Watch for a feature article on Josh Wheeler and Kaleb Hamilton in the upcoming June/July issue of Inside Track.
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Watch for a feature article on Rob Lindsey in the upcoming June/July issue of Inside Track.
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Watch for a feature article on Rob Youngblood in the upcoming June/July issue of Inside Track.
]]>This feature article was published in the April/May 2020 issue of Inside Track. You can read the whole issue at this link.
By Steve Heeb
Kaiden Anderson faced his toughest competition younger than most.
The driver out of Yakima, Wash., was diagnosed with Stage 2 Neuroblastoma when he was two months old and battled that until he was 2.
“I’ve been all clear since 2003,” Kaiden says. “One side effect was no sports, but racing fits right in.”
He had great support from his father, Ron Anderson Jr., who had fielded the 37 cars in Yakima’s Street Stock and Bomber divisions.
“I started when I was 8 and ran Quarter midgets for six years,” he says. “We raced all around the Northwest.”
Kaiden started Quarter midgets powered by a Honda GX120 engine in Junior Honda, followed by a GX160in the Light 160s.
In his third year, Kaiden jumped to the Light World Formula division, with a more powerful Briggs & Stratton engine.
“In my first race I advanced from the B-Main to start seventh in the A-Main,” Kaiden recalls. “The car became a rocket and I won by half a track. Since then I knew I wanted to race.”
During those six seasons in Quarter midgets, Kaiden notched multiple regional victories. He racked up 11 championships and placed second and third at national events.
At 15, Kaiden began racing a Legends car in the Young Lions division.
“The biggest difference between the Quarter midgets and Legends cars is the speed and handling,” he reflects. “Quarter midgets are easier to handle and they have no clutch. I had to get used to the clutch in the Legends and focus on steering.”
He says his dad was a huge help in transitioning to the faster racers and bigger tracks.
“He taught me stuff like driving lines and pick up points on the throttle,” Kaiden says.
Kaiden also credits Chance Overholt at Kustom Fab in Richland, Wash.
“He is my mentor,” Kaiden says. “ He sets the cars up and shows me how to do it. Without him I couldn’t do this.”
He says Chance offered him the best advice early on.
“I had been using the clutch on my starts,” Kaiden explains. “Chance showed me to just lift off the gas and shift to keep momentum at the start.”
Kaiden also learned from competing with long-time veterans like Randy Schaaf, who has multiple state championships since starting in the Legends in 2000.
“Randy is quick everywhere,” Kaiden laughs. “He’s been in Legends as long as I’ve been alive.”
“I race for these young guys,” Randy says. “I like to be a mentor for them.”
“Beating Randy would be quite an accomplishment,” Kaiden said of his goals at the time.
All the advice paid off as Kaiden won the Young Lions championship that year and made a trip south to Las Vegas for a national qualifying event.
“There were 30 cars there and they were all quick,” he laughs. “It was my first year and it was really exciting.”
There certainly was no Sophomore slump for Kaiden, who certainly made the most of his second season in the Legends.
Kaiden snagged the (2017) Semi Pro championship for Washington state, finished fourth in the Race of Champions at Nationals, and ended with an 8th-place finish in the National Championship race.
He also placed third in the National Traveling Series, having competed at 10 different tracks throughout the Northwest including Wenatchee, Puyallup/Graham, Monroe, Elma, Yakima, Portland, Hermiston and Meridian.
Kaiden recalls some extra excitement during the 2016 Fourth of July weekend at Meridian.
“They shot off fireworks in the parking lot and they were landing on our cars in the pits,” he laughs.
Kaiden’s travel time was trimmed the following year, only competing in eight races, on the podium for each with three wins, four runner-ups and a third place.
Kaiden enjoys plenty of support in his racing.
In addition to dad, family support comes from grandparents Carrie and Ron, and sister Mykala.
Jerod Marin tackles crew duty for Kaiden.
“Jerod has been a great crew guy and has helped me tremendously,” Kaiden says.
Kaiden thanks Chance at Kustom Fab and Dave Winchell, who helps with tires on the Legend.
He adds that Jim Schimmel was a great help while they were competing in Las Vegas.
Kaiden maintains a good friendship with Caity Miller and Justin McClure.
“Caity races out of Meridian, Idaho and they have become great friends of mine,” he says. “They even came and helped out during my first Pro Late Model race.”
Kaiden knew he was ready to jump into full-size race car when he accomplished one of his big goals for the Legends, finally beating Randy in an exciting race at Meridian in 2018.
“At that moment right there. I knew I had accomplished a lot in racing,” Kaiden says. “Beating one of the very best to race Legends.”
Last season, Kaiden focused on fielding a Pro Late Model in three races.
“I was super fast at the Fall Classic,” he says of Yakima Speedway’s prestigious late-season event. “I was in the top 5 out of 38 cars with less than 10 laps to go, but ran out of fuel with one lap left.”
If the season ever gets underway, Kaiden hopes to get 10 races in 2020.
“First on my list is Apple Cup and I cannot wait,” he says of the chance to return to Yakima Speedway. “We have tested a couple times and I feel like we have a winning car.”
Here’s hoping Kaiden, and all the Northwest drivers, have a chance to hit their favorite tracks again as soon as possible.
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This feature article was published in the April/May 2020 issue of Inside Track. You can read the whole issue at this link.
By Steve Heeb
It has been more than five years since Rick Froehlich first got nudged into drag racing.
The driver from Redmond, Ore., says he stopped running his local autobody repair shop in 2007 due to multiple sclerosis, though it finally gave him a chance to play with his own cars.
Rick remembers as a 14-year-old borrowing 200 bucks from his father to buy his first car – a white ’57 Chevy 2-door Post.
“It had no motor or tranny, but I had it ready for the road by the time I was 16,” Rick says of starting his passion for the mid-Fifties Chevrolets, with an affinity for the ‘57. “I just love the fins and the grill.”
All told, Rick has had several of these classics as street rods.
“My buddy Bill Ledford said I should give drag racing a try,” Rick recalls. “I finally brought my ’57 out to an Oldies event in 2014.”
Bill, who had been racing since he was 15, first met Rick in the Redmond 4 Bangers Jeep club. The extreme wheeling and rock crawling activities were quite different than the car show circuit.
“Rick always had hot rods for the car shows, but mine were for drag racing.” Bill laughs. “I told him it was like a car show, but once an hour you get to run it really hard.”
Friend Cliff Dwy, living within miles of the dragstrip in Madras, also encouraged Rick to take up racing.
Cliff recalls meeting Rick at a Cruz-in and offering advice to Rick about the carburetor on his ’57 Chevy.
“I knew he had a few nice cars and we started chatting,” Cliff says. “He wanted to know how to make his blower happy.”
“Bill and Cliff both have a tremendous amount of knowledge,” Rick says of the veteran racers.
Encouragement from Bill and Cliff finally convinced Rick to give it a try at the final nostalgia race in 2014.
“He brought his street car and has been hooked ever since,” Cliff laughs, recalling the days he first got hooked on racing as a 16-year-old catching rides to the dragstrip in 1968.
“That winter Rick bought a black ’55 Chevy from Doug Gray,” Bill says. “It was a street car just like the one in American Graffiti.”
The full-bodied, full-framed ’55 is powered by a 468-cid big block running on regular fuel. It uses ladder bars, even at a heavy 3,000 pounds.
“I thought maybe I could do this after all,” Rick said of getting his first taste of drag racing. “I was terrible, but I couldn’t believe I hadn’t started 30 years ago.”
“Rick made a great transition,” Cliff says. “He took his ’55 and really made it into a drag car.”
By the end of his first real season, Rick had won a race in his ’55, claimed Rookie of the year honors and was ranked fourth in the Sportsman points for 2015.
“I had no idea bracket racing was so in-depth,” Rick recalls of the early challenges, including his reduced muscle control from the MS. “I had to worry about syncing my legs.”
Rick’s second season caught up with him.
“I started overthinking,” he explains. “I knew I had to get a transbrake and hand throttle. I could have added them to my ’55, but I’m really a ’57 guy.”
An internet search provided just what he needed.
“A guy had one parked for a few years and had it shipped to me,” Rick says. “I added a hand throttle, but left the foot throttle in.”
He also added the grill and tinted the windows red.
“I just had to make it mine,” he laughs.
He debuted his new ’57 “Brutus” in Pro for the 2017 season.
The sleek black fiberglass body is mounted on a chrome moly chassis.
With a thousand pounds in weight difference, the alcohol-breathing small block 377 in the new ’57 produced considerably faster speed than the ’55 was running.
“This car is consistently 1.5 seconds faster,” Rick says of the comparison. “And it is fun.”
A Powerglide tranny shoves power to the Fab9 rear end and out to the 32x14x15 Hoosiers in back.
Cliff’s mechanical expertise was called upon to help fine tune the new car.
“We really figured out how to make it work for him,” Cliff says of the new Chevy. “He asked me to test the new car to see if it would go straight.”
Cliff has been with Madras Dragstrip since 1986, and had a hand in building many of the cars and engine that race there.
“Cliff and Bill have both helped me dial in the car,” Rick says. “This car is so fast now.”
Rick says he is always learning, and especially improved his reaction times.
“He’s better on the lights for sure,” Bill adds. “With the new car Rick has been spot on. The transbrake in the car has made a world of difference.”
Having good folks helping also has made a difference.
“I have to thank my wife Jodi and her daughter Cori,” Rick says of his family support. “I couldn’t do this without them.
Rick also credits Trevor Osbon for helping out each week.
By late 2019, Rick had determined that Brutus was becoming more of a challenge.
“Brutus had a chopped top and a funny car cage,” Rick explains. “It was just getting to hard to get in and out of the car because of my legs.”
The struggle was sapping some of the appeal of competing.
“I’m not done racing yet, so the answer to the problem is a new car,” Rick says of building another black ’57 Chevy: Dirty Harry. “It will be even faster with this new 632 big block Chevy.”
Watch for the new car to make its debut when the Madras Dragstrip opens back up.
“I just come up here to have fun,” Rick says of making the 30-minute haul from Redmond to Madras. “It’s close to home so I save some money.”
“He doesn’t miss a race,” Cliff says, even though the physical challenge might stall someone less determined than Rick.
Rick’s philosophy: “You should try anything if there’s even a chance you can do it.”
]]>This feature article was published in the June/July 2018 issue of Inside Track.
By Steve Heeb
Almost 40 years ago, Kelly Thomas went with his father to look at cars and picked up a ’65 Dodge Dart.
“That car smoked the right rear no matter what,” Kelly says of that six-cylinder four-speed.
At the time he was 16 and turning wrenches in auto shop at Montlake Terrace High School.
“Kelly was just looking for an open road,” shop teacher Skip Carlson recalls. “He was a super kid with a real love of cars.”
Skip also remembers the teachers going on strike and Kelly taking full advantage of the opportunity.
“The strike gave Kelly a chance to drive his car up and down in front of the school,” Skip explains.
Perhaps a little too much.
“I got caught street racing by a State Trooper,” he explains. “He gave me directions to the dragstrip and checked in on me for the next couple years.”
That bit of guidance put Kelly on the right track for good.
“Once I was here I never left,” he says.
He started fielding a ’69 Dodge Dart Swinger in the Heavy bracket at Pacific Raceways – then Seattle Int’l Raceway. He recalls being influenced by the Bertoldi brothers.
“John and Alan were the track champions back then,” Kelly says.
In 1989, Kelly turned laps in the Pro bracket with a ’67 Barracuda and notched two track titles in a four-year span.
He sold the Barracuda in 1993 and hit the track in a ’91 Jeep Commanche pickup that he raced from 1994 to 2001, when he opened Kelly’s Auto Repair in Auburn.
Within a couple years another race truck found its way into Kelly’s Mopar stable.
“I found a ’94 Dodge Ram factory Mopar race truck in Louisiana,” he says. “I had it shipped up here on the back of a flatbed semi.”
The new pickup helped him pick up Divisional wins at Boise in 2008 and again in Seattle in 2012, as well as numerous top-qualifier postings along the way.
Around 2007, Kelly bought a ’73 Plymouth Duster to race in Stock Eliminator.
In 2013, he swapped out the original 340-cid and converted the car for Super Stock division.
“I put in a different 340 Super Stock legal motor,” he says. “Also a lightweight transmission and aluminum driveshaft.”
He added another Super Stock Dodge to the mix, this one a ’69 Dart GTS.
“It’s just a creampuff,” he says. “It drives perfect and works well.”
Under the hood beats a’73 340-cid motor with Edelbrock aluminum cylinder heads; factory carb and compression; and a T&D valve train.
Even with limited passes in the car by the NHRA Northwest Nationals at Pacific Raceways, Kelly was making 10.43-second runs at 126 mph.
“It’s my favorite,” Kelly says of the yellow Dart GTS. “But the truck is still part of the family.”
Kelly gets plenty of family support from wife Dawn, daughters Jessica and Pam and their husbands Brent and Kyle, respectively.
“I have to thank all the crew at Kelly’s Auto Repair, past and present,” he says. “Manager James Davis and the rest of the crew keep the shop running flawlessly while I am out doing this.”
He also is grateful for all the people who have helped throughout the years.
From the long-time auto shop teacher and good friend Skip Carlson, to Jim Storms, Brian Engelking, Brad Van Lant, Dale Green and Pat Blais.
“I have a lot more good people around me,” he says of the personal friendships he’s developed through racing.
He’s also enjoyed a partnership with Mopar that has helped him race throughout the NHRA Division 6 venues and beyond, from north of the border at Medicine Hat Dragstrip in Alberta, Canada, and south to Pomona, Calif., and Top Gun Dragstrip in Fallon, Nev.
He appreciates all the support along the way and recognizes how things have changed for him.
“I used to mix my own fuel,” he recalls of his early efforts. “Now I order VP by the drum.”
On race day he might bring three of the 12 Mopars he owns.
“They are all great cars,” he says of his collection. “They stick with you for life.”
Beyond the machines, Kelly also recognizes the hard work needed to stay competitive in close brackets.
“I look up to any of the Stock and Super Stock Division champions,” he says, with advice for those new to the sport. “Just stay after it and don’t give up.”
Four decades after having curbed his street racing, Kelly enjoys the straight and narrow of the dragstrip.
“It’s a good clean fun sport,” he laughs. “Come on out and have a good time.”
]]>This feature article was published in the June/July 2018 issue of Inside Track.
By Steve Heeb
Growing up, Joe Bowers was no stranger to the race track. His father John raced Hardtops and his brother raced at Klamath Speedway as well.
“Jack was a big influence,” Joe says of helping on his brother’s Hobby Stock car. “I knew I had to get my own car.”
In 1976, Joe was ready to field his own’64 GTO convertible that he ran in Hobby Stocks for a season.
The next year he ran Street Stocks with a ’69 GTO.
“I would put the big tires on it to run with the Supers,” he says of always trying to expand his racing resume.
For several seasons Joe kept busy behind the wheel and trying to raise funds.
“I was still learning but I wanted to be a pro,” he says. “I had to have money and experience.”
Then a brand new series caught his attention: The Nascar Northwest Tour.
Joe ran full-time during the Northwest Tour’s inaugural 1985 season, competing in 14 of the 15 races on a schedule that included venues in Oregon, Wahington, Nevada, Idaho and California.
He finished in the top 10, in a field made up of the region’s top drivers including Derrike Cope, Dirk Stephens, Chad Little, Ron Eaton, Bob and Leon Fox, Rick Shultz and the series’ very first champion, Garrett Evans.
After a quick breather, Joe was back at Klamath Speedway to earn the Sportsman title in 1988.
“They used to have a $500 bounty for anyone who could beat him,” Debbie laughs. “They even ran an ad in the Nickel paper.”
Joe says that when the season ended, he was given the unclaimed bounty.
He followed up with a second consecutive title in 1989 and earned the track’s Most Popular Driver recognition.
In 1990, Joe put in another full-time effort with the Northwest Tour, including a top-5 finish at South Sound Speedway in which he led 88 laps.
He continued to travel the West Coast from 1991 to 1995 racing in Late Models, Open Comp and Sportsman events in Oregon, Washington, Nevada and California.
In 1994, Joe and wife Debbie decided to have some fun with the No. 1 car while raising some money for their racing efforts in the NorCal series.
“We wanted to involve the kids so for $5 they could sign a vinyl hand and we’d put it on the car,” Joe explains. “The car was orange and blue with white hands plastered all over it.”
“They looked like butterflies all over the car,” Debbie laughs.
Joe credits Dick Mauro, car owner and sponsor, for matching the money from the hands promo and other sponsorships received.
With the car being No. 1, he also says it was natural to have foam finger hands for the fans in the stands.
Joe and Debbie also produced a newsletter that they sent out to keep their junior fans up on Joe’s racing successes.
Their efforts paid off as Joe won the NorCal Series championship that year.
In 1996, Joe put aside his racing suit to start his own business building street rods as Bowers Race and Rod Shop.
Almost a decade would pass before the next generation of Bowers were ready to race. Joe’s three sons – Nicholas, Will and Clint – shared seat time in a Mini Stock they built for the 2002 season at Douglas County Speedway.
Joe was back on the track the following year when the family got a second car and alternated which pair would drive each week.
The following year Joe and Clint each ran one of the cars full time, and Joe picked up the 2004 Mini Stocks title, and successfully defended his title in 2005 with father-son finishing 1-2 in the season points.
After that, the family put Clint in a Modified for a season at Roseburg, but soon other priorities pushed racing onto the back burner.
However, so many experiences were centered on racing that they couldn’t shake it.
“Our family spent so much time together on the road,” Debbie reflects on their racing adventures. “They still like to road trip, and we all have to travel together when we go. We even scheduled our family reunion at South Sound Speedway.”
In 2015, Joe began racing with the NW Pro4 Alliance Late Model series with Clint by his side as crew chief and spotter.
“I wanted to apply what we had done before,” he says of the path that got them to this point.
A path that weaved its way throughout the Northwest, including tracks in Coos Bay, Eugene, Lebanon, Roseburg, Spanaway, Monroe, Wenatchee, Yakima, Tri-Cities, Tenino, Post Falls, Meridian and the dirt in Medford. California tracks like Bakersfield, Yreka, Madera and Ukiah. Down to Phoenix and even racing for fun in Charlotte.
“My favorite times have been racing at Douglas County with my kids,” Joe reflects. “Racing with my boys was fun.”
With Joe back on the road following the NW Pro4 Alliance schedule, Debbie helped focus his racing efforts.
“He was the car builder and the driver and the crew chief,” she explains. “Now he’s just the driver. It’s what he likes the most.”
For this season, Joe and Debbie had a new car built by Chuck LaHorgue, a veteran fabricator with more than 200 cars built over the past 35 years.
“We just happened to be at the same race last year,” Chuck says of meeting Joe by chance, and taking the order for a new Late Model.
Chuck’s own Super Late Model efforts date back to 1986 and include the 2001 title at Shasta Speedway.
“I also ran some Modifieds on the asphalt,” Chuck says. “But after the championship I quit driving full-time.”
Joe and Debbie field the new car as the 55+, promoting their “Baby Boomers at Play” program. They share their current adventures with the NW Pro4 Alliance and encourage other seniors to do the same with their exciting activities.
For the younger set, Joe’s advice for drivers starting out is to work hard at marketing and not be bashful.
“We had to go out and get sponsors,” he explains. “Early on we tried racing hard, but we didn’t pursue the dollars we needed. We could have been more productive in the sponsor hunt.”
Four decades later, there were plenty helping out.
“Our customers became our friends and some became sponsors,” Joe says. “Like Tony Day. He liked the racing so we put his name on the car.”
Joe credits WSK Machine for all the engine work they’ve done over the past 25 years, but thanks Looper’s Auto Rebuilding owner Dale Looper for building the 2.4-liter Duratec engine in his new car.
“Dale is a great asset to the team,” Joe says. “He’s been helping me for two years now, with his machine work, engine work, crewing and engine tuning at the track.”
Chuck is also at the track helping Joe on race day.
“The car he built is awesome and he’s been doing a great job setting it up and tuning it at each race so far this year,” Joe says. “He is on the crew as long as he wants to be.”
More support comes from M&S Shelter, who assist with a workshop for the car, and Stayton Tire & Auto.
“They do all my tires,” Joe says. “They’ve really helped me out all the way back to my Mini Stock days.”
Joe also offers a shout-out to Craig Neves.
“Craig is a great guy, pit crew and spotter at the track,” Joe says. “He’s an ambitious, hard working, fun guy.”
Joe also recalls competing with Craig’s dad Steve.
And Joe is grateful for the unfaltering family support.
“Debbie has been there since the beginning,” Joe says of his wife. “She’s always working hard, sacrificing, supporting and pushing to improve every step of the way.”
Encouragement from Debbie and the boys has helped keep Joe hitting the track at age 60.
“I just wish we could have done this when I was 30,” Joe sighs. “But we couldn’t do this at this level until now.”
He and Debbie are trying to squeeze all they can out of this opportunity.
“We’re not done yet,” he laughs. “We race for fun, but the winner has the most fun. That’s who we want to be.”
Racing veteran Joe and wife Debbie noticed they were growing a fan base due to Joe’s age and wanted to tie the brand new NW Pro4 Alliance car in with a project they were developing.
“Fans found out how old I am and I got a following of people my age,” Joe laughs. “We opened a lot of eyes.”
“He’s 60 and plans on racing 15 more years,” Debbie adds. “And he’s still competitive.”
They decided the team would help promote activities with their “Baby Boomers at Play” program
The car number was switched from 13 to a distinctive 55+ and they installed a GoPro camera to shoot videos of Joe in action.
“We want to engage people over 55,” Debbie explains of sharing their videos and encouraging others to do the same. “We want to help others share their adventures from mountain climbing to motorcycle riding.”
Their grandson Joshua, 9, has been tasked with handling the 55+ team’s online presence.
“It’s just great to see grandpa racing,” Joshua says.
With Joshua’s help, the Bowers maintain an online presence with the babyboomersatplay.org website and the babyboomersatplay accounts established on facebook and Instagram.
Joshua’s own racing includes Junior Karts and Mini Sprints, but he hopes to be a race car driver and designer when he is a few years older.
Perhaps grandpa Joe will still be out there giving him a run for the money.
]]>This feature article was published in the June 2017 issue of Inside Track.
By Steve Heeb
JD Barnum was up on two wheels at the age of 5, riding a motorcyle for fun and watching his father John race, whose long-time SCCA membership dates back to the 1960s.
“Dad dabbled in Autocrossing early on, but also raced motocross and enduro as well as road racing shifter karts,” JD says.
JD’s own passion for racing was fueled by experiences at the race track.
“My family and I spent our spring and summers watching guys like Frank Pool race Trans Am cars,” JD says of the Northwest veteran who would later play a role in JD’s racing efforts. “It set the foundation for my future – I knew I had to find a way to race, and I would race anything!”
That opportunity came riding a MR50 at Mulky Park in McMinnville, Ore.
“I raced BMX and Motocross for six or seven years until injuries pushed me into karts,” he says.
John eventually left the SCCA in order to travel to kart races with his son.
“Dad and I started racing karts in 1992 from Canada to California and spending many many hours practicing at Pat’s Acres Karting Complex where we used to have a key to practice any time we wanted.”
The dedication paid off and JD saw much success as the Novice Heavy champion for the Portland Kart Assoc. in 1995, and earned a pair of titles the following year in IKF Region 6 (representing Washington, Oregon and Idaho) for both the 80cc Road Race and 80 cc Sprint Kart divisions.
He moved to shifter karts and competed in northern California, posting second in the SKUSA points in 2000 and earning the NorCal title in 2002.
In 2003, JD made his last race in a 125-cc shifter kart, and the Barnums set their sights on building a car to run on the dirt track at Lebanon.
That plan changed when the family ventured north to South Sound Speedway to watch a race on the paved oval.
“We decided to keep the car an asphalt Late-model, which could run in the Limited Late Model class or as a Super Stock,” JD says. “I loved the atmosphere there. They put on a great show.”
A year later, JD was putting on a good show too, driving his No. 2 Pontiac Grand Prix to a podium finish in his very first race there, even while getting used to a whole new type of racing.
JD’s kart had sported a 40-hp motor for a 400-pound machine, vastly different than the 550-hp motor bolted into the 3,200-pound Late Model he was fielding in the 2004 season.
“The karts were much faster,” he laughs.
And the differences were apparent off the track as well.
“The cars were so much work,” he explains. “We had to work on the car after each race. We really tore everything up.”
“We replaced a lot of metal and fiberglass for each race,” John says of repairs to his son’s Pontiac. “We had to make sure the car was looking good.”
JD credits great advice from former Trans Am racer and Nascar chief engineer Frank Pool.
“He really helped us with the Late Model,” JD says of the veteran he used to watch race. “He always has been big on our racing. It’s nice to hear from a guy with that kind of experience.”
Eventually the toll of weekly repairs caught up with the Barnum team in 2006.
“My first race at South Sound I had finished third and my last race I came in on fire,” he laughs. “We figured that was it.”
With the Pontiac done for, and a new child at home, JD took a break from racing for the next five seasons.
Seeking a form of racing more suited to the young family, JD turned to the SCCA that had been good for his father.
“Dad started as a Starter but spent most of his years as a Steward helping keep the races organized,” JD says of his father’s involvement on and off the track. “He was the Regional Executive for the Oregon Region SCCA in 1984 and was one of many that help bring the CART cars to Portland for the 1984 Stroh’s 200.”
“I worked with CART and the safety crews, coordinating with the SCCA and Rose Festival,” John says of bringing the elite racing circuit to Portland Int’l Raceway. “We had 150 workers at the actual event coordinating with CART and IMSA and Trans Am. That was an intense six months of effort by a whole lot of people.”
It was great experiences like that which helped JD return to the family roots in road course racing.
“It just has more of a family atmosphere and that is what racing is to us,” JD says.
He picked up a used 1994-vintage Spec Racer Ford with a Gen 2 motor setup.
“I knew the SRF was competitive and could be run on a budget,” he says. “This is a race car that is very cost effective.”
In addition to being based on a very reliable chassis setup, JD notes that SRF is meant to be a driver’s class.
“We all have the same parts,” he explains. “Most of the races come down to only thousandths of a second apart.”
“This car is different,” John says comparing the SRF with the Pontiac they had fielded at South Sound Speedway. “Maintenance is low with the SRF. The Late Model was more work to repair damage and the SRF is more time on maintenance and set up.”
Working with the car set up, the Barnums were back in touch with Frank Pool.
“We still work with him,” JD says gratefully. “We call to get his thoughts on set-up ideas.”
Trading the ovals for road courses also meant a shift in driving philosophy.
“Instead of charging hard into the corners, now I look to carry speed through and out of the turns,” JD says. “There was a lot of contact in Late Models. In SRF the competition is extremely tight because the cars are so equal.”
The SCCA racing has brought him back to some of the Northwest road courses he had grown up with.
“Portland is convenient and I like the level of competition there,” he says. “And I like Pacific Raceways for nostalgic reasons.”
Though he and his dad take care of the car themselves, JD appreciates what Flat Out Racing has done for the group of racers scattered throughout the Northwest.
“They maintain virtually all the cars in the Portland area,” he explains, citing their extensive inventory. “They help keep the group strong by carrying parts so a guy like me can afford to go racing.”
He also thanks Mikki Rice for helping keep the family’s uniforms looking sharp.
On race weekends, JD’s pit area is populated by parents John and JoAnn, wife Rusti and their 16-year-old daughter Jaden, who comes to all of dad’s races.
“I am very thankful that my wife supports our racing and is very involved because it takes everyone to make it happen,” JD emphasizes. “Yes, my dad and I do most of the work during the week, but come the weekend we have a large crew of family and friends that make it all happen and as a group we have fun.
JD’s sister Jennifer Colby and brother-in-law Mike are at most events to help out, as is father-in-law Russ France.
And this group never goes hungry at the track.
“We all eat good,” JD says. “JoAnn is really good at cooking Italian food.”
“She’s good at everything,” Jennifer laughs.
The family’s racing efforts paid off in 2016 as JD had the kind of season many racers dream of.
He set three track records at Portland Int’l Raceway, won the SCCA Majors event there and picked up the Rose Cup championship. He also notched the Oregon Region champion as well as the NorPac title, representing the western states Alaska, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, California and Montana.
So, what does a defending Gen 2 champion do over the off season?
Swap out the engine and jump classes, of course.
“We’ve updated it with a brand new Gen 3 engine package and replaced everything in it,” he said during the SCCA event at Pacific Raceways in May. “But with the SRF we are always making forward progress. With the Late Model we were always working just to get the car back to the track.”
]]>This feature article was published in the June 2017 issue of Inside Track.
By Steve Heeb
Steve Reeves started racing his ‘64 Ford Custom in British Columbia when he was 18.
“Echo Field had been abandoned for five years,” he says of the paved oval in Cranbrook, BC. “It’s where one of the Sneva boys had been killed.”
Edson ‘Babe’ Sneva, one of five brothers in the noted racing family, was critically injured during a CAMRA practice session in 1974, passing away 18 months later.
“The track was getting re-opened,” he said of taking up what would become five seasons at Echo Field Raceway. “I won quite a few races in the Street Stock there.”
And that was while working against his choice of car and the availability of performance parts on a budget.
“Don’t even try to race a Ford,” he laughs. “It’s too expensive to make them go fast.”
A family move and work commitments led to a break from racing that lasted 25 years.
“Then my oldest son David started racing stock cars in 2006,” he explains.“It didn’t take long before I was back at the track with my own car.”
In the following years he raced on the pavement at Hythe Motor Speedway in Alberta and in the dirt at Tayor Speedway in British Columbia.
“My friend Bill Lanktree raced sprint cars and had been bugging me to try one,” Steve recalls. “My son tried it and bought one. I tried it and never went back – it’s four times the rush.”
So at the age of 50, Steve bought his first sprint car from veteran World of Outlaws driver Tim Gee.
“Tim helped me a lot,” Steve says of the assistance from Gee and Gee Racing. “Without him I never would have got the hang of it.”
He admits the experience on the pavement circuits had been much easier than the switch to driving his No. 78 Sportsman Sprint at dirt tracks like Skagit Speedway.
“You have to forget everything you learned in stock cars,” he says of the finesse needed in a sprint car. “You can’t let them hit you and you can’t hit anybody. You have to break all your old habits because they work against you.”
He says a driver can’t lift while racing a sprint car.
“As soon as you get off the throttle the car goes in the other direction,” he adds.
However, the open wheel cars prove to be more accessible than their full-fendered counterparts.
“Sprint cars are ten times easier to work on than stock cars,” he says. “Bill Lanktree just had a small bag of tools – that was all he needed to get through a raceday.”
When he made the move to 360 Sprints division, Steve he purchased a complete car that happened to be bright orange.
“I finished last but after the race the kids all gathered around my car more than the winner,” he smiles. “So I’ve kept this color all the time.”
His current ASCS 360 Sprint is built on a chassis from ART Speed Equipment.
“I’ve raced XXX and Maxim,” Steve says of the different chassis. “The ART is stiffer.”
Steve appreciates help from Northwest veteran Marc Huson, whose Shark motor provides power for the 5n car – painted fluorescent orange of course.
Steve also thanks Skagit Speedway promoter Steve Beitler for allowing him to keep some of his racing equipment on site, rather than making a 13-hour haul from Valleyview, AB, to Alger, Wash., each week.
In addition to being fairly regular at Skagit, Steve also has seat time at Canadian tracks in Lethbridge and Edmonton, and US tracks in Montana and California, and has run the Speedweek events in Oregon.
“I like the track at Yakima too,” he says of State Fair Raceway. “It’s so fast.”
He does prefer a wetter track conditions at race time.
“I was always good on the sticky ones,” he smiles. “Stomp and steer is easy. Slick tracks require more finesse.”
He points out that he has been working to improve on that.
“I’m getting better at the slick tracks like Skagit gets to be by the end of the night,” he says.
Crew chief Steve ‘Buffalo’ Scribner and the crew – George and Cathy Noordegraaf, wife Conny and brother Andrew – all ensure the car is prepared to make it through the race, helping take pressure off of Steve.
“Actually, I am one of those rare guys that is totally relaxed until the flag is about to drop,” Steve says. “But my adrenaline goes through the roof when the racing starts.”
He says he also gets plenty of support at home.
“My wife Conny has been a big supporter,” he says. “She puts up with me spending an insane amount of money.”
In turn, Steve has made sure to assist the next generation of drivers along the way, sponsoring Eric and Danielle Fisher as well as Tim Gee’s son Skylar on the ASCS National series.
He has fond memories of competing with his own son.
“David and I raced together in 2009 through 2013,” he recalls with a smile. “Back in 2010 he and I finished first and second at Lethbridge – I think he was first. Boy, that was fun.”
He has a message to those looking to take up sprint car racing.
“Start out young because this is hard when you’re old,” he chuckles, having taken dirt track racing up when he was 50. “You’ve got to drive against some 14-year-old that doesn’t own a bolt in their car and has already been racing 10 years. They have no fear!”
]]>This feature article was published in the June 2017 issue of Inside Track.
By Steve Heeb
Ryen Haney grew up in Elma, Wash., watching his father Chip race Street Stocks at the hometown dirt track, Grays Harbor Raceway.
In 2000, they bought a ‘67 Mustang they planned to get racing.
“We got it half built before we gave up and took up riding quads,” Ryen recalls.
When the family needed to move, the project was again on the front burner.
“We had to finish the car,” he explains. “Just to get it out of the garage.”
A 383-cid Windsor was bolted in and Ryen was able to log five races in 2009, followed by his first full season in 2010.
“I was the Hobby Stock rookie of the year that season,” he says of the 2010 campaign at Grays Harbor Raceway. “The class is now the Street Stocks. It’s become more standardized with other tracks.”
He also hauled south to Coos Bay Speedway to improve his racing.
“I went down there to learn patience,” he explains. “And work on not pissing people off.”
He admits he made it tougher on himself than needed.
“It’s been a long lesson,” he reflects. “I ignored everything dad said back then.”
With more seasons under his belt, Ryen has seen the improvements.
“I used to be totally out of control,” he laughs. “Now I am a lot smoother.”
Ryen also has kept an eye on other talented drivers at the track, especially Jack Parshall Jr.
“He’s so smooth and never over-drives his car,” Ryen says of the veteran. “He’s always fast, but doesn’t try to take more than the car will give.”
In addition to Grays Harbor Raceway and Coos Bay Speedway, Ryen has competed at Skagit Speedway and Sunset Speedway.
“Coos Bay is the most fun, but Grays Harbor will always be home,” he says.
He also notes he hasn’t had a chance to test the dirt at Willamette Speedway and Cottage Grove Speedway.
He is grateful for unshakable support from parents Chip and Gloria, though he recalls an incident that put his mom to the test.
“Dad and I broke down while on our way to the Dunes,” he says of a spring road trip that happened to be on April First. “I called my mom but she didn’t believe me.”
Eventually she was convinced and came to their rescue.
He ranks his late sister Shella Graham as his biggest supporters up until her recent death in May.
Outside the family, Ryen lists several sponsors that have helped his racing efforts, including Tracey’s Racing Jewelry, D&D Dyno, Ewing Racing Engines and Finish Line Graphics.
Ryen still drives the same Mustang in the Street Stocks at Grays Harbor Raceway, now powered by the third motor since he started.
“I’m still getting everything figured out,” he says. “I’m back in it full time so I have to re-teach myself some things.”
He’s still working on being smooth and patient, and following the advice he received long ago.
“Hold your line – the fast guys will go by you,” he counsels new drivers. “Trying to get out of their way is what causes problems.”
And his solution: “I try to run up front as much as I can.”
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