We pulled the sportsman car
out of its winter storage in time to attend Icebreaker weekend at Thompson
Speedway. Luckily the car was race-ready when put into storage, so limited prep
time was good enough. I was able to leave work from my night shift assignment,
catch a short nap of about 2.73 hours, and make it to the track before the
Saturday AM practice. My last minute decision to attend the icebreaker, along
with many of my crew members having to work, ended up with a one-person crew on
Saturday. David Nichols was there at Thompson for his first time
ever! I drew a #2 chip (very rare for me to draw well), and then
headed out for practice. Car was awesome. No need for more
practice.
I started in the front row in the heat race and pulled away
leaving the others to battle. NO issues.
Then comes the “Best of the Rest race”. I was asked to
participate. I was there to race as much as I could, so I agreed, based on the other cars that were expected. The plan was for me to start dead last. I was penalized
for going three wide (even though that wasn’t the cause of an accident) part way
through the race. I had to start last yet again. Car was perfect, and I slowly
picked off the cars. I was able to pass multi-time winner Bill McNeil, Kevin
Mason, and eventually former champ Scott Cook with three laps to go to take the
win. I thought it was one hell of a win. Far from any walk in the park for
sure.
Win # 64 |
Sunday: Another great race. A couple of race starts vs. Steve Kenneway in which I was able to inch my way to the lead, then a side-by-side battle vs.Jesse Gleason. What a race. He had me beat - I thought, but I
fought my way back over about 5 laps to finally take back the lead. Lots of
fun. Win #65 in the books.
Win #65 |
My Spotter duties for the day did not go quite as well. Todd
Ceravolo would finish a lonely 5th in his Sunoco Mod, Danny Gamache joined
the masses with a DNF is his light mod debut, and then Bobby Santos finished
18th in the Tinio Whelen Mod. All will do better the next time
around.
Modified plans: I will not be attending the monadnock vMRS race. The car is
nearly ready for a visit to North East Race Parts to get the frame checked and
repaired. If that goes well, we might be able to race at Thompson on May
19th. Sportsman car? Depending on the modified, crew help etc. I
will consider racing the May 19th show with the Sportsman car. Stafford: I will be at the Sizzler to play Spotter for the
Tinio / Santos # 44 Whelen Mod. Looking forward to running up front where we
belong!
Boston Marathon: On the Monday after the IceBreaker I was finally able to manage going to see my big brother David run his 19th Boston Marathon. His goal was to finish in 3 hours 10 minutes, so his son Jake, daughter Marie, and her boyfriend Xander joined the race at ~ mile marker 18 to help him power up the hills and maintain a pace needed to complete the race at his goal. All three kids (ok, not kids...in their 20's) are excellent runners and figured their presence would give him a kick in the pants.
LB and Mom Janet wait at mile marker 25 for David to come by. |
David runs every year in memory of our father Phil, our brother Jack, our uncle Bud, and others who have passed away due to cancer. He has raised an astronomical amount of money for the Dana Farber team, and this year was no different. David beat his goal of 3 hours 10 minutes with an official finish of 3:07:52.
Marie, David, Xander, and Jake approach the family at mile marker 25. Nice to see these smiles. |
Sounds like his son Jake will join him next year, and his goal is to beat his own personal best Boston Marathon performance of 2 hours 46 minutes. Way to go, guys, we were all very proud of each of you on Monday! Thankfully none of the family was directly involved in the chaos that ensued about an hour after David crossed the finish line.
LB's niece Marie, her boyfriend Xander, and his nephew Jake after they helped their Dad run the hardest 8 miles of the marathon. They weren't even winded -- ah, youth. |
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