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| Hirschman
Earns Third North-South Shootout Victory Matt Hirschman of After setting fast time in qualifying on
Friday, Chuck Hossfeld led the field to green for the start of the 125-lap main event for
the Modifieds. The caution flew immediately for a spin by Corey Lajoie in turn one. On the
complete restart it was once again Hossfeld in command. Second-running Bonsignore
immediately had company in Matt Hirschman. Just outside of the top five things were
heating up between Burt Myers, Eric Beers, James Civali, Ronnie Silk and Erick Rudolph. Civali began to work over Beers taking the
fifth spot on lap four. Hossfeld continued to lead Bonsignore, Hirschman, Preece, and
Civali before a spin by TJ Zacharias off turn three brought out the second caution on lap
six. Bonsignore got a great run on the lap six restart getting up alongside Hossfeld
before settling back in line in second. Earl Paules and Burt Myers were involved in an
incident in turn four to bring out the third caution. Myers rolled on while Paules was
forced to retire from the event. On the ensuing restart, Bonsignore was able
to get the advantage over Hossfeld. Preece got the jump on Hirschman and then used the
outside groove to get around Hossfeld. Preece immediately went to work on Bonsignore for
the lead. Hossfeld fell to third and into the clutches of Hirschman. Beers and Rudolph had
each gotten by Civali. The fourth caution flew on lap 10 for pile-up exiting turn four
that included Junior Miller, Josh Nichols and Gene Pack. All cars were able to continue. On the lap 10 restart, Bonsignore had his
hands full with Preece. The young drivers went wheel-to-wheel for the better part of a
lap. Not able to make the outside move work, Preece did the crossover move to the bottom.
The two continued to run side-by-side. Bonsignore was able to take sole possession of the
lead once again on lap 13. Erick Rudolph, who had been strong on the restart, was now
running in the fourth position. Meanwhile, Hirschman had caution the leaders to make a
three car battle for the lead. George Brunnhoelzl started to make some
noise moving into the seventh position by lap 15. He went to work on Silk for sixth taking
the spot away on lap 19. Preece got a great run coming out of the
fourth turn to the take the lead away from Bonsignore on lap 21. Brunnhoelzl began to run
down Hossfeld in fifth. Once out front, Preece was able to run out to a ten car-length
advantage over a brewing battle between Bonsignore and Hirschman. The leader Preece began to enter lapped
traffic on lap 29. As the rest of the pack entered lapped traffic the positions second
through fifth began to tighten up. Ted Christopher had moved up into the seventh position
by lap 35. Up front, Hirschman continued to take chase
of Bonsignore in second. Rudolph and Hossfeld were able to gain some running room over
Brunnhoelzl. Despite being in heavy lapped traffic, Preece was not losing any ground to
the battle for the second spot. There was a scary moment for Hirschman and Bonsignore when
Jimmy Zacharias spun in turn two directly in front of the duo to bring out the events
fifth caution. The caution period did result in disaster
for Bonsignore who stalled in turn two a lap later. After receiving a push, his car
stalled once again on it pit road. While Bonsignore was getting service to his car for a
reported dead battery, a host of other teams headed for pit road on lap 41 including
Civali, Silk, B. Myers, Beers, Franks Fleming, Jason Myers, Tommy Farrell and others. For the lap 41 restart, the running order
was Preece, Hirschman, Rudolph, Hossfeld, Brunnhoelzl, Christopher, Eric Goodale, Rowan
Pennink, Zach Brewer, and Jamie Tomaino inside the top-ten. Preece handily retained his
lead over Hirschman on the ensuing restart while Hossfeld rocketed into third taking
Christopher along for the ride. Rudolph fell back to fifth followed by Brunnhoelzl. While Preece was being pressured by
Hirschman for the lead; B. Myers, the two-time and defending race champion, appeared to
have problems as he slid back several positions. Bonsignore was able to return to action on
lap 46 just as the sixth caution flew for a spin by B. Myers. During the caution period,
Bonsignore returned to pit road. Frank Fleming had encountered problems and also headed
down pit road. Myers was pushed behind the wall on lap 46. Hirschman was able to get the advantage on
the lap 46 restart to take the lead from Preece. Christopher had gotten by Hossfeld to
move into the third spot. Brunnhoelzl and Hossfeld went wheel-to-wheel for fourth. A bid
by Brunnhoelzl on lap 48 gave him the fourth position. Erick Rudolph immediately began to
apply pressure to Hossfeld for position. Hirschman began to extend his lead over
Preece, Christopher, Brunnhoelzl, and Hosffeld. James Civali was making tracks back to the
front following his pit stop earlier in the event. The Hirschman was enjoying a ten-car length
advantage over Preece and Christopher when the seventh caution flew for a scaring looking
incident involving J. Zacharias. It was a vicious hit for the young driver, who impacted
the inside wall at the entrance of pit road. Also receiving damage were Pack and Fleming. During the caution period, Hirschman,
Preece, Christopher, Brunnhoelzl, Hossfeld, Goodale, Silk, Brewer and Miller all came down
pit road for their mandatory pit stop. Goodales #58 stalled on pit road and failed
to refire. After the pit stops, Rudolph was the new
leader followed by Civali, Jimmy Blewett, Shaun Carrig, Nichols, J. Myers, Farrell, and
Pat Emerling. Hirschman and Preece lined up at the tail-end of the top ten followed by
Christopher, Hossfeld, Silk, Tomaino, Brewer, Brunnhoelzl, Pennink, and others. Rudolph easily motored into the lead on the
restart at lap 62. Civali looked to the outside of Rudolph and was able to make the pass
on lap 64. Civali was the new leader followed by Rudolph, Blewett, Carrig, Nichols, J.
Myers, Preece, Hirschman, Hosffeld, and Christopher inside the top ten. Nichols was looking racy in fifth; applying
pressure to Carrig. Rudolph found himself in the middle of a three wide battle. Electing
to lift, the youngster, began to drop back through the field. Civali began to get away from the field as
Beers worked his way into the second spot. Preece and Hirschman were both able to get by
Carrig and Nichols. Preece had reeled in Blewett; making the pass on lap 75. Carrig lost
several positions after making some contact with the outside wall in turn two. Preece began to run down Civali while
Hirschman continued to work on Blewett for second. The eighth caution of the event flew on
lap 79 when the leader just laps before, Rudolph, lost the handle on his mount hitting the
wall on the front stretch. The lap 79 restart pitted Civali against
Preece at the head of the field. Civali used the outside groove to his advantage to retain
his lead. Hirschman was also able to get by Preece while Christopher moved into the fourth
position over Blewett on the restart. An aggressive move by Pennink opened the
door for both he and Brunnhoelzl to move past Blewett. Up front the top four were locked
together in a heated battle. Hirschman was glued to the back bumper of Civali. Preece,
likewise, was right on the bumper of Hirschman. Christopher made it a four-car battle for
the top spot. On lap 89, contact between the leaders sent
the field scattering and the caution flying for the ninth time. There was initial contact
between Hirschman and Civali exiting turn four. The top-three of Civali, Hirschman and
Preece all sustained damage. Christopher drove away with the lead. Civali and Hirschman
both had front end damage but were able to rejoin the event after repairs on pit road.
Preece was forced to retire from the event. On the restart it was Christopher, Pennink,
Brunnhoelzl, Silk, and Goodale, who had problems earlier but was the benefactor of well
placed caution periods and remained on the lead lap, inside the top five. Pennink got the
jump on the restart to take the lead from Christopher. The pass was for naught as the
events tenth caution flew before the completion of the lap when Civali made hard
contact with the outside wall in turn two. Pennink had his second shot at the top spot
with another attempt at the restart. Exiting turn two on the restart, Pennink and
Christopher made contact sending Christopher into the outside wall. A host of cars were
collected in the incident including Hossfeld, Goodale, Nichols, Brewer, Tomaino, and
Miller. Pennink was placed at the tail of the field for his involved in the incident. All
but Christopher and Miller were able to rejoin the field. Brunnhoelzl was pitted against Ronnie Silk
for the third attempt at the restart on lap 89. On the single file restart, Brunnhoelzl
handily took the top spot over Silk. Carrig and Farrell duked it out for third while
Hirschman had already worked his way back into the top five. Blewett and Beers were also
gaining momentum. Silk was glued to the back bumper of
Brunnhoelzl for the top spot while Hirschman, who had already passed Carrig, dogged
Farrell for third. Pennink was locked in a battle for the eighth position with Blewett and
Hossfeld. Hossfeld got by both and continued his march back into contention. Pennink moved
into seventh leaving Blewett in eighth followed by Carrig. On lap 100, Hirschman moved
passed Farrell and immediately hunted down Silk in second. Brunnhoelzl entered having lapped traffic
with 20 laps to go. Hirschman dove low on Silk exiting turn four on lap 105 to take over
second. He went to work in an effort to cut into Brunnhoelzls lead. Silk fell into
the clutches of Beers. Beers took the spot away exiting turn two on lap 107. Hirschman had caught Brunnhoelzl with 15
laps remaining. Beers ran a half straightaway behind in third. Hirschman got alongside the
leader in turn two on lap 111. He was able to make the pass weaving through lapped traffic
in the dogleg on lap 112. Hossfeld had worked his way back into the fourth spot with eight
laps remaining. He caught Beers in a battle for third. Hirschman was able to stretch his advantage
while Hossfeld was able to take the third position from Beers on lap 120. Hossfeld had a
distance to run down Brunnhoelzl. A spin by Carrig brought out the twelfth caution of the
event with only four laps remaining erasing the margin at the head of the pack. Blewett
gave up a top finish to head behind the wall under the caution period. On the restart on lap 121, it was Hirschman,
Brunnhoelzl, Hossfeld, Beers, Silk, Farrell, Pennink, Keith Rocco of Rocco and his team made what has turned out
to be a controversial call to change two tires with only a handful of laps remaining. The
move turned out to be the winning one as Rocco rocketed through the field in the late
stages of the event to score the victory. Ronnie Silk, by virtue of his pole earning
qualifying run, led the field to the green in the 50-lapper for the SK Type
Modifieds. His time at the head of the pack would be short-lived as Ryan Preece dove to
the bottom groove to take over the point before the completion of the first lap. Ted
Christopher moved up from his fifth place starting position passing Rocco and Ron Yuhas,
Jr. to run in third. The first caution of the event flew on lap two for an incident
involving Tommy Farrell and Patrick Emerling. Preece jumped out to the lead on the restart
while the battle for the second position brewed between Silk and Christopher. The leader
was able to pull away from the battle for second that now also included Rocco. On lap 13,
Christopher was able to grab the second spot away from Silk. Preece continued to lead with
the running order now Christopher, Silk, Rocco, and Matt Hirschman inside the top five. The second caution of the event flew for a
spin by Tommy Barrett. During the caution, Silk gave up the third position to head to pit
road. He was joined by Woody Pitkat, Tommy Farrell, Doug Coby, Adam LeCicero and Barrett. Christopher was able to gain the advantage
and the lead over Preece. Hirschman, Rocco, and Yuhas ran nose-to-tail. With an aggressive
move, Silk was able to get underneath Yuhas taking Earl Paules along for the ride. Yuhas
fought back looking low on Paules lap-after-lap. Christopher continued to lead Preece,
Hirschman, Rocco, Silk, Paules, and Yuhas. On lap 33, Woody Pitkat lost control of his
mount; backing it into the turn four wall to bring out the third caution. Pit road was a
busy place under the caution as Silk, Yuhas, Steven Reed, Barrett, Coby, and Pitkat looked
for service from the crews. Christopher once again gained the advantage
on the restart; however, green flag racing was stalled for the fourth time when Pitkat
spun on the backstretch. Christopher was successful in holding onto the lead on the
ensuing restart. Paules began to work over Preece for second. A bit deeper in the back,
things were heating up between Barrett, Coby and Yuhas. Barrett advanced his position on
Farrell while Yuhas was able to grab seventh from Coby. Barrett passed Coby on lap 37. Preece had reeled in Christopher at the head
of the pack. Hirschman and Paules were getting racy for third. All battles ceased when the
red flag was immediately displayed following a horrific accident involving Steven Reed.
Reed had a tire go down as he exited turn two. The car climbed the wall in the dogleg and
was launched into the catch fence. The car appeared to hit a pole and was twisted back
onto the speedway; tearing down several yards of fence. Reed walked away from the carnage
uninjured. When the caution was displayed Coby, Pitkat, and Rocco pitted. Back under racing conditions, Christopher
continued to show the way with Preece in second. Hirschman lost several spots after
contact with Paules. The caution flew once again when contact between Yuhas and Barrett
sent Yuhas spinning. Barrett was penalized to the rear of the field for over aggressive
driving. On the single-file restart, contact between
Preece and Christopher sent both cars spinning. Preeces teammate Pitkat was also
collected. All three were able to continue. Another attempt at the restart saw Paules lead
Hirschman, Silk, Farrell and Coby inside the top five. The rash of yellow fever continued on lap 43
with an incident involving Farrell, Christopher, and Pitkat. Christophers ride was
the most heavily damaged and would not continue. With only seven laps remaining, things
began to get dicey at the head of the pack. Silk dove low on Paules to take over the
lead while Rocco rolled under Hirschman for third. Rocco quickly grabbed the second
position from Paules. Preece also got by Hirschman; taking the fourth spot. He moved by
Paules to take over third. Rocco immediately reeled in the leader Silk. On lap 47, Rocco
was the new leader. A brush with the wall opened the door for Preece to move into second.
Rocco streaked to the checkers to claim the victory. Preece, Silk, Paules and Hirschman
rounded out the top five. For the second straight year, the Champion
Racing Association ( Following a caution on lap 111, then leader
Ross Kenseth ran out
of fuel causing the caution to be extended and giving the lead to Michael Pilla. Kenseth
fueled up; returning to the now-dissemated field. On what proved to be the final restart,
Pilla spun his tires giving James the edge he needed to take the lead. James held the lead
over the final five laps, keeping a hard-charging Kenseth at bay to score the victory.
Kenseth had to settle for second. Pilla, Dennis Schoenfeld, and Grant Davidson rounded out
the top five. In USA Modified action, Brian
Nester of In the Vintage ranks, it was Johnny Sutton
scoring a dominating performance in his Vintage Modified. The car is as beautiful as it is
quick. In the Vintage Sportsman, Johnny Gregory had worked his way to the front of the
pack and looked to be well on his way to victory when Tim Buxton began to pour it on.
After a brief battle Buxton passed Sutton and went on to claim the victory. 109 U-Pull It John Blewett 109 U-Pull It John Blewett USA
Modified North-South Shootout 50-Lap Feature Finish: 1. Brian
Nester; 2. Mike Stacy; 3. Brad Springer; 4. Ross Klingelhofer; 5. Chad Poole; 6. Scott
Tomasik; 7. Nick Carr; 8. Kyle Jones; 9. Brandon Oakley; 10. Greg Fullerton; 11. Ali
Kern; 12. Jim Blagg; 13. Chris Tomasik; 14. Rob Yelton; 15. Kenny Phillips; 16. Damon
Breedlove; 17. John Karl; 18. Don Skaggs; 19.
Brad Yelton; 20. Ryan Morgan; 21. Danny Partello; 22. Brian Brewer; 23. Mickey Wright; 24. Dave Christensen. 109 U-Pull It John Blewett 109 U-Pull It John Blewett The North-South Shootout is a registered trademark of
C&C Racing Promotions. |
Last Updated on 11/14/10
By George Campbell or Greg Fish
Email: neracing@neracing.com