karts to stock cars and oval racing when she was 16. After she graduated from Stanford, she won the Limited Late Models championship at Motor Mile Speedway in Virginia, the first woman to accomplish that feat, and started racing in the K&N Pro Series West.

“Regardless of how you view women racers, it’s a question of who’s the best,” Landauer said. “There are so few of us. Now we can safely say we are as good if not better than the competition out there.”

K&N Pro Series and NASCAR Next driver Julia Landauer

Julia Landauer is one of the NASCAR Next drivers and currently fifth in the standings.

With one race remaining in the K&N Pro Series West schedule, Landauer is fifth in the series standings and second in the rookie of the year standings. She has six top-five finishes in 13 races. In addition to her runner-up finish at Meridian Speedway, she was fourth in one of the K&N Pro Series West road course races at the Utah Motorsports Campus in September.

“I really didn’t know what to expect going into K&N,” Landauer said. “It’s such a big jump up from what I raced last year. The number of races, the races are three times the distance. It’s a heavier car, it’s a faster car. The competition was definitely more stout than last year. I didn’t quite know what to expect. I wanted to finish in the top 10 as much as I can, get a few podiums and I really wanted to get a win. I definitely thought I was capable of getting top five.

“For the season we’ve been back and forth. I think we’re right on the cusp of doing what we set out to do this year. Obviously, I really want to win. I am going to do everything in my power come Roseville to get that last goal checked off.”

The K&N Pro Series West season ends at All-American Speedway in Roseville on Oct. 15. Meridian Speedway is similar to All-American Speedway in that they are both short track ovals with not a lot of space to pass. Landauer said she expects her team to be just as strong in Roseville as it was at Meridian.

“My crew chief and I, we’ve been communicating a lot all year, trying to figure out what we really need to be the best, what he needs to be the best, what I need,” Landauer said. “We just went in strong, had a good practice. All season, we have been struggling a little bit with qualifying. At Meridian, I qualified eighth.

“We just started picking off drivers one-by-one. I got into a real comfortable position in third or fourth. It was really great to better our best finish. It’s always really cool to tie for history.”

One of the things Landauer says she has been working on this season is her aggressiveness on the race track. At the beginning of the year, she said she played it safe. But as the season wore on, she learned how to work her way through the field and put herself in position to win races.

“Something I have been working on all season is aggression,” Landauer said. “In the beginning of the season I think I was probably not aggressive enough. Finding out how to really muscle my way to the front, I felt like at Roseburg, that was a really good showing of being an aggressive driver. Our road course at Utah was really good, showed really strong racing to get fourth.”

Landauer has taken advantage of being a NASCAR Next driver. She has met with some people in NASCAR who have been helpful in furthering her career. She said she is grateful for making those connections.

Julia Landauer being interviewed by NBCSN

Julia Landauer is second in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series Rookie of the Year standings.

“To not only get the public recognition that NASCAR sees my potential, that they want to help me, that in of itself is really cool and great confidence-building,” Landauer said. “It’s incredible the amount of exposure, the ability I’ve had to meet people in the industry, especially as a New Yorker, in particular, I’ve had a lot of things to learn. Being able to tap another resource, and be able to go to a large group of people at NASCAR, and just ask for help, bounce ideas off of them, get tools from them to help me with my career has been really very powerful.”

Having K&N as a sponsor in the Pro Series West has also been helpful. Landauer said being able to race at tracks on the same weekends as Sprint Cup and Xfinity Series races puts her team and other K&N Pro Series West teams and drivers in contact with NASCAR supporters.

“K&N has been with the series for a long time now,” Landauer said. “The fact that we got such a dependable, established program supporting our series is really cool. To be able to have such an admirable company really invest in the grassroots level of racing and us younger racers who really want to put on a good show for a good series, it really helps provide that. They really put on a good show for a development series. It helps us get a sense of what it’s like to go racing big time. The fact they have faith in us to make it worth their while, it says a lot. It seems like a really great relationship.”

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Netherlands-based Smokin’ Motorcycles Builds an Amazing Ducati Café Racer

Custom Ducati Cafe Racer Motorcycle built by Smokin Motorcycles

The 4Nol sits with a lean and mean forward stance (Photo courtesy mkfotografie.nl 2016)

Maarten Timmer’s passion for cars and motorcycles traces back to his grandfather, Arnold, who was a mechanic and also a mentor. It’s only fitting that Timmer’s stunning new Ducati café racer pays tribute to the man better known as “Nol.” The prototype build, which carries the production number 001, also carries the loving moniker 4Nol. It doesn’t take a code breaker to decipher the significance of those four characters. The labor of love was designed and engineered by Timmer, but was completed with the close working partnership and help of Rob van der Heijden.

The concept began with Timmer’s rumination over the skeletal visage of a frame, a pair of wheels, and a set of forks that sat languishing in a shed. The builder’s vision was that of a seamless and unique café bike built around a Ducati 900ie engine. Once the rebuilt Italian L-twin power-plant was fitted into the specially adjusted frame, the real artistry began. A foam core for the clay model of the seat and bodywork was crafted and fitted to the rolling chassis. In keeping with Timmer’s vision of a seamless café racer, the entire tank, seat, and tailpiece were designed and sculpted in unison on this clay model.

In a process that Timmer’s beloved grandfather could not have imagined, the final clay model design was translated into rough 3D CAD data, making use of a 3D scanner. This data served as the starting point for the 4Nol’s digitally perfected one-piece body. When this stage was complete, fiberglass molds were made and the final bodywork was laminated. The end result of this tactile and digital effort was exactly the unified and seamless silhouette that Timmer craved. Smokin’ Motorcycles now offers this body as a kit for Ducati Monsters.

Custom Cafe Racer Motorcycle built by Smokin Motorcycles with Ducati motor

Notice the K&N performance air filter at the heart of the Dutch masterpiece (Photo courtesy mkfotografie.nl 2016)

The beauty of 4Nol goes beyond the lines so carefully created with the bodywork. The bike’s performance compliments its aggressive aesthetics. To open up the lungs of the Ducati engine, Dell’Ortho PHM40 carburetors were mounted on 41mm intake manifolds. Pointing forward from the carbs are a pair of conical K&N performance air filters. You can clearly see the K&N through the trellis framework. The Smokin’ guys report that the K&N helps generate a high torque level at low revs and also provides a wonderful “hoarsely and greedy sound” from the intake. Nice description gentlemen!

On the exhaust end, Smokin’ Motorcycles developed a new 2-1-2 exhaust manifold system that leads to the two Spark megaphone silencers. Both silencers are mounted with beautiful CNC milled brackets, which were engineered in house at Smokin’ Motorcycles. The exhaust cans sit at an aggressively rakish angle, and the sound emanating from them is equally aggressive.

No stylistic or performance stone was left unturned on the 4Nol. The frame, swing arm, and wheels share the same satin black powder coating, and the bodywork is painted a beautiful metallic grey. A carbon fiber front fender is fitted, and clip-on bars are mounted to a visually striking upper triple tree. On the bottom end, fully adjustable foot pegs are mounted to the custom frame. The engine is accented with details such as aftermarket aluminum timing belt covers, clutch cover, and a gold colored pressure plate.

The entire package achieves exactly what gleamed in Timmer’s eye when he looked at that basket case in the shed. The 4Nol is an excitingly eclectic mix of influences. It was created by Dutch visionaries, beats with an Italian heart, and serves as a fitting tribute to a grandfather’s legacy. That’s a bike with character and purpose.

Custom Cafe Racer Motorcycle with Ducati motor built by Smokin Motorcycles

That beautiful bodywork is the result of manual and digital artistry (Photo courtesy mkfotografie.nl 2016)

With the 4Nol vision completed, the folks at Smokin’ Motorcycles are on to another great custom build. They have their collective noses to the grindstone on a bike that will carry the name Ghost Dog. Rest assured, this dog will have both a bark and a bite, and will do it in style!

If you own a Ducati of your own, you can add some style and performance with a K&N KN-153 oil filter or an air filter. Use the K&N search by vehicle tool to find the right parts for your needs.

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Justin Haley Wins NASCAR K&N Pro Series East Championship at Dover Speedway

Justin Haley on car at Dover International Speedway

Justin Haley won the 2016 NASCAR K&N Pro Series East championship

Justin Haley won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East championship giving HScott Motorsports with Justin Marks its fourth series title in a row. Haley won the 2016 K&N Pro Series East championship with 13 top-five finishes in 14 races and ended the season with another solid race at Dover International Speedway in Delaware.

“We brought speed everywhere we went,” Haley said. “This is a great series. We had a really, really good year, only finished outside the top five once in 14 races. That’s pretty impressive. The crew is unbelievable, bringing and preparing the car from the shop, unloading good every week.”

Haley won two races, at Greenville Pickens Speedway in South Carolina in March and at Columbus Speedway in Ohio in July. He was fourth in the season finale Dover 125 and won the K&N Pro Series championship by 22 points over Kyle Benjamin.

Justin Haley in victory lane at Dover International Speedway

Justin Haley raises the trophy for winning the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Dover Speedway

Benjamin won the K&N Pro Series East finale at Dover, taking the lead from Haley, who started on the pole, on lap 43. Benjamin won the race on a green-white-checkered flag finish.

“We came here with the mindset that we wanted to win the race,” said Shannon Rursh, Haley’s crew chief. “Qualifying getting rained out, it gave us a little bit of an advantage to go lead several laps. Clean air was good for us. I didn’t really focus a whole lot on the championship side of things until it probably hit with about 10 laps to go. This is probably going to happen.”

Haley finished in the top 10 in every K&N Pro Series East race and won two poles, not including the race at Dover. His worst finish of the season was eighth place.

“It’s been a great year,” Rursh said. “Obviously you look back at the races you thought you gave away. In the end I think our average finish was 3.4 or something. I’m pretty sure there’s a lot of people who would be really ecstatic to have that average finish throughout the season.”

Justin Haley after NASCAR Pro Series race at Dover International Speedway

Justin Haley was fourth in the season finale NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Dover Int'l Speedway

For Harry Scott Jr., the owner of Haley’s team in the K&N Pro Series East, it was his fourth championship in a row. He won with Dylan Kwasniewski in 2013, Ben Rhodes in 2014 and William Byron in 2015.

“We’ve been very fortunate in this series,” Scott said. “This is our fourth straight championship. It seems each championship gets more and more special. Justin is a fine young man. He deserves a championship. He’s been very consistent and he keeps his head in the game. He concentrated on what he needed to concentrate on. I’m proud of him for that.”

Scott gave much of the credit to Haley’s championship season to Rursh. He said the crew, led by Rursh, consistently gave Haley fast, reliable cars throughout the season.

Justin Haley driving at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware

Justin Haley started on the pole and led 42 laps for the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Dover

“Shannon’s been great preparing the cars, making sure that Justin gets what he needs,” Scott said. “Their communication and their relationship have been phenomenal this year. That’s a lot of why he’s been so successful this year.”

Haley, a 17-year-old from Winamac, Ind., is the eighth teenager in a row to win the K&N Pro Series East championship. He joins 16-year-old Cayden Lapevich, who won the NASCAR Pinty’s Series championship in Canada, as another teenage NASCAR champion. Haley won the K&N Pro Series East championship in his third season in the series.

“I made my K&N East debut in 2014 and didn’t have the best of run ins,” Haley said. “Last year I did the full championship and finished sixth in the points. It’s been a long wait coming. I’m very fortunate and blessed to come out here and run like we have this year. It’s amazing. Now, kind of all the stress and all that is lifted here after we cross the start-finish line. I am very thankful.”

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Husqvarna’s Colton Haaker Reaches a Rocky Mountain High with Denver EnduroCross Win

Max Gerston, Cody Webb, and Colton Haaker on the podium in Denver, Colorado

First-time podium finisher Max Gerston (right) joins series leaders Webb (left) and Haaker (center) (Photo courtesy Bolder-Moto)

Colton Haaker passed Cody Webb on the penultimate lap of the very tough Western Events Center course to take the win in the EnduroCross main event in Denver. The battle was so intense, and the pair was so fast, that they lapped the eventual third-place finisher Max Gerston. Haaker acknowledged the difficulty of the win. “This one was hard. I kept messing up the matrix (a section with spaced logs) and Cody was nailing it. Soon, I got over making mistakes in the beginning and started racing smoother and kept on it through lappers. Then, Webb had a mistake after the firewood and I got in there. I just needed to get in front on the last lap and I’m glad I made it happen,” he said.

Although it didn’t come easily, Haaker’s dominance of the Denver EnduroCross was complete. He won his heat race to start his night, and he later claimed the fast time in the event’s Hot Lap. He even won the holeshot (and the resulting $500 check from an event sponsor) in the main event. Clearly Haaker loves the thin, cool Rocky Mountain air.

Colton Haaker going through log section in Denver, Colorado

Race winner Colton Haaker leads the pack over the log section (Photo courtesy Bolder-Moto)

Webb had to work through the pain of a bad tumble in his qualifying race to garner his hard-fought second place finish. “Honestly, it was a rough day for me after going down really hard in the heat race and had to ice both my wrists, my shoulder and tailbone and take some Advil to get out here,” Webb revealed. Despite the injuries, Webb felt that this was a race he let slip away. “I was riding at the top of my game and know I could have had it tonight,’ he said. “After the two-week break, I know I’ll be ready to be back.”

The third place finish marked the first podium of the season for Gerston. While he couldn’t match the blistering pace of Haaker and Webb, Gerston was clearly elated. “I am super stoked. I got off to a rough start but I was able to find some cool lines through the firewood pit and get by some guys,” Gerston said. He went on to acknowledge the dominance of the top two finishers. “I honestly don’t know how I could go any faster than I was and I was still lapped.”

Cody Webb taking on the rock section in Denver, Colorado

Cody Webb fought through pain to finish second in Denver (Photo courtesy Bolder-Moto)

Nagging injuries continue to limit five-time EnduroCross Champion Taddy Blazusiak who did not compete in the Denver event. It has been reported that he will compete in the next leg of the season series.

After a 2-week break, the season will continue in Everett, Washington at the XFINITY Arena on October 22. It will then move on to Nampa’s Ford Idaho Center on November 5. The season will move south to its final race on November 18-19 at the Citizens Business Bank Arena in Ontario, California.

Denver EnduroCross Main Event Results
1. Colton Haaker, Husqvarna
2. Cody Webb, KTM
3. Max Gerston, Beta
4. Ty Tremaine, KTM
5. Kyle Redmond, Beta
6. Mike Brown, Husqvarna
7. Noah Kepple, KTM
8. Nick Thompson, KTM
9. Trystan Hart, Husqvarna
10. Geoff Aaron, GasGas
11. Wyatt Hart, Husqvarna
12. Cory Graffunder, KTM
13. Ty Cullins, Beta

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