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Daily Dirt 04/19/2024 09:09:16

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May 23
Jackson Motorplex,
Jackson, MN
Sanction: World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Model Series (Drydene Double Down Invitational) - $20,000
Information provided by: Series reports (last updated May 24, 10:29 am)
Thornton wins WoO first, $20,000 at Jackson
Drydene Double Down Invitational
  1. Ricky Thornton Jr.
  2. Ricky Weiss
  3. Brandon Sheppard
  4. Chad Simpson
  5. Chris Madden
  6. Chase Junghans
  7. Darrell Lanigan
  8. Cade Dillard
  9. Dennis Erb Jr.
  10. Frank Heckenast Jr.
  11. Boom Briggs
  12. Matt Cosner
  13. Brent Larson
  14. Scott Bloomquist
  15. Ashton Winger
  16. Shannon Babb
  17. Justin Zeitner
  18. Kody Evans
  19. Jason Rauen
  20. Tad Pospisil
  21. Chris Simpson
  22. Jeremy Grady
  23. Blair Nothdurft
  24. Jake Timm
presented by
Jacy Norgaard/jacynorgaardphotography.com
Ricky Thornton Jr. atop his car in victory lane at Jackson.
What won the race: Becoming a World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Model Series winner for the first time in his career, open-wheel modified ace Ricky Thornton Jr. of Chandler, Ariz., took advantage of Chad Simpson's slip to grab the lead on lap 53 and went on to capture Saturday night's 60-lap Drydene Double Invitational finale at Jackson Motorplex. He beat Friday-night victor Ricky Weiss to the finish line by 0.486 of a second to secure the $20,000 top prize.
Key notes: Saturday’s purse was originally $10,000-to-win, but doubled to $20,000 thanks to sponsorship from Drydene. … The event was run spectator-free but streamed live on DIRTVision.com. … The World of Outlaws last visited Jackson, Minn., June 18, 1988, a race won by Willy Kraft of Lakefield, Minn.
On the move: Darrell Lanigan of Union, Ky., started 19th and finished seventh.
Winner's sponsors: Thornton’s SSI Motorsports Longhorn Race Car is powered by a Clements engine and sponsored by Dyno One, Excel Floor Covering and Sub-Surface of Indiana.
Points chase: After Jackson Saturday: 1. Brandon Sheppard (1,582); 2. Ricky Weiss (1,530); 3. Darrell Lanigan (1,450); 4. Chris Madden (1,432); 5. Chase Junghans (1,418); 6. Cade Dillard (1,384); 7. Dennis Erb Jr. (1,378); 8. Scott Bloomquist (1,364); 9. Ashton Winger (1,310); 10. Matt Cosner (1,258); 11. Boom Briggs (1,230); 12. Kody Evans (1,230).
Current weather: Clear, 63°F
Car count: 28
Fast qualifier: Chad Simpson
Time: 15.603 seconds
Polesitter: Ricky Thornton Jr.
Heat race winners: Chad Simpson, Ricky Thornton Jr., Justin Zeitner, Chris Madden
Consolation race winners: Dennis Erb Jr.
Provisional starters: Matt Cosner, Blair Nothdurft
Next series race: May 29, Davenport Speedway (Davenport, IA) $6,000
Editor's note: Results and race details are unofficial.
From series reports

JACKSON, Minn. (May 23) — Everyone has known Ricky Thornton Jr. possesses the talent to excel behind the wheel of a Dirt Late Model. He proved it Saturday night at Jackson Motorplex.

Capping his first weekend of 2020 competition in the SSI Motorsports Longhorn Race Car, the open-wheel modified star from Chandler, Ariz., who now lives in Iowa roared to the biggest and richest full-fender victory of his career — and first-ever World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Model Series triumph — in the 60-lap Drydene Double Down Invitational.

The joy of breaking through on a national tour to the tune of a $20,000 paycheck was evident from Thornton’s post-race demeanor.

“It’s huge,” Thornton said of his milestone checkered flag. “I’ve always dreamed to be able to run a Late Model, and (SSI Motorsports owners) Todd and Vicki Burns (of Morgantown, Ind.) gave me this opportunity again. I don’t get to run a Late Model a whole lot every year so maybe this will open some doors somewhere.”

Thornton started from the pole position and led the race’s first lap, but he lost the spot to front-row mate Chad Simpson of Mount Vernon, Iowa, the following circuit and found himself chasing the Hawkeye State veteran for most of the race’s remaining distance. He finally shot into the lead on lap 53 when Simpson slipped high off turn two and mastered a final restart one lap later to beat WoO regular Ricky Weiss of Headingley, Manitoba, by 0.486 of a second.

Defending WoO champion and current points leader Brandon Sheppard of New Berlin, Ill., advanced from the 10th starting spot to place third. Simpson fell to fourth in the final rundown after leading laps 2-52 while third-starter Chris Madden of Gray Court, S.C., completed the top five in a steady but quiet outing.

Thornton has been plenty active in open-wheel modified competition this season — he has 16 victories despite racing being shut down for nearly two months by coronavirus concerns — but he didn’t have a Dirt Late Model ride lined up as the division began returning to action in recent weeks. He landed one for Jackson’s big spectator-free WoO doubleheader with a couple familiar faces in Todd and Vicki Burns, who seemed likely to forego fielding a car in high-level national events this year after ending their run with Hudson O’Neal of Martinsville, Ind., following the 2019 campaign.

“They took the year off pretty much, and Taylon (Center, who works for Todd Burns and is an Arizona native like Thornton) and us kind of talked them into letting us come and run this weekend,” said Thornton, who subbed for O’Neal as the SSI Motorsports driver in 2018 when O’Neal was sidelined to undergo shoulder surgery. “Hopefully we’ll run a little more.”

Thornton made the Burnses’ decision a worthwhile one with a never-say-die drive. He chased Simpson relentlessly throughout the race, unsuccessfully pulling alongside the leader on several occasions before Simpson finally made a critical error.

“My only shot was I was gonna have to slide him off of (turn) four and hope that we didn’t wreck,” Thornton said when asked if he thought he could have overtaken Simpson without the door being left wide open by Simpson’s lap-53 miscue. “The odds are we probably would’ve got second.”

Nevertheless, Thornton’s dogged pursuit of Simpson might have contributed to the deciding turn of events as well.

“That cushion was getting more and more,” Thornton said. “I kept kind of getting under him and he was driving harder and harder and harder, and finally he made that one big mistake and that was kind of all it took.

“That one restart I kept running around the top and then Weiss got under me and pretty much passed me off of four (for second place on lap 41). So I was like, ‘As long as I can get back in front of him and almost block him a little bit.’ But then, you can get such a good run through the center and on exit, and, like, your straightaway speed wasn’t as good but you’d make the guy (ahead) know you were there. So then it just kind of makes him run harder and harder.”

And finally Simpson ran too hard, bouncing over the cushion in turn two on lap 53. Thornton bolted past and never looked back — although the final circuits were anything but easy.

“The last five laps I was kind of … I’ve never gotten nervous in a car, and that was probably the most nervous I’ve ever been,” Thornton said. “I’m a little wore out after that one. I think probably more of it is my nerves than anything.”

Weiss, 31, fell short in his bid to back up his $6,000 victory in the previous night’s opener at Jackson, but he made a strong run forward from the ninth starting spot in his Bloomquist Race Car. The second-year WoO regular lost ground after failing to complete a pass of Thornton for second on lap 41, but he grabbed the position from Simpson on a lap 54 restart and was drawing closer to Thornton as the race concluded.

“Slowly but surely we were just trying to keep the car under us,” Weiss said. “It’s a long race. This is a slippery surface. Where it’s shiny it’s really shiny, and where it’s brown it’s real sticky. We were just trying to find something where we could be a tick better than them.

“We were starting to reel them in at the end there. I don’t know, if it was five more laps maybe we would’ve been there.”

Weiss knew that his inability to pull ahead of Thornton on lap 41 probably was the biggest moment of the feature for him.

“I got beside Ricky a few times,” Weiss said. “And I think if I could’ve cleared him … obviously, when the 25 (Simpson) there slipped up out of two, maybe we would’ve been there to jump on that rather than him.

“But it is what it is. I’m proud of my team here, and the car’s got no damage. We’re leaving here just making things better. It was a real good weekend.”

The 27-year-old Sheppard, meanwhile, felt his conservatism early in the A-main in Mark Richards’s Rocket Chassis house car might have cost him a shot at the big prize.

“I needed to be more aggressive at the beginning of that race there,” said Sheppard, who slipped past Simpson for third place on lap 56 and was hot on Weiss’s tail at the finish. “As good as my car was in the feature tonight, and last night in the feature (he finished second on Friday), I’m definitely disappointed that we didn’t get one.

“But we were right there again. We were moving around and could pretty much run all over the racetrack in three and four, and then I was decent in one and two. There at the end of the race I could really make some speed around the top. I just couldn’t do nothing there at the end there. We kind of got lined out and that was all I had.

It was just a matter of being more aggressive at the beginning of the race. We definitely have to work on our qualifying game. We need to start up front in these races.

Caution flags flew for Chris Simpson slowing on lap 16; Jason Rauen nosing into the turn-one wall on lap 40; Kody Evans stopping on lap 41 (due to a broken wheel as he was primed for a top-10 finish); and fluid that flowed from Ashton Winger’s car on lap 54 as the WoO rookie ran in the top 10.

Notes: Thornton’s triumph came just weeks after his wife, Shea, gave birth to the couple’s second child. His wife and both of their boys were at the track on Saturday. … One night after debuting his new Bloomquist Race Car with a third-place finish, Shannon Babb of Moweaqua, Ill., experienced a rough outing. He transferred through the B-main and advanced from 18th to seventh before an overheating engine forced him out on lap 54. … Scott Bloomquist of Mooresburg, Tenn., started sixth but managed only a 14th-place finish after making a mid-race pit stop…. Justin Zeitner of Omaha, Neb., impressed with a heat-race victory and appeared headed for a top-10 feature finish until his car’s transmission popped out of gear on lap 54, forcing him to retire. … Dennis Erb Jr. of Carpentersville, Ill., hustled from the 17th starting spot to a ninth-place finish after putting in long hours to repair heavy front-end damage his car sustained in a Friday accident. … Chub Frank of Bear Lake, Pa., didn’t enter Saturday’s program because his car was damaged significantly in a Friday crash.

Feature lineup

Row 1: Thornton, Chad Simpson
Row 2: Madden, J. Zeitner
Row 3: Chris Simpson, Bloomquist
Row 4: Winger, Heckenast
Row 5: Weiss, Sheppard
Row 6: Grady, Junghans
Row 7: Rauen, Briggs
Row 8: Larson, Dillard
Row 9: Erb, Babb
Row 10: Lanigan, Timm
Row 11: Pospisil, Evans
Row 12: Cosner, Nothdurft
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