Screven Motor Speedway
Lanigan wins $20,000 in Screven's Winter Freeze
By Kevin Kovac
World of Outlaws Late Model SeriesSYLVANIA, Ga. (Feb. 11) – What a difference a year makes.
Almost exactly 12 months after missing the 2011 World of Outlaws Late Model Series season opener due to a medical issue, Darrell Lanigan of Union, Ky., kicked off the national tour’s 2012 schedule with a convincing victory in Saturday night’s inaugural 60-lap Winter Freeze event at Screven Motor Speedway. | Complete Speedweeks coverage
Lanigan, 40, grabbed the lead from Ray Cook of Brasstown, N.C., on lap 13 and paced all but one circuit over the remaining distance to secure a lucrative triumph worth $20,700. It was the richest race in the history of promoter Redd Griffin’s 3/8-mile oval and Lanigan’s third $20,000-plus WoO checkered flag in the last four years.
“I’m glad to come back and race the first race and not give up points this year,” said Lanigan, who was forced to sit out the ’11 lidlifter at Volusia Speedway Park in Barberville, Fla., while seeking treatment for back pain that doctors ultimately found to be caused by a fractured tailbone. “I just couldn’t ask for a better car tonight. It was just flawless...unbelievable.”
Cook, 40, settled for second place, matching his career-best finish in WoO competition. He was able to nose ahead of Lanigan in lapped traffic to lead lap 45, but Lanigan slid back in front the following circuit and marched on win by 2.181 seconds.
Defending WoO champion Rick Eckert of York, Pa., advanced from the 12th starting spot to finish third. Two-time tour titlist Josh Richards of Shinnston, W.Va., placed fourth and polesitter Shane Clanton of Fayetteville, Ga., slipped to fifth at the finish.
On a night that saw fans and competitors chilled by frigid conditions (below-freezing temperatures and wind-chill factors in the teens), Lanigan, who started fourth, survived a late-race scare from Cook to register his 27th career victory on the WoO tour. He is just one triumph from tying Steve Francis of Ashland, Ky., for second on the tour’s win list since 2004.
“We just kind of gave up the bottom there trying to get around a lapped car,” said Lanigan, whose brand-new Rocket machine lost traction momentarily exiting turn four on lap 45 as he attempted to lap Brent Dixon of Elberton, Ga. “(Cook) got on the inside of me, but our car was good enough and I drove back by him. I wasn’t gonna give up the lead that easy.”
Cook, who started second, was a gracious bridesmaid.
“He got back by me the same way I got by him – lapped traffic,” said Cook, who debuted a new MasterSbilt car. “After I got ahead of him, all I did was catch the same group that messed him up to start with.
“But he had a better car than I did. There was no doubt about that. He could leave the center of the corner harder than I could. When he’d get under lapped traffic, he could about spin out and still take off.”
Eckert, 46, was one of the race’s hardest chargers. He drove his Team Zero by Bloomquist car into third place on lap 33 and quickly pulled within striking distance of Lanigan and Cook, but he was unable to climb higher.
“I really wanted one more double-file restart,” said Eckert. “I think I could’ve got by Ray on the outside. The track got one-lane pretty good late (in the distance) when it started cleaning up, but there was a little bit on top on restarts so I would’ve liked one more shot.”
Unfortunately for Eckert, after six caution flags flew during the race’s first 28 laps, only one was needed for the remainder of the distance. That slowdown came on lap 54 when Austin Hubbard of Seaford, Del., stopped in turn four – and with less than 10 laps left, the race was restarted in single-file fashion.
Richards, 23, ran inside the top five for virtually the entire distance, but he couldn’t steer his new Rocket Chassis house car higher than fourth.
“Our car was really good, but I kept getting myself in the wrong place on the restarts,” said Richards, who started sixth. “We definitely had a car that could’ve run second to Darrell, but we didn’t take advantage of the restarts like we needed to.”
Clanton, 36, struggled in the A-Main after driving to an impressive heat-race win on Friday night.
“It was just driver error,” said Clanton, who drove a new Capital Race Car in his first WoO LMS for the Kennedy Motorsports team. “We just went the wrong way. I needed to go back to the way I was last night.
“Sitting behind that seat, I thought I needed to change something to get faster. I did – and I slowed down even more. I thought I was O.K. until Lanigan pulled up alongside me and he could charge the corner harder than I could.”
Tim McCreadie of Watertown, N.Y., finished a steady sixth in his first WoO appearance in a Warrior Chassis machine. WoO Rookie of the Year contender Jared Hawkins of Fairmont, W.Va., advanced from the 15th starting spot to place a solid seventh, followed by Steve Shaver of Vienna, W.Va., Ron Davies of Warren, Pa., and Casey Roberts of Toccoa, Ga.
Several contenders had strong runs ended by problems in turn four. Shannon Babb of Moweaqua, Ill., started the trend when he spun on lap three while bidding for third place. Later, Scott James of Bright, Ind., spun on lap eight after coming together with Shaver and Mike Marlar of Winfield, Tenn., who hopes to follow the WoO tour for the first time in 2012, lost fourth place on lap 27 when he spun on the inside of the track.
Saturday’s program began with three 10-lap consolation races won by James, Bub McCool of Vicksburg, Miss., and Gregg Satterlee of Rochester Mills, Pa. Jack Sullivan of Greenbrier, Ark., captured the 10-lap last-chance qualifier that also transferred runner-up Brandon Sheppard of New Berlin, Ill., to the feature.
A busy month of February for the World of Outlaws will continue after the Winter Freeze. The tour will head farther south for the inaugural Bubba Army Late Model Winter Nationals Feb. 16-18 at Bubba Raceway Park in Ocala, Fla., and two dates (Feb. 23 and 25) during the UNOH DIRTcar Nationals Presented by Summit Racing Equipment at Volusia Speedway Park in Barberville, Fla.
Winter Freeze: (1) Darrell Lanigan, (2) Ray Cook, (3) Rick Eckert, (4) Josh Richards, (5) Shane Clanton, (6) Tim McCreadie, (7) Jared Hawkins, (8) Steve Shaver, (9) Ron Davies, (10) Casey Roberts, (11) Bub McCool, (12) Vic Coffey, (13) Jack Sullivan, (14) John Garvin Jr., (15) Kent Robinson, (16) Hunter Peacock, (17) Chub Frank, (18) Tim Fuller, (19) Clint Smith, (20) John Lobb, (21) Brent Dixon, (22) Pat Doar, (23) Brandon Sheppard, (24) Austin Hubbard, (25) Mike Marlar, (26) Greg Johnson, (27) Gregg Satterlee, (28) Scott James, (29) Shannon Babb. Fast qualifier (among 56 cars): Lanigan, 14.305 seconds. Heat race winners: Lanigan, Clanton, Marlar, Cook, Babb. Consolation race winners: James, McCool, Satterlee. Last-chance winner: Sullivan. Provisional starters: Frank, Smith, Coffey, Fuller, Doar, Lobb.