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WERA National Endurance series, Round 7
(Right) Team Suzuki Endurance
slapped a five-lap margin of
victory on Its nearest rival to earn
its 116th WERA National
Endurance victory at Putnam
Park.
(Below) TKO Rayce Team Suzuki
Too grabbed second oilerall and
won the Heavyweight Superstock
class after a race-long batte with
Arclight Racing (not shown).
Tea uzuk;
t Ifes
Iher
By Aaron Mintz
Photos by Lester Wilson/Greencastle
Photo Service
MOUNT MERIDIAN, IN, AUG. 9-11
earn Suzuki Endurance's Grant
Lopez got off to a slow start and
took his time gaining the lead position, bu t once he did, he never looked
back and Team Suzuki Endurance rode
. to its 116th endurance win.
If Lopez had looked back he would
have witnessed a great battle for second
place overall and for first place in the
Heavyweight Superstock class as TKO
Rayce Team Suzuki Too and Arclight
Racing battled on the tarmac and in the
pits with Bloomington, Indiana-based
TKO Rayce Team Suzuki Too emerging
victorious.
The race ran without incident or red
flag, save a warmup-lap crash which
sent one person to the hospital, Team
Bear's Ed Guzik, who suffered a wrist
injury.
The absence of red flags allowed
Team Suzuki Endurance to tally 279
laps on the 1.B-mile, 10-turn road
course. Team Suzuki Endurance finished five laps ahead of TKO Rayce
Team Suzuki Too.
Team Suzuki Endurance's Crew
Chief Keith Perry attributed the weekend's success to "good clean racing with
no red flags."
"I got off to a lousy start," Lopez
said, "but the bike was handling well
and helped me take the lead early in the
race.
At the start of the six-hour endurance
race, Joe Prussiano ill of Arclight Racing
grabbed the holeshot and ran hard into
tum one, with Joey Gilleland, H&H Racing's Brian Lantz and Team Suzuki
Endurance's Lopez in tow. Prussiano
made his bike as wide as possible and
maintained the lead through lap eight.
The on-track rivalry between the
TKO Rllyce Team Suzuki and Arclight
Racing has been heating up all season
and has been providing some of the best
racing in the series this year. Carrying
on that tradition, the two teams ran neck
and neck throughout most of the first
three hours until an extended pit stop in
the third hour set Arclight back over a
minute.
"I neglected to get the pit crew
together for practice and we lost time on
two pit .stops, but TKO Rayce Ieam
needs to be congratulated," Arclight
Racing's crew chief said. "They beat us
straight up. The time we lost in the pits
would not have changed the outcome."
TKO Rayce Team Suzuki Too ran
flawlessly and enjoyed precision pit
stops all race long. "The Metzler tires
worked great," Joey Gilleland said.
"After testing the suspension two weeks
ago, the bike is set up for me and )ohn
Jacobi. The crew's efforts have made the
TKO Rayce Team Suzukis run fast and
smooth.
Close behind at the start of the race
was Lexington, Kentucky's Team Bell's
Suzuki with Roger Bell at the helm, and
. team riders Brian Jones, Jeff Wilson and
Tommy Hayden proving their abilities
on the GSXR750. They kept the Bell's
Suzuki running up front all day, finally
finishing fourth overall and second in
class.
1I
It
I
Fifth overall and third Heavyweight
Superstock was the team of TKO Rayce
Team Suzuki with Steve Doolin and
Gr.egg Blackwell aboard their '96
GSXR750 Suzuki. Early front-runner
H&H Racing fell out with engine-bearing failure, relegating the team to 29th
overall.
New to Heavyweight Superbike and
finishing third in class was Team
Triad/Tapeworks of Greensboro, North
Carolina, with state residents Lee Acree
and two top novice rivals, Luke
Yarbrough and Gregg White, at the controls of the team's Yamaha YZF750.
They finished seventh overall with 265
laps, just five seconds behind top Middleweight Superbike entry Excel Racing
with Matt Macheca and Mike Dye as the
riders. This Yamaha YZF600-mounted
team completed 266 laps, two laps more
than the second-place Middleweight
Superbike team of Ten 40 Racing.
Excel Racing's victory moved the
team into second place in points behind
Team Ten 40 Racing and ahead of previously second-place Team Triad II/Tapeworks, (which finished 16th overall and
fourth in class).
The usual torrid battle in the Middleweight Superstock class continued as
Mike Reed on the Triple R Racing
Kawasaki ZX6 completed 265 laps, a
mere 43 seconds ahead of SBR's Evan
Semoif and Paul Youngman, aboard a
Yamaha YZF600.
The. two teams traded positions all
during the race with additional heat
applied by Canfield, Ohio's Thu~der
Racing, which unfortunately lOW-SIded
coming out of turn eight toward the end
of the race. The accident sent Thunder
Racing back to eighth in class and 21st
overall.
.
Third in the Middleweight Superstock was Cycle Speed Racing which
managed a consistent race, keeping the
shiny side up all race long.
.
Triple R Racing continues to lead m
class and is ranked fourth overall in
points.
Putnam Park Raceway
Mount Meridian, Indiana
Results: August 10, 1996 (Round 7 of 10)
ENDUR O/A: 1. Team Suzuki Endurance (Suz); 2.
TKO Racing Team Suzuki Too (Suz); 3. Arc1ight Racing
(Suz); 4. Team Bells Suzuki (Suz); 5. TKO Race Team
Suzuki (Suz).
Sprints
125 GP, 1. Chris Ulrich (Han); 2. Paul Black (Yam);
3. Chris Pyles (Han); 4. John Ulrich (Han); S. Dan
Clemens (Han).
600 PROD: 1. 'Luke Yarbrough (Han); 2. Gregory
White (Kaw); 3. Chris Nonnand (Kaw); 4. Chad Feltner
(Han); S. Brian Healea (Han).
600 SIBK NOV, 1. G,egory White (Kaw); 2. Chris
Normand (Kaw); 3. Myron Bell (Han); 4. Christopher
Allen (Han); 5. Steven Olechowski (Han).
600 SISTI< EX, 1. Mike Reed (Kaw); 2. Ma,k Reed
(Kaw); 3. Joey Gilleland (Kaw); 4. Stoney Landers
(Han); 5. Ray Litton (Kaw).
750 SIBK NOV: 1. Ragrough
(Han); 3. Chris Normand (Kaw); 4. Gregory White
(!

