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Porter King of the Jennerstown
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By: John Clark
Nestled among the
Pennsylvania mountains is the 0.522-mile Jennerstown
Speedway. Toby Porter was the king of the mountain
during the running of the ASA Racing Jennerstown 250.
It was Porter’s first ASA National Tour career win, and
it came in his 23rd start. The Greenville, S.C., native
has had his share of bad luck this season so far, so it
was an even sweeter visit to the winner’s circle.
Needing a change of luck, Porter strapped a stuffed
rooster to his roll cage two races ago at Madison
International Speedway. Since then, the team has had
three consecutive Top-5 finishes, something for the
driver to crow about.
“We’ve struggled at times, but man, now it’s paid off,”
exclaimed the driver of the No. 11 Meijer Chevrolet
Monte Carlo. “We worked hard, and had a good car
tonight. Thanks to Meijer’s, Tony’s, Stouffers, Edy’s
and Ron Daniels (car owner). If it wasn’t for them we
wouldn’t be here tonight.”
Porter became the second ASA National Tour driver to
capture his first career victory this season, and is the
eighth driver to win in the nine events contested this
year showcasing the parity among the teams in the
series.
Pit strategy helped Porter take the lead on lap 112 of
the 250-lap contest. ASA National Tour rules specify
that each team must make a minimum of two stops; Porter
took advantage of an early caution to make a stop-and-go
pit stop on lap 3. From there, his second stop came on
lap 68 when he took a fuel load. Incredibly, he ran the
entire race on the same set of BFGoodrich Tires, leading
the final 138 laps and held off drivers with much
fresher rubber.
“I had a good car, even in practice, and I knew it,”
Porter claimed. “Whether or not I could hold them off I
didn’t know. It was pretty nerve-wracking there towards
the end, especially for your first win.”
Porter started the event in the 10th position, and
stayed ahead of Bryan Reffner in the No. 80 Menards
Chevrolet for a 0.420-second margin of victory. He led
the most laps of the event.
Reffner pitted for right side tires on lap 112, handing
the led to Porter and coming back out in fourth place at
the time. Though he had fresher rubber, and tried both
the inside and outside lines, he could never get his car
underneath Porter.
“”We just got tight,” the 1995 ASA National Tour
champion explained. “We had a fast race car. My hat is
off to Toby. He ran a great race on those tires. We just
didn’t have a chance.”
Reffner hasn’t visited the ASA winner’s circle since
1995 and he wanted the win just as badly as Porter.
“I wanted it really bad,” he claimed. “Worse than you
can even imagine. I mean, second is good, but it still
isn’t good enough for this team because we needed a win.
It’s coming, but it just seems to be forever getting
here.”
The rest of the top ten included Mike Garvey, Reed
Sorenson, Mike Eddy, Kevin Cywinski, Stephen Leicht,
Casey Smith, Tim Sauter and Rich Loch who recorded the
first Top-10 of his career.
The ASA Racing Jennerstown 250 saw three lead changes
among four drivers, and 16 of the 33 starters finished
on the lead lap. There were nine cautions for 50 laps.
The BFGoodrich Tires Halfway Leader award was given to
Porter, who also received the Cool Shirt “Cool Move of
the Race” award for being able to hold off the field
with considerably older tires.
The VP Fuels “Hard Charger of the Race” was Mike Garvey
who moved up 18 positions from his starting spot of
21st. Carl Hartman, crew chief on Reffner’s No. 80 Monte
Carlo, was the SK Hand Tool Crew Chief of the Race. It
was his second time receiving this award this season.
There was a red flag period lasting for approximately 30
minutes for the clean-up of a spectacular accident
involving the No. 74 of Jay Middleton and the No. 70
Ford of Mark Mitchell. Racing hard together, it appeared
as though Mitchell was pushed high up on the backstretch
wall and his right tires climbed up the retaining
barrier. The No. 70 went up on the driver side and then
rolled onto the roof, sliding to a stop at the entrance
of Turn 3. Middleton’s Chevrolet slammed into the wall
and sustained severe front end damage.
During the offseason Jennerstown (Pa.) Speedway was
repaved, and most thought that it would make the
facility extremely fast. Butch Miller proved the
foreshadowing correct as he shattered the track record
of 18.597-seconds with a fast lap of 18.493-seconds on
the way to winning the Jani-King pole. This was the 51st
Jani-King pole in Miller’s career, adding to the total
he has atop the all-time list.
“That was a pretty good lap considering I drove really
stupid today,” Miller said of his qualifying effort in
which he was the very first car on the track. “I think
for once we got lucky. You figure drawing number one
qualifier is bad; I think today it was an advantage.”
The cloud cover that had cooled the track during
Miller’s run later broke slightly with the sun heating
the track for those qualifying later in the afternoon.
There were two local classes racing prior to the ASA
National Tour this evening as well. Garry Wiltrout won a
50-lap Super Late Model feature, and Rick Boyer narrowly
beat Dusty Rhoads to the checkered flag in a near-photo
finish in the 25-lap Late Model race.
The next event for the ASA National Tour is Sunday,
August 29 at The Milwaukee Mile.
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