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arctic monkey21 (Offline)
  #11 6/21/16 9:11 AM
Originally Posted by Nate:
Not surprising, he's been busted for soaking his tires multiple times. Won the same event last year and came up light at the scales.

As for testing and these violations, it should serve as an example to all drivers whether you're running sprints, mods, late models or something else. A 3 month ban, there went any hope at a championship for any of them and they're going to miss a lot of "Crown Jewel" events (World 100, Firecracker, etc) while they're at it.
The suspension only covers events under some sanction owned by the World Racing Group. 3 of the 5 I believe run full time with the Lucas Oil series which they should still be eligible to race. The biggest penalty to those 3 at least is missing the World 100. Considering the crowds there, the loss in potential merchandise sales alone could be a big hit.
Charles Nungester (Offline)
  #12 6/21/16 9:43 AM
The first race was when the first two cars met.
The first time someone cheated, Was the second time.

Charles Nungester
5 Likes: EPSpeed, mtek56, oldfan49, PIT CART, rclaridge
Jonr (Offline)
  #13 6/21/16 7:59 PM
Wasn't there an issue in the 80's/90's, where the Late Model association said everyone had to run a tire that was stamped 13", and one of the tire manufacturers started making a 14" tire with a 13" stamp?

It seems that drama just follows the LM guys around.
Stevensville Mike (Offline)
  #14 6/22/16 12:32 AM
Originally Posted by Jonr:
Wasn't there an issue in the 80's/90's, where the Late Model association said everyone had to run a tire that was stamped 13", and one of the tire manufacturers started making a 14" tire with a 13" stamp?

It seems that drama just follows the LM guys around.
I can remember an old interview/story with the late Neil Bonnett on tires. He said that NASCAR would have a serial number molded on each tire to check them back in his day. All of his tires always had the correct serial numbers on them. They might not have been the correct tires, but they had the correct serial numbers on them.

Not to promote cheating, mind you, for it has always gone on and always will, but when the sanctioning body starts lowering the boom on guys like Bloomquist and Jimmy Owens, one has to start thinking that this could backfire in their faces. Teams check/police each other for the most part and a hush-hush "agreement" is always there, such as traction control in sprints. Bloomquist and Owens could fire a volley back and everything might go sideways. Sometimes, a behind the scenes agreement with the offenders and the rest of the racers might work a little better to prevent dime dropping. This isn't a NASCAR-type penalty wherein you sit down a crew chief for a few races. These guys are sitting down the heavy hitting drivers. These are the equivalent of Jimmie Johnsons and Kevin Harvicks, not Carl Long, as NASCAR so heavily threw a book at years ago.

Just an opinion, of course. Watch out what you do. You might get way more than you expect out of it.
Charles Nungester (Offline)
  #15 6/22/16 12:41 AM
Hell the reason Napcar has Templates to begin with, I someone built a car three quarter scale, went out and whooped the field and nobody noticed until after the race.

Charles Nungester
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