BARBERVILLE, FL – For the first time since 2007, Tim Fuller parked
his Super DIRTcar Series Big-Block Modified on the front stretch at the
Volusia Speedway Park as a feature winner. The Edwards, N.Y., driver
drove his familiar No. 19 to the win in the opening 30-lap feature for
the Modifieds as part of the 45th Annual DIRTcar Nationals.
Fuller started on the inside of the second row and wasted little time
in moving to the front. Fuller grabbed second early before using a
restart in the first third of the race to drive around opening lap
leader Tyler Dippel. From there, Fuller survived numerous restarts and
challenges from long-time friend Billy Dunn to earn his sixth career win
at the speedway.
“It’s been a lot of years since I’ve been here,” Fuller said in
victory lane. “First and foremost I have to thank my car owners
(Rauschers). To be able to come down here and to be able to do this for
four days in the dead of winter is unbelievable. I dragged a crew man
down from Scranton, Pa., Brett Tonkin, because I had no one coming down
with me and this is all for them.”
Tyler Siri and Dippel shared the front row of the start of the 2016
Big-Block Modified season with Dippel charging by Siri for the lead at
the exit of turn two on the bottom of the opening circuit. Siri looked
for a way back by the Wallkill, N.Y., teenager but as he looked for an
advantage Fuller found the fast line and drove into the runner-up spot.
Once he got to second, Fuller moved up to the top groove with his
Enders powered Bicknell while Dippel continued to try and make laps on
the bottom. This allowed Fuller to work his way by Dippel for the lead
on lap six. Before another lap could be completed, Siri brought out the
first caution of the night as he slowed with a flat tire.
“I went to the top and started winging it,” Fuller said about his
move for the lead. “If you can get to that top and your car is good
enough that you don’t push it is the predominant groove here.”
Fuller elected to use the outside of the front row for the restart
and he blasted into the cushion to hold off Dippel. Dippel meanwhile had
his hands full with Dunn. Dunn drove by Dippel on the top, securing the
second spot as they came off of turn four.
As Fuller paced the field, the action behind him and Dunn picked up
with Dippel, Billy Pauch and Larry Wight all battling for the third
position. Pauch was able to fend them off each time to hold onto third.
By the time the race reached the midway point, Fuller had extended
his lead over Dunn and began to work slower traffic. He stayed on the
upper portion of the speedway with Dunn in tow. Pauch remained third
with Dippel and Wight getting together. This caused Dippel to catch the
wall off of turn two. Dippel stopped with a damaged race car
necessitating a second caution.
Dunn gave Fuller all he could handle on the restart as he looked down
low and slid up the speedway to pull alongside of Fuller as they exited
the second turn. They remained that way all the way down the
backstretch before Fuller barley cleared him on the top of turn three
with Dunn trying to keep pace off of four.
“Billy Dunn got up inside me and it really scared me,” Fuller said.
“I started to turn it up a little bit. If you watched Race-Monitor I
probably picked it up two or three tenths because I started trying a
little bit harder. I was just out there in cruise mode and when he
blasted up there inside of me on that restart I picked it up and was
determined not to lose it.”
Fuller pulled away from that point. He blasted the cushion harder and
harder each lap increasing his lead over the Dunn. That lead was
negated one final time on lap 23 as Eldon Payne’s car blew a right rear
tire which caused him to slow in turn three.
Dunn and everyone else had one more shot at Fuller on the restart.
Fuller made sure that he wasn’t going to be denied as he drove into one
and caught the cushion perfectly running away from the rest of the
competition. Dunn remained in second by himself while Pauch and Wight
renewed their battle for the final spot on the podium.
Fuller took the checkered flag nearly three seconds in front of Dunn.
For Dunn, of Watertown, N.Y., it was a good night considering he had
never turned a lap at the track prior to Tuesday night’s practice session.
“This is a new track and a new car,” Dunn said about his Bicknell.
“Bob Slack and I tried some strange stuff on the car and it’s got a lot
of promise but it needs a lot of work. It just got too tight there the
last 10 laps. The harder I drove it the worse I was.”
Dunn had one chance where he could have thrown the slide job on
Fuller and it may have been possible for him to take the lead and keep
it. He did not pull it off forcing him to settle in for second.
“I got a good run on the bottom on the one restart and if I could
have slid up in front him I probably could have held him off, but the
best car won tonight,” he said. “We are close we just need to do a little bit of work.”
Pauch, of Frenchtown, N.J., finished in the third positon after
starting the main from the outside of the second row. Pauch tried to get
in the mix early for the lead but settled in to the third position as
the race became a battle for the preferred line on the cushion. It was
his ninth career third place finish at Volusia.
“It’s nice to make the podium and come up here,” Pauch said. “I have
to congratulate Tim Fuller. He deserves a win down here. He runs hard. I
was trying to beat him to the front there and I thought I had him
before he got me back. It was wild there when we were running
three-wide.”
Wight, the 2015 DIRTcar Nationals Big-Block Modified champion,
finished in the fourth position while defending Super DIRTcar Series
champion Matt Sheppard completed the top five.
Heat race wins went to Siri, Dippel, Fuller and Pauch with Jamie
Mills and Danny Johnson each earning a pair of victories in the
consolation events.
Racing returns Thursday night at Volusia Speedway Park for the 10th day of the DIRTcar Nationals. Gates open at 5 p.m. and racing begins at 7:30 p.m.
Follow the series on Twitter @SuperDIRTcar, or click www.SuperDIRTcarSeries.com.
DIRTcar Nationals Statistical Report; Feb. 16, 2016; Volusia Speedway Park; Barberville, Fla.
Super DIRTcar Series Big-Block Modifieds A-Feature (30 Laps) – 1.
19-Tim Fuller [$2,000], 2. 49-Billy Dunn, 3. 1-Billy Pauch, 4.
99L-Larry Wight, 5. 9s-Matt Sheppard, 6. 44-Stewart Freisen, 7. 32c-Vic
Coffey, 8. 20-Brett Hearn, 9. 25R-Erick Rudolph, 10. 21a-Pete Britten,
11. 74-J.R Heffner, 12. 27J-Danny Johnson , 13. 54-Steve Bernard, 14.
7-Rick Laubach, 15. 14J-Alan Johnson, 16. 83-Brian Swartzlander, 17.
7-Tim Kerr, 18. 6m-Mat Williamson, 19. 323-Neal Williams, 20. 1G-Darwin
Green, 21. 85-H.J. Bunting, 22. 30-Jamie Mills, 23. 5-Billy VanInwegen,
24. 5*-Tyler Siri, 25. 28p-Eldon Payne, 26. 1T-Tyler Dippel
The Super DIRTcar Series and DIRTcar Racing in the Northeast is
brought to fans by many important sponsors and partners, including:
Hoosier Racing Tire (Official Tire), VP Racing Fuels (Official Racing
Fuel), Chevy Performance Parts and NAPA Auto Parts; in addition to
contingency sponsors, including: ASI Race Wear, Bicknell Racing
Products, Bilstein Shocks, Cometic Gasket, Comp Cams, Edelbrock, Fox
Shocks, Intercomp, JE Pistons, JRI Shocks, KSE Racing Products, Mike’s
Racing Heads, Motorsports Safety Systems, MSD, Mobil 1, Superflow Dynos
and Wrisco Aluminum; along with manufacturer sponsors, including: Beyea
Headers, Racing Electronics and TNT Rescue.