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September 9, 2007...Subbing
for an injured Tony Jones, defending series champion
Cory Kruseman, Ventura, Calif. jumped into the Alexander
Trucking / La Villa Restaurant #No. 4 DRC and won the
30-lap Lucas Oil USAC/CRA main event Saturday at Ventura
Raceway.
Kruseman, who had been
driving for his own team this season, elected to park
his car in order to help the Alexander Team after Jones
suffered a broken collarbone last week at the Perris
Auto Speedway. Even before the announcement was
officially made on Wednesday, Kruseman's familiarity
with the team, as well as the Ventura Raceway, made him
the obvious replacement for the series point-leader.
"I feel bad for Tony
Jones and I know what he's going through right
now," said Kruseman after gathering his fourth CRA
win of the season. "The Alexander's are a great
group of people and when they called me last Tuesday I
wanted to help them any way I could. We've had a lot of
fun together in the past and it was just great that
everything went our way tonight."
Last week's feature
winner David Cardey of Riverside, Calif., shared the
front row with Rodney Argo for the start of the race
with Kruseman lined-up in the seventh spot. Cardey's
Glen Crossno owned / ITI Performance No. 83 Bullet went
on to lead Argo by less than a car-length at the end of
the opening lap.
Mike Spencer entered the
evening trailing Jones by 157 championship points and
was looking to take a significant bite out of his point
lead. Spencer's hopes quickly changed after contact
between Cardey and Scotty Weir left Weir were parked in
turn-two directly in front of him on the second lap.
Also left with nowhere to go was fast time qualifier
Garrett Hansen, who slammed into Spencer and Weir. The
mishap eliminated all three cars and relegated Spencer
to a 19th-place finish.
Cardey and Argo continued
to fight for lead after the restart, while Kruseman
patiently worked his way to the forward. After passing
Rickie Gaunt for third on the sixth lap, Kruseman almost
instantly closed-in on the leaders to make it a
three-way battle for the lead. Even though he appeared
to be faster than the two cars in front, Kruseman
conservatively waited until the 18th circuit for his
opportunity to move into the lead.
"I just really
wanted to make sure that we finished because the whole
purpose for me driving the car was to get points for the
team," Kruseman later admitted. "I really only
had one close call the whole night and that was when I
went three-wide down the back-straight with Greg Taylor
and Rickie Gaunt. Even though I felt I had the line, I
elected to slow down and let them go before we got to
the corner just to protect everything. As it turned out,
I ended up getting run into from behind."
Once in the lead, nothing
seemed to slow "The Kruser", except for a
number of late caution flags. Most notably, one for
fourth-place Gaunt, who flipped three laps from the
finish after contact with the turn-one wall. Gaunt was
not hurt.
Putting together a
spectacular drive from the 19th starting spot, Danny
Sheridan, Santa Maria, Calif. had moved his Kittle
Plumbing / Pace Electronics No.18 Stinger into the
second spot prior to Gaunt's flip. Kuseman pulled away
from Sheridan after the restart and looked to be on his
way to a comfortable win until fourth-place Argo Spun
during the white-flag lap.
Sheridan took advantage
of a slight miscue by Kruseman exiting turn-four on the
restart as the green and white flags waved. As a result,
Sheridan was able to carry more speed along the
back-straight than Kruseman. Working hard to beat
Kruseman to the turn-three cushion, Sheridan simply ran
out of racetrack entering turn-four and was fortunate to
be able to keep Cardey in the third position. Sheridan
did, however, received Hard-Charger honors for the race.
"I knew we were both
running on the top, and I was afraid of the slide-job on
the restart so I was trying to get a nice run off the
bottom (coming down for the green flag). Unfortunately,
I actually got down too low and hit some mud with my
left front tire," Kruseman explained. "Nobody
should have been too surprise with what I was doing
because we had the same restart twice before and
everyone knew that I was going to run the bottom in
turns one and two, and move right to the top in
turn-three. If anyone wanted to pass me they were going
to have to figure out a way other than driving around
the outside of me."
Cardey's teammate, Tyler
Brown of Norco, CA, started 18th and finished an
impressive fourth. In addition to winning the race,
Kruseman also owned the Agromin Soil No. 21 Bullet that
Michael Trimble of San Jose, Calif., drove to a
fifth-place finish. |