9/20/09

                                        Regier and Kinchen Reap 2009 Harvest Gold
                                                      
                                                        
by Gerald Laurie

                                                       
The 2009 edition of Madera Speedway’s Annual Harvest Classic turned out to be the proverbial
barnburner that keeps fans on their feet. The Classic featured  the SMRA Supermodifieds, and
Madera Speedway’s 360 Supermodifieds. When the dance was finally over for the night, Troy
Regier had won his third Madera SMRA feature of the year, and Kenny Kinchen had bested the
360 Supermod field.

The 360 Supermodifieds were the first to challenge the clocks. Kenny Kinchen proved fastest at
13.280 followed by Lance Tatro at 13.399, Lance Jackson at 13.399, Dan Vanderpool at 13.484,
and David Tuey at 13.618.

The Supermodified Racing Association Supers rounded out time trials. Jeff Russell paced the
field at 12.392 seconds. Bryan Warf was next with a time of 12.409, followed by Troy Regier at
12.426, A.J. Russell at 12.492, and Davey Hamilton at 12.566.

The first head to head competition of the evening was the 360 Supermodified Trophy Dash.
Lance Jackson started on the pole flanked by Dan Vanderpool. Kenny Kinchen and Lance Tatro
rounded out the field. Jackson snagged the lead on lap one with Vanderpool second, Tatro third,
and Kinchen in back. Tatro and Kinchen both passed Vanderpool on lap two and that was the
limit of the passing. Jackson won the four lapper over Tatro, Kinchen, and Vanderpool.

The SMRA Supermodifieds were next up with their own four lap dash. A.J. Russell and Troy
Regier comprised the first row while Bryan Warf and Jeff Russell made up row two. Regier and A.
J ran side by side through turn one with Regier gaining momentum on the high side to lead lap
one over A.J., Jeff, and Warf. Warf took third on lap two and Jeff Russell slowed dramatically on
lap three. Regier took the hardware with A. Russell second, Warf third, and J Russell fourth.

Eight lap heat races were next on the agenda. The first 360 Supermodified heat featured Kenny
White, Kyle Vanderpool, Jeremiah Beardon, Larry Hinz, and Doug Gould. Willie Northammer
scratched while effecting repairs to a broken torque arm. White led lap one over Vanderpool,
Hinz, Gould, and Beardon. And that was the extent of the excitement. White was victorious with
the remaining order the same.

The second 360 Super heat started with David Tuey and Dan Vanderpool in front followed by
Lance Jackson, Lance Tatro, and Kenny Kinchen. Tuey took the lead at the green flag and by the
end of lap one Tatro was second followed by Vanderpool, Jackson, and Kinchen. Lap eight
directly mirrored lap two.

The first SMRA heat had Jim Birges on the pole flanked by George Greenway and followed by
Lonnie Adamson and Davey Hamilton. Tim Skoglund scratched with ignition malfunctions.
Birges led lap one over Adamson followed by Hamilton and Greenway. Hamilton began a pitched
battle with Adamson that resulted in a pass on lap five. By that time Birges was approaching the
next zip code but Hamilton started reeling him in. However, there was too little time and Birges
took the checkers over Hamilton, Adamson, and Greenway.

The second Supermod heat lined up with A.J. Russell leading Troy Regier, Bryan Warf ,and Jeff
Russell. The order after one lap was Regier over A.J., Jeff, and Warf. On lap eight, Jeff Russell
slowed dramaticall and Warf moved to third. Finishing order was Regier over A. Russell, Warf, J.
Russell.

The SMRA Supermodifieds and the 360 Supermodifieds were combined in a single 50 lap main
event featuring a fourteen car invert. With nearly a second and a half separating the front of the
invert from top qualifiers, the race was bound to be interesting. At the front of the pack, were Kyle
Vanderpool, David Tuey, Dan Vanderpool, Lance Jackson, Lance Tatro, Lonnie Adamson,
George Greenway, and Kenny Kinchen. Completing the invert were Jim Birges, Davey Hamilton,
A.J. Russell, Troy Regier, Bryan Warf and Jeff Russell. Behind the fast burners came Larry Hinz,
Carl Johnson(replacing Kenny White), Jeremiah Beardon, Doug Gould, Willie Northammer.

At the drop of the green, K. Vanderpool led from pole followed by Tuey, D. Vanderpool, Jackson,
Adamson, and Tatro. Lap two saw Adamson go high, and Birges do a bonsai move on the bottom
to bring Lonnie to third, Birges to fourth and Kinchen followed them through to fifth. Birges took
Adamson and Tuey on lap three with A.J. moving to the top five. The yellow flew on lap four when
Johnson spun in turn four negating Birges’s pass for the lead. Greenway hit the pits on the
yellow with some steering problems. On the restart, Birges grabbed the lead over K. Vanderpool
with A.J. in third, Adamson in fourth, and Regier now up to fifth. Lap five saw Russell move to
second and Regier to third. Birges and A.J. split a lapped car on lap seven with Birges up on the
top in no man’s land and A.J. leading the lap. The yellow flew on lap eight when Northammer
coasted to a stop in turn two with terminal problems. Birges regained the lead on the restart. The
yellow flew on lap ten when Jackson executed a spin in turn three. During the caution the 7 car
was brought in for an inspection and relegated to the pits with an oil leak Order at lap ten was
Birges over Regier, Warf, Adamson, and Jeff Russell. The top five 360’s were Kinchen, K.
Vanderpool, Tuey, Tatro, and D. Vanderpool.

The yellow fever continued on lap 12 when Johnson spun again in turn four. By this time Jeff
Russell and Adamson had swapped fourth and fifth. Again Birges held the lead on the high side
when the green flew. Tatro also advanced in the 360 order by displacing both Tuey and
Vanderpool. Hamilton replaced Adamson in fifth place on lap fourteen. Birges and Regier
encountered a rapidly slowing Jackson on the backstretch on lap eighteen  and Regier reacted
earlier to take the lead. Jackson headed to the pits. The yellow and then the red few on lap
nineteen when Larry Hinz got pinched high on the backstretch and hammered the support pole
for the pit gate. The car came to rest in turn three. Jeff Russell checked up to avoid the incident
and got nailed by Gould. Russell spun to a stop sideways and Gould was just below him
effectively blocking the backstretch. The red light flashed to bring out the ambulance and clean
up the carnage. All of the drivers were fine, but the Hinz and Gould rides left on the hook. Jeff
Russell was relegated to the rear of the pack. With Jeff starting at the back on the restart, the lap
twenty order was Regier over Birges, Warf, Hamilton, and Adamson. Top five 360’s were Kinchen,
Tatro, K. Vanderpool, Tuey, and D. Vanderpool.  

The next ten laps featured Regier slowly pulling away with Bryan Warf continually hounding
Birges. Lap after lap, Birges ran the high line for momentum and Warf would dive low off of four
trying to affect a pass. Meanwhile, Jeff Russell was charging back through the field. Jeff regained
top five status on lap twenty five, displacing Adamson. The order after thirty laps was Regier,
Birges, Warf, Hamilton, and Russell. Kinchen in seventh led the 360 contingent followed by Tatro,
K. Vanderpool, Tuey, and D. Vanderpool. Russell took fourth from Hamilton on lap thirty-five and
then the yellow lights flashed on lap thirty seven. Tuey and Johnson had a meeting in turn one  
resulting in both cars coming to a halt in turn two. Hamilton was called to the inspection area
under the yellow and sent to the pits with a leaking rear axle seal. This brought Adamson back
into the top five. At forty laps, Regier led over Birges, Warf, Russell, and Adamson. Kinchen,
Tatro, Tuey, K. Vanderpool, and D. Vanderpool  were the top five 360’s in positions 6 through ten.

And then came the finish. Regier had a substantial lead. Warf had been trying to get around
Birges for thirty laps. Russell had nearly caught up to the second place battle. It had to happen on
the last lap. Birges had kept the lead up high on the track using momentum and great bite off the
corners. He knew Warf would charge hard into turn three on the bottom to try a classic slide job.
So Birges went down to protect the bottom in turn three and completely messed up Bryan’s
charge. Contact ensued. The two tangled and nearly came to a stop trying to negotiate the turn,
Russell tried to shoot the gap and got caught up in the action. As Regier had already taken the
checkered, Birges managed to cross the finish line at a pace of at least twenty-five MPH. Russell
wobbled across behind him and Warf wound up in the turn four in-field with the front wheels
pointed in different directions.

After the shouting and finger pointing ended, Regier was the victor over Birges, Jeff Russell,
Warf, and Adamson. Kinchen was top dog among the 360’s with Tatro, Tuey, Vanderpool the
younger, and Vanderpool the elder rounding out the top five.

Madera Speedway’s Super Saturday Events are always interesting and action packed.
Combining the 360’s and SMRA cars in the Supermodified feature make for an exciting race for
the fans. But there needs to be a rigidly enforced limit to the speed differentials used in the
inverts. The standard for years has been one second. This usually would give a huge advantage
to the top one or two of the 360 teams, putting them at the front with remaining cars behind the
invert. So the Madera officials have expanded that differential, Looking for a break of three or four
tenths of a second in the order and putting everyone faster than the break in the invert. However,
I think the time has come to go back to one second. There were far too many yellows in this event
and there was some serious damage to Larry Hinz car. Someone needs to really take a long look
at this format for the 2010 season. The 360 class has expanded greatly during the 2009 season
and with several more cars possibly joining the fray in 2010, it may be time to let the 360’s stand
alone. The problem is that there are not enough of the open SMRA cars now participating to have
a separate event and support their own purse. Hopefully, someone at Madera or SMRA will come
up with a solution. From the comfort of my air-conditioned home in this ridiculous heat in
September, I am the racing Widow’s Husband.

Madera Speedway
360 Supermodifieds
Qualifications: 1. Kenny Kinchen(5), 13.280; 2. Lance Tatro(72), 13.399; 3. Lance Jackson(18),
13.462; 4. Dan Vandrpool(17), 13.484; 5. Davis Tuey(6), 13.618; 6. Kyle Vanderpool(1), 13.751; 7.
Larry Hinz(4), 14.301; 8. Kenny White(07), 14.657; 14.657; 9. Jeremiah Beardon(27), 14.795; 10.
Doug Gould(60), 14.876; 11. Willie Northammer(15), N/T.
Trophy Dash: 1. Jackson; 2. Tatro; 3. Kinchen; 4. D. Vanderpool.
Heat 1: 1. White; 2. K. Vanderpool; 3. Hinz; 4. Gould; 5. Beardon.
Heat 2: 1. Tuey; 2. Tatro; 3. D. Vanderpool; 4. Jackson; 5. Kinchen.

SMRA Supermodifieds
Qualifications: 1. Jeff Russell(85), 12.392; 2. Bryan Warf(91), 12.409; 3. Troy Regier(98), 12.426; 4.
A.J. Russell(7), 12.492; 5. Davey Hamilton(2), 12.566; 6. Jim Birges(32), 12.677; 7. George
Greenway(8), 13.298; 8. Lonnie Adamson(14) 13.393; 9. Tim Skoglund(89), N/T.
Trophy Dash: 1. Regier; 2. A. Russell; 3. Warf; 4. J. Russell.
Heat 1: 1. Birges; 2. Hamilton; 3. Adamson; 4. Greenway.
Heat2: 1. Regier; 2. A. Russell; 2. Warf; 4. J. Russell.
Combined SMRA and 360 feature:  1. Regier; 2. Birges; 3. J. Rufssell; 4. Warf; 5. Adamson; 6.
Kinchen*; 7. Tatro*; 8. Tuey*; 9. K. Vanderpool*; 10. D. Vanderpool*; 11. Hamilton; 12. Johnson*;
13. Hinz*; 14. Jackson*; 15. Gould*; 16. A. Russell; 17. Northammer*; 18. Beardon*; 19. Greenway;
20 Skoglund (DNS).