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Lucas Oil Saves Drag Boat Racing From Possible Extinction

Boats racing at the Lucas Oil Raceway in Wheatland, MO.

Racing at the newly constructed Lucas Oil Raceway in Wheatland, Missouri

Although the sport of drag boat racing began in the 1960s, it could never gain traction with fans.

“It bounced back and forth between all kinds of sanctioning bodies that never seemed to accomplish much,” noted Mike Chastain of Lucas Oil. “Lucas Oil came in to stabilize it.”

According to Chastain, Lucas Oil was a sponsor of the previous drag boat racing sanctioning organization called International Hot Boat Association (IHBA). The oil company recognized that the organization and possibly the sport of drag boat racing was under threat of ending and its executives considered stepping in to save it.

“It came to the point where if we were going to get involved with racing we needed to take over and manage the series ourselves,” explained Chastain.

Lucas Oil decided to make the commitment.

“There were a lot of little club racing associations across the United States in all motorsports. What we did was came in and set up one sanctioning body with a stable set of rules nationwide,” Chastain added.

Chastain noted that the rules for a new sanctioning body were already in place. He gathered a committee consisting of racers that considered the rules and then passed a recommendation.

At that point Ken Dollar of Lucas Oil was selected as Director of the series and he met with Chastain and the racers to encourage them to move forward in making a stable set of rules that benefited safety and racing. After some time, stakeholders in the series established the rules and the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing Series was formed.

Next, Lucas Oil promoted the group.

“Everything we do in racing is television driven,” Chastain explained. “We’ve always been a huge company as far as promotions through print media as well as other methods, but primarily we are television driven. Lucas Oil Products was made from advertising on television. So we used that format. We worked with four or five networks including CBS Sports, CBS, NBC Sports, Fox Sports, SPEED, and our own network called MAVTV Motorsports Network.”

Then venues where races could be held had to be chosen.

“Some of the venues were already in place,” continued Chastain. “We met with promoters and we worked out agreements to get them to hold races for the organization. Other venues we created on our own. For us, our first priority was to keep the sport safe. That was our bottom line. It’s a dangerous motorsport and it’s hard to find facilities out there that are long, narrow, and shallow enough. So we researched all the different places that had facilities for racing and a good fan base. We considered locations like Phoenix, Arizona; San Angelo, Texas; which is a suburb of San Antonio, and more that had facilities available. Most of them were lakes that were long enough to take on drag racing boats. It takes about 4,000 feet of space to race and shut down because obviously the boats don’t have any brakes. You have to stop them using parachutes. We also didn’t want racers in water deeper than 20 feet because if something happens and the capsules of the boats get ejected, we needed to be certain that our rescue divers would be able to find them.”

Ultimately, venues were found in a number of states including Missouri, Georgia, Texas, Arizona, California, Oregon, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Kentucky.

Most of the venues are used year after year, but the organization also tries to add new venues. Some are newly constructed including the Lucas Oil Raceway in Wheatland, Missouri.

“It is a $7 million facility that is the only one in the world specifically designed for drag boat racing,” added Chastain.

Drag boats can travel 1,000 feet in as little as 3.4 seconds at 250 mph

Drag boats can travel 1,000 feet in as little as 3.4 seconds at 250 mph

Hydro boats are raced in the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing Series.

The Pro Class includes Top Fuel Hydros, Top Alcohol Hydros, Top Alcohol Flatbottom, and Pro Mod. Two types of hulls are used –- watercraft and outrigger style. The size of the engine for the Top Fuel category is limited to 500 cubic inches and the boats can use only nitro-methane and alcohol fuel. These boats travel at speeds of 250 mph and travel 1000 feet in about 3.396 seconds. The boats are designed to ride above the surface of the water because they feature a tunnel between the front sponsons. A W-drive propels the crafts down the track with twin props that rotate counter to each other at 20,000 rpms.

The Top Alcohol Hydros travel at speeds of more than 200 mph and commonly achieve 1,000 feet in 4.322 seconds. These boats may use alcohol or nitro-methane fuel and blown, or supercharged, engines and un-blown fuel engines that do not exceed 565 cubic inches.

The Top Alcohol Flatbottom boats travel a 1,000-foot course and have been known to achieve speeds that are more than 160 mph and achieve times of 5.2 seconds. The hulls are flat bottom with a minimum length of 16 feet. There are no horizontal breaks. The fuel and engine dynamics used in this class is the same as the Top Alcohol Hydros. However, screw blowers are not allowed.

The Pro Mod Class uses boats with a hydro style hull and V-drive. The engine has the same specs as the Top Alcohol Hydro and Top Alcohol Fuel, but there is no limit on cubic inches. Nitrous oxide is not permitted in the professional classes except in Pro Modified.

The Sportsman Class includes Pro Eliminator, Top Eliminator, Modified Eliminator, Stock Eliminator, and Quick Eliminator. The Pro Eliminator boats can use engines of any cubic inch displacement. That includes naturally aspirated, supercharged or fuel injected including electronic fuel injection systems. Fuels used include gasoline, alcohol, pure methanol, ethanol, nitro-methane, E-85, or nitrous oxide. The boats must stay within an 8.00-8.99 seconds index to compete.

The Top Eliminator competitors want to achieve 9.00 – 9.99 seconds index. The engine dynamics and fuel specs are the same as they are in Pro Eliminator. Engines for the sportsman classes can use superchargers or turbochargers. However, proper blower restraints must be used as required based on fuel used.

Boats in the Modified Eliminator Class strive for 10.00-10.99 seconds index. Any hull design with a V bottom is acceptable, but blown engines are not permitted.

The engine specs and dynamics as well as the fuel and hulls for boats in the Stock Eliminator class are the same as it is for Pro Eliminator, Top Eliminator and Modified Eliminator. These boats reach speeds of more than 95 mph.

The Quick Eliminator runs at speeds of 6-seconds per 1,000 feet. It is the fastest non-capsule boat class.

Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing is a fun event for competitors and spectators alike

Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing is a fun event for competitors and spectators alike

The Bracket Class, which is for racers who are 18 years old and older, is for river racers that achieve 12 seconds or slower elapsed time. Engines specs are the same as they are for the Sportsman Class. This class includes Personal Watercraft 1 and Personal Watercraft 2. Personal Watercraft 1 uses 4-stroke gasoline or 2-stroke gasoline/oil mix engines.

Personal Watercraft 2 is the entry-level class for teenage racers with approved water safety class and parental consent. These boats travel a quarter-mile at 50 to 60 mph.

There are four divisions with its own group of classes.

Pro Class

• Top Fuel Hydro

• Top Alcohol Hydro

• Top Alcohol Flat

• Pro Modified

• Pro Outlaw

Division 1

• Pro Eliminator

• Quick Eliminator

• Top Eliminator

• Modified Eliminator

• Stock Eliminator

• River Racer

• Personal Watercraft 1

Division 2

• Quick Eliminator

• Top Eliminator

• Modified Eliminator

• Stock Eliminator

• River Racer

• Personal Watercraft 2

Division 3

• Pro Eliminator

• Quick Eliminator

• Top Eliminator

• Modified Eliminator

• Stock Eliminator

• River Racer

• Personal Watercraft 3

Minimum age for racers is 16 years old.

According to Chastain, new racers must get a license in order to participate in events. To get the license their boat must pass a safety inspection and the racer must perform a launch, and make a half pass and then a full pass while a committee watches. Committee members focus on a racer’s performance and decide if the racer deserves the license.

There are 10 national racing events per year. The season runs from March through the first weekend of November. The schedule is determined during meetings held in the fall each year with racers and Series executives. The schedule is published by January 1 each year.

K&N has been a sponsor of Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing and other Lucas Oil series since the beginning

K&N has been a sponsor of Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing and other Lucas Oil series since the beginning

There are also member state associations that run races in their own series under a Lucas Oil “umbrella” said Chastain. The local associations schedule between six to eight events on their own each year for a total of about 75 regional races a year.

Lucas Oil and the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing Series business partners fund a point system for every class. Pay off is given to the first place down to the 10th place finisher.

“Points are based on performance,” said Chastain. “A racer gets so many points when they enter an event, so many points when they qualify as well as points if they are the number one qualifier.”

K&N Engineering has been a business partner of the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing Series for 12 years and has had a relationship with Lucas Oil for 15 years, said Chastain.

“They have been a heavy player with us in cross marketing and they have helped us reach race fans and racers,” he said. “K&N helps with print media, social media, and television, as well as with contingency programs with racers to promote the series.”

The schedule for 2017 is as follows:

March 31-April 2 Chandler, Arizona Valley of the Sun Spring Nationals

April 14-15 Parker, Arizona Colorado River Challenge

June 9-11 Wheatland, Missouri John Hass Memorial

June 23-25 San Angelo, Texas Showdown in San Angelo

July 21-23 Augusta, Georgia Augusta Southern Nationals

August 11-13 Marble Falls, Texas Marble Falls Lakefest 2017

September 1-3 Wheatland, Missouri 7th Annual Diamond of Drag Boats Nationals

Sept 30-Oct. 1 San Angelo, Texas Lucas Oil Fall Shootout

October 13-15 Parker, Arizona Lucas Oil Thunder on the River

November 3-5 Phoenix, Arizona Lucas Oil World Finals

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Chris Eggleston is Back on Championship Track in the K&N Pro Series West

Chris Eggleston, NASCAR, K&N Pro Series West, Bill McAnally Racing

Chris Eggleston is second in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West standings after four races

Before the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West season started, Chris Eggleston didn’t know his fate. He was coming off a lackluster season. He won two races in 2016, but he was sixth in the final K&N Pro Series West standings.

Eggleston said he wasn’t sure if he was returning to his Bill McAnally Racing team for 2017. He didn’t have a deal until the middle of February. The first race of the season was on March 18 at Tucson Speedway in Arizona.

Eggleston had success in the K&N Pro Series West. He won the championship in 2015 in one of the tightest races in recent memory. He won by seven points over Noah Gragson after winning two races early in the season.

Eggleston and McAnally made the right decision to team up again in 2017. Eggleston won the K&N Pro Series West season opener in Tucson and put himself in contention for another series championship after the first four races.

Chris Eggleston, NASCAR, K&N Pro Series West, Bill McAnally Racing

Chris Eggleston won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West championship in 2015

“This win’s big. It means a lot to me,” Eggleston said after winning in Tucson. “I really didn’t have a ride going into January, almost into February. Bill brought me in for another year. Couldn’t be more happy and proud. This win is definitely for them for bringing me back.”

The road back to contention was bumpy. Even with wins at the Orange Show Speedway in California and Colorado National Speedway, he was not much of a factor in the championship in 2016. Winning at Tucson to open the 2017 K&N Pro Series West season did wonders for Eggleston’s confidence.

“It’s a little shot in the arm obviously,” Eggleston said. “Going into the offseason you want to get a win or two going into the season. To get the first one out of the way for the first one is huge for us. Hopefully we can start clicking them off, make sure we get good, solid points day and keep going.”

He followed his win in Tucson with a pair of runner-up finishes at Irwindale Speedway. After four races, Eggleston is in second place in the K&N Pro Series West standings, 13 points behind teammate Todd Gilliland.

Chris Eggleston, NASCAR, K&N Pro Series West, Bill McAnally Racing

Chris Eggleston won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West season opener at Tucson Speedway

“It’s hard to swallow, two second places tonight,” Eggleston said after the races at Irwindale Speedway. “Everything they do in that 16 (Gilliland) camp makes this 99 (Eggleston) camp stronger. We’ll put our heads down and we’ll try to chase some more Ws.”

Gilliland won three races in a row, both Irwindale Speedway races and at Kern County Raceway Park in California.

The next K&N Pro Series West race is at Spokane County Raceway in Washington.

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Yoshimura Suzuki Hogs the Podium in MotoAmerica Superbike First Round

Eilas and Hayden racing at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas

#24 Elias and #95 Hayden battled for supremacy all weekend long at COTA

The conditions at the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, were perfect for racing and Yoshimura Suzuki Superbike star Toni Elias proved to be perfect as well. When Elias emerged from the paddock with an Army green helmet, it was clear he was ready for battle. To the victor go the spoils, and Elias left Texas with a commanding lead in the MotoAmerica Superbike standings.

Elias may have stolen the show at COTA, but Roger Hayden proved that he is game for a season-long battle with his Spanish teammate. Hayden pressed Elias in both Superbike races and secured a solid second in the MotoAmerica standings.

Before the first race at COTA, both Yosimura Suzuki riders were excited to see how the new GSX-R1000 would perform in full race conditions.

“It will be interesting to see how the GSX-R does on a long race weekend,” Hayden said. "We really don’t have that many laps on the new bike, but Suzuki has given us a great platform, so we will see.”

Elias and Hayden on the COTA podium in Austin, Texas

Elias (left) and Hayden will surely share the podium throughout the 2017 season

Clearly any questions the K&N-sponsored team had going into the first round of the MotoAmerica Superbike season were answered in spades. The huge COTA crowd was treated to some fantastic Superbike racing with the Yoshimura team providing the lion's share of the drama.

Race 1

The first race was an epic battle between Hayden and Elias from start to finish. The matched pair of Yoshimura GSX-R Superbikes were clearly the class of the field all race long.

Hayden stalked Elias for more than a dozen laps looking for any opening that his teammate would give him. On the final lap, Hayden made an exciting pass at the end of the back straight. However, the speed Hayden carried into the turn proved to be too hot. When Hayden went wide, Elias dove back under his teammate and held on for the win.

Rounding out the podium behind Elias and Hayden was Bobby Fong on his Kawasaki. Fong tried desperately to stick with the Yoshimura riders, but faded late in the race.

Eilas and Hayden racing at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas

COTA in Austin has emerged as a favorite track for Toni Elias

Race 2

The final race of the exciting weekend at MotoAmerica/MotoGP at COTA served as a fittingly dramatic curtain call. An impressive number of fans remained after the MotoGP race to see the MotoAmerica Superbike finale.

Again, Elias and Hayden put on a fantastic show on their new GSX-R1000 machines. Just like in race 1, Hayden found himself stuck to Elias’ rear wheel for most of the race looking for an opening for a pass. It often looked like Hayden may just steal the race.

However, last year’s champion Cameron Beaubier added to the drama on his factory Yamaha. Late in the race, Beaubier made a fast and desperate charge on the Yoshimura riders, but the veteran Elias was surgical in his defense of the lead.

In the end, Elias stayed perfect at COTA with another impressive win. Beaubier held on for second, and Hayden had to settle for third. The COTA weekend was a huge success for Yoshimura Suzuki and the 2017 GSX-R1000.

Eilas and Hayden signing autographs at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas

Hayden (left) and Elias interact with race fans in the MotoAmerica paddock

“I am very happy with where this puts us in the championship,” Elias said. “It’s especially good since we were able to provide a great introduction for the new GSX-R1000 with two victories. It’s amazing.”

Hayden was equally impressed with how the team performed on the new Suzuki.

“We had an awesome weekend here at COTA,” Hayden said. “We got a lot of points with a second and third. The new GSX-R was working great all weekend. I came up a little bit short, but I’m really excited about the team, how hard they’re working and where we are with the new bike. I’m looking forward to Atlanta already.”

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"Ragin' Cajun" Makes Major Assault On World Of Outlaws Sprint Car Series

Racing at the Devil's Bowl at the Texas Outlaw Nationals. (Photo Credit: Serena Dallamer)

Jason coming out of a turn at the Devil's Bowl (Photo Credit: Serena Dallamer)

Racing was a major part of Jason Johnson’s life early on as he grew up in Cajun Country in the city of Eunice, Louisiana. His dad and uncle raced cars and owned a racing team and Jason started racing go-carts at the tender age of 4.

Now 40 years old and a resident of Rocky Mount, Missouri, he has raced in a variety of divisions including stock cars, mini sprints, outlaw winged modifieds, 360 sprint cars and 410 sprint cars.

He started racing stock cars in 1994 and jumped to sprint cars where he raced as a pro starting in 2000. He has competed in a number of top series including the All Star Circuit of Champions (ASCoC), American Sprint Car Series (ASCS), World Series of Sprintcars (WSS), Pennsylvania Posse (PA Posse), and the National Championship Racing Association (NCRA). He has been racing fulltime in the World of Outlaws Craftsman Sprint Car Series since 2015.

He started racing with his dad and uncle’s team when he turned 15 and he started his own racing team with his wife Bobbi in 2010 after racing for other owners.

He has chalked up more than 250 wins including:

• 8 World of Outlaws

• 27 World Series Sprint Cars

• 9 All Stars Circuit of Champions

• 78 American Sprint Car Series Nationals

• 55 American Sprint Car Series Regionals

• 14 National Championship Racing Association

• 2 Sprint Car Owners of Arizona

• 1 National Racing Alliance

• 2 Interstate Racing Association

• 3 United Sprint Car Series

• 8 Cajun Sprint Car Association

• 1 Texas Super Sprinters

• 5 Winged Outlaw Warriors

• 1 United Racing Club

• 15 Open 410 Competitions

• 4 Open 372 Competitions

• 17 Open 360 Competitions

The greatest win of his career was the 2016 Knoxville Nationals.

“It’s the pinnacle of the sport,” said Johnson. “It’s like the Daytona 500 of NASCAR or the Indianapolis 500 in Indy racing.”

Other major races he’s won include:

• 2017 DIRTcar Nationals

• 2017 Texas Outlaw Nationals (Night #1)

• 2016 World Finals at the dirt track in Charlotte, North Carolina

• 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2014 ASCS Driver Championships

• 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2014 ASCS Owner Championships

He was also recognized as the 2015 World of Outlaws’ Kevin Gobrecht Rookie of the Year.

While he raced 360 sprints cars in the early portion of his career, Johnson is now concentrating exclusively on the World of Outlaws (WoO) Sprint Car Series racing a 410. He is competing in all the scheduled events of the series this year. It is a fulltime job.

Jason claims the winner's trophy for his victory in the Devil's Bowl at the Texas Outlaw Nat

Jason celebrates his win in the Devil's Bowl at the Texas Outlaw Nationals

“The season runs from early January through the first week in November and includes 98 events,” said Johnson. “I am racing in 28 to 30 states around the country and competing in two to five races a week.” Obviously, it’s not just Saturdays and Sundays when he races. Events take place just about every day of the week depending on the schedule or necessary adjustments due to postponements because of weather.

“I travel from coast to coast four times a year,” he noted.

He is the only driver on the team, which also includes Philip Dietz, the Crew Chief, Jeff Bingaman, the Car Chief, and Jakob Weaver, who is the Tire Specialist. His wife Bobbi manages merchandise sales and distribution and their son Jaxx is the team’s biggest cheerleader.

Between January 1 and May 1, 2017, Johnson has competed in 26 races in such locations as Canada, Australia, Oklahoma, Florida, Texas, Nevada, California, Arizona, Missouri, and Indiana.

Between May 1 and November 4, he will compete in 72 contests in locations including Arkansas, Kansas, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Missouri, New York, New Jersey, North Carolina, Indiana, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Illinois, South Dakota, Canada, Michigan, Montana, Washington, Oregon, California, and North Carolina.

Between January 1 and April 22 he has had five podium finishes in the A Main events.

• Jan. 7 Murray Bridge Speedway World Series Sprintcars 3rd

• Feb. 17 Volusia Speedway Park WoO 46th DiRTcar Nationals 1st

• Feb. 19 Volusia Speedway Park WoO 46th DiRTcar Nationals 2nd

• March 3 LoneStar Speedway WoO East TX. Lonestar Shootout 2nd

• March 15 Devil’s Bowl Speedway WoO Texas Outlaw Nationals 1st

During that period he achieved 18 podium finishes for heat races.

Racers who finish in the top 24 positions in each event receive a cash reward. Johnson finished 24th or better in every race.

K&N Engineering is a major sponsor or partner of Jason Johnson Racing.

“K&N has been a partner since 2010,” said Johnson. “We’ve always been a believer in K&N products. Working with the K&N team has given us the opportunity to showcase, display and promote their products across the United States. The products have performed great in all the different track conditions we have run in coast to coast. They build a superior product that keeps our engines running strong night in and night out. K&N is a big reason for our success. In all the years we have been running with K&N we haven’t had any engine failures. That’s huge and shows how much we can rely in their products.”

The racing team uses boxed air filters and oil filters.

Other companies that have partnered with Jason Johnson Racing include:

• Priority Aviation Services

• Mesilla Valley Transportation

• Fischer Body Shop

• Dissolvalloy Downhole Revolution

• Saich Family

• CCC

• Maxim Chassis

• Pro Powder Coating

• Jonestown KOA

• Valvoline

• Waco Metal

• FK Rod Ends

• Weld Racing

• Shell Shock Designs

• Brown & Miller Racing Solutions

• MSD Performance

• Schoenfeld Headers

• Bell Helmets

• Crow Enterprises

• ISC Racers Tape

• KSE Racing Products

• Wilwood Brakes

• Race Die Cast

• Kenny’s Components

• Winters Performance Products

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K&N Pro Series Rookie, Dylan Murry, Uses Greenville Pickens Speedway to Prove His Might

16 year old high school student Dylan Murry may well have the stuff he needs to go all the way

In just his fifth race in a car, Dylan Murry finished sixth in his first K&N Pro Series event

If in high school you were to draw the shape of the Greenville Pickens Speedway and submitted it to your teacher as a representation of an oval, it’s unlikely you would have received a passing grade. With four turns, each with its own radius, and front and back straights that aren’t parallel, it’s not the standard image of an oval racetrack that usually comes to mind.

Beyond just the shape of the track, there are even more challenges for the driver. The two straights are virtually flat and the turns are banked at only five degrees. In addition, the turns have been freshly repaved while the straights are covered in decades-old asphalt. So just as the driver starts to transition to power, the grip of the track surface changes greatly.

This background is provided so that you can better appreciate the feat of this young teenager from Georgia, who raced in his very first K&N Pro Series East race at Greenville Pickens Speedway this month, in only his fifth race in a car.

Sixteen-year-old Dylan Murry is like many young drivers who come out of a racing family. His father David was a championship road racer and now operates a track day and coaching business. Dylan caught the racing bug not from his dad’s insistence or encouragement, but from watching kart races and pressuring dad to allow him to start racing. “I wanted to make sure it was his passion and not mine,” dad, David, added emphatically.

The already tricky track became more difficult to master with paving in the turns only

Dylan enters a newly paved turn with the older asphalt straightway behind him

Dylan drove road racing karts for several years but then decided to pursue a career on ovals. He moved up into Legends where he cut his teeth in quarter-mile wheel-to-wheel competition. He managed to put together funding to drive in four Whelen Late Model races for Spraker Racing Enterprises last year, at two tracks – Caraway Speedway and Motor Mile Speedway, with the goal of breaking into the K&N series at Watkins Glen, to take best advantage of his road-racing background.

A quick aside: While Dylan’s racing has received some support from Tooth Life, Gliimpse, and The Gorsline Company, it's come mostly from his friends, fans, and other supporters through a GoFundMe campaign.

Dylan Murry, a high-school student from Georgia, has already impressed NASCAR with his driving

Will Dylan Murry be among the drivers to replace fan favorites who are retiring, like Dale Jr.?

Because of the high speeds at Watkins Glen (160 mph up the backstraight) NASCAR wanted Dylan to first prove his ability in a more powerful K&N car on a shorter track. So the race at Greenville Pickens was chosen. The challenge of driving Greenville Pickens is well-known among short track racers in the south. The apex is up against the inside retainer wall, plus the changes in pavement and the mixture of radii of the turns. Not the place most drivers would select to put in a safe finish to receive approval to race at the faster tracks.

The only experience he’d had of the South Carolina track was a few laps in a street car. If the layout wasn’t intimidating enough (based on a clay horse track carved out in 1940), it’s also the second oldest NASCAR track still operating and where the legends of Richard Petty and David Pearson have at least some of their roots.

In the first practice session, Dylan was not surprisingly near the bottom of the order – 18th out of 19 cars. In qualifying Dylan moved up to 16th. Not what he’d been hoping for, but the race would take over an hour and Dylan knew he could learn more about the car, the other drivers, and the track as the race wore on.

With each lap of the race, Dylan began to find his pace. He learned that you lost speed late braking into the turns as the cars are actually coasting at the apex, and that power has to be applied judiciously as you transfer off the fresh asphalt of the turn and onto to aged surface of the straights. “In the last 25 laps I felt I had a good handle on the track,” Dylan would comment after the race.

Dylan utilized an online service to allow his supporters to make small individual contibutions

As a shout-out to those who supported him through GoFundMe Dylan carries the logo on the car

Dylan had moved up 9 positions during the race and finished an incredible sixth and top Rookie, in his Rette-Jones Racing Ford Fusion. To put accomplishment into context, the drivers who finished ahead of him have multiple K&N Pro Series races under their belts, or have raced in ARCA or the Camping World Truck Series. Not just four outings in a Late Model car.

For his performance, Dylan was awarded the Sunoco Rookie of the Race, Coca-Cola Move of the Race, and the Brembo Brake Through Challenge. The only award he didn’t receive was a first place trophy.

Because of his impressive performance at Greenville Pickens, Brett Bodine, head of NASCAR's Driver Approval Committee, has given Dylan the green light to race at not only Watkins Glen, but all tracks in the series, including the three other fastest tracks: Bristol, Dover, and New Hampshire.

So make sure to look out for this young man in the K&N Pro Series East race at Watkins Glen, and perhaps a few other races this year, depending upon the support he receives through his GoFundMe campaign.

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