









GREETINGS FROM
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WE WOKE UP IN
PEOPLE/STRATEGY/TRAVEL NEWS
The Strategy
I was ready to deviate from my
primary trackchasing strategy of trying to see as many different tracks as I
possibly can. Before we left on this
trip, I asked Carol what she would like to do, trackchasing-wise today, Sunday.
Would she like to go to the NASCAR
Nextel Cup race in
Which offer did she go with? The
The Trip
We had a pleasant Sunday morning
drive up from Northern Georgia to the track in
Of course, we started in
The Tazewell Speedway is located out
in the country. When we were within five
miles of the track or so, Dusty recommended a very rural looking road. The road narrowed to just one asphalt lane
that wound up and down and around the
Wrong! As if by divine intervention our one lane
road turned back into a two-lane road again and there was the Tazewell
Speedway! I was surprised.
At the end of the day, several fans
left to head home. We were among
them. When it came time to make the “phantom left” that would take us to our secret
one lane road, we turned. Everyone else
headed right. Soon we were back on the
one lane road. A little bit later we
were on the main road back to
The People
I have a number of people who help
me with trackchasing when I visit their part of the country. For that, I am most grateful. Georgian Dale Terry was instrumental in our
having a very successful Southeastern trackchasing weekend. Thanks, Dale!
RACE TRACK STATS:
TAZEWELL
This was
my 14th track in the Volunteer state, home of the state bird, the
Mockingbird. I hold an 11th
place state ranking just two tracks behind the racing Eckels who are tied for
ninth place. John Moore of Knoxville,
I gained
only one NGD point (
This was
Carol’s fourth
RACE TRACK NEWS:
TAZEWELL
The Tazewell Speedway was my “signature” track in
Coming into today, we had had a very
successful trackchasing weekend.
On the other hand, we had had a very poor racechasing
weekend. At the World of Outlaws show in
I know I say that I don’t care too
much about the racing as I go about chasing new tracks. That is not exactly accurate. I want to see good racing, it’s just not a
requirement. On the other hand, this
hobby would be dreadful if I saw bad racing all the time.
The Tazewell Speedway needed to save
our racechasing weekend. Would it? I’m going to say it did, but it looked
doubtful for a while.
The website told me that “qualifying” was to begin at 2 p.m. The track’s answering machine only told us
that the gates opened at 11 a.m. That
wasn’t very helpful.
Although it was clear, it was
cold. The temperature was 41 degrees
when we arrived at 2 p.m. I was so
hoping they had terrace viewing where spectators can watch the races from their
cars. They didn’t! A large crowd was on hand when we did
arrive. We had to park creatively just to
get a spot.
We bought our tickets and went in to
use the track’s bathrooms. They were
still wheel packing the track. Recall,
it was now 2 p.m. and they were supposed to begin qualifying. We decided to sit in the car while nothing
was going on, rather than freeze like popsicles watching two old cars run
around the track in a clockwise direction on the muddy track. We spent the time listening to NCAA
basketball games on the radio.
I had predetermined that our track departure
time would be 6 p.m. I figured if they
started qualifying at 2 p.m. they might be finished by 3 p.m. A 6 p.m. departure time would give us three
hours of racing. We were facing a
five-hour drive back to
Well, they didn’t start qualifying
at 2 p.m. as they said they would. They
started HOT LAPPING at 3:14 p.m. They
started QUALYFYING (time trials) 3:55 p.m.
They did not begin their first race until 4:48 p.m. As you might imagine, I was very
disappointed, especially given what we had already experienced this weekend.
The track has tons of seating. Much of it is concrete benches attached to
short poles built into the ground. They
have a scoreboard and lap counter. This
is a bright, red dirt track that became dry slick during hot laps and time
trials. They have a good P.A. and
announcer.
I will give the Tazewell Speedway
some credit. They picked up the pace
after qualifying ended. They ran 3-4
consie type races off in quick succession.
The first feature event of the day was for the 11 ministocks. They were scheduled for 15 laps or 15 minutes
whichever came first. Fortunately, the
laps came first. The race began at 5:26
p.m. and wrapped up at 5:40 p.m.
We were going to watch one more of
the feature events and head for the hills.
I didn’t want to do it that way, but
The 26-car, 50-lap, $3,000 to win
Super Late Model race lined up quickly. It
was fun to see so many cars on the reddish southern clay. The track is also one of the most banked
quarter-mile dirt ovals I have ever seen.
I would estimate the STRAIGHTS are banked at least 15 degrees.
There was not much passing for the
top positions in the SLM main event. The
winner won from the first row. However,
the leaders were constantly passing lapped traffic. The winner probably passed 50 cars or more
during the race. There were only three
or four cautions. That’s not bad for
such a large field over such a small track when the racing distance is 50
laps. The race ended at 6:25 p.m. and we
were leaving the parking lot at 6:30 p.m.
I guess we would get just 4 ½ hours of sleep tonight.
I’ve got to give a major shoutout to
the Tazewell Speedway track management.
How many tracks with five classes run the premier classes feature
second? The answer is not very many.
When the Super Late Model feature
wrapped up, a significant number of folks headed for the exits. They had seen what they had come to see. It was now Sunday night and most of those
fans probably have to go to work tomorrow.
Why can’t more tracks do it this way?
Everyone knows that the fans that travel follow the big classes. I have never known many people to drive 200
miles to watch the bombers or mini-stocks.
Let the people who came the furthest see their class race early in the
program Mr. Promoter. If you do, then
you’ll have a lot more of them come to visit.
CAROL’S COMMENTS
This is a down-home track. The
cars are fast. I wasn’t as cold as I
thought I would be (it was 41 degrees.)
I liked the announcer.
WEATHER CONDITIONS
It was 41 degrees at 2 p.m. today at
the Tazewell Speedway. We layered up so
that it didn’t feel too bad. We were
fortunate that it was sunny and clear without too much wind. The strange thing was that it was more than
80 degrees in
RENTAL CAR UPDATE:
We’ll be driving the National Rental
Car Racing
Thursday total driving miles - 22
Friday total driving miles - 470
Saturday total driving miles - 210
Sunday total driving miles – 550
Monday total driving miles – 3
We covered 760 miles during this
weekend’s trip with the
LIFETIME TRACKCHASER STANDINGS UPDATE:
These worldwide trackchasers are within 100 tracks (plus or minus) of my current trackchaser total.
1. Randy Lewis,
2. Allan Brown,
3. Guy Smith, Effort,
4. Rick Schneider –
7. Ed Esser,
* Warning, you are within 50 tracks of being removed from this list.
** Special exemption.
LIFETIME NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC DIVERSITY STANDINGS
2007 (current thru 2/18/07)**
With gains in
1. Randy Lewis,
2. Gordon Killian, Sinking Springs,
3. Allan Brown,
**Until the end of the year, NGD rankings are unofficial. Rankings are affected not only by the leader’s activities but by other trackchasers impact on the leader’s position.
Other notables
These worldwide trackchasers are within 10 tracks (plus or minus) of Carol’s current trackchaser total.
31. Carol Lewis,
32. Chris Economaki,
33. Gary Jacob,
2007 TRACKCHASER STANDINGS
1. Randy Lewis,
2.
Ed Esser,
3. Mike Knappenberger,
3. Carol Lewis,
5. Guy Smith, Effort,
6. Rick Young,
7.
Will White,
7.
Gordon Killian, Sinking Spring,
8.
Roger Ferrell,
10. Pam Smith, Effort,
Tracks have been reported by 27
different worldwide trackchasers this season.
Thanks for reading about my trackchasing,
Randy Lewis
#1 Trackchaser Living
West of the
God grant me the senility to forget the people I never liked, the good
fortune to run into the ones that I do, and the eyesight to tell the
difference.
CUMULATIVE TRAVEL DISTANCES:
AIRPLANE
Los Angeles, CA – New Orleans, LA – 1,668 miles
RENTAL CAR –
* This is not always the direct
mileage from the airport to the first stop as detours along the way may add to
the stated mileage.
AIRPLANE
Houston, TX – Atlanta, GA – 687 miles
RENTAL CAR –
Hartsfield International Airport – trip begins
AIRPLANE
Atlanta, GA – Los Angeles, CA – 1,940 miles
Total Air miles – 4,295 miles
Total auto and air miles traveled on
this trip – 6,045 miles
TRACK ADMSSION PRICES:
Dawgwood Speedway - $10
Toccoa Speedway - $12
Tazewell Speedway - $15
Total racetrack admissions for the
trip – $69
Some of the data
in this report comes: www.trackchaser.net
Garmin GPS
My 2007 season has gotten off to a fast start with 26 tracks seen so far in eleven states and two foreign countries. I normally have an advantage over my fellow competitors when the summer months come around. During June/July/August many tracks run during the week. My retired status gives me some flexibility to see those mid-week tracks when my working fellow competitors cannot. I figure if I can stay even or a little ahead in the 2007 rankings until June 1, then I can try to gain an advantage then.
1,139. Meremere Dirt Track
Club,
1,140. Meeanee Speedway,
1,141. Top of the South
Speedway,
1,142. Woodford Glen Speedway,
1,143. Robertson Holden
International
1,144.
1,145.
1,146. Angels Stadium of
1,147. Angels Stadium of
1,148.
1,149.
1,150. Grand Prix De
Lanaudiere,
1,151. Ste-Eulalie Ice Track,
1,152. St Guillaume, St
1,153.
1,154.
1,155. Northeast Pond Ice
Track,
1,156. Lee Pond Ice Track,
1,157. New Hendry Country
1,158.
1,159. Honeoye Lake Ice Track –
Road Course,
1,160.
1,161.
1,162. Dawgwood Speedway,
1,163. Toccoa Speedway,
1,164. Tazewell Speedway,