DonMoore10 (Offline)
#1
12/29/09 8:20 PM
A few years ago, a very famous driver stepped out of the Beast that I run at Fort Wayne, so I went driver hunting. I had a short list, but the driver who kept coming to the top was Geoff Kaiser of Fort Wayne, IN. I met Geoff many years ago and we kept in touch when he would volunteer as a crew member for some of the dirt races we would run. One of the best decisions I ever made since I've owned midgets was to hire Geoff Kaiser. No drama, no nonsense, no hissy fits, no finger pointing, a laid back individual that gets the job done. Geoff is one of the unsung heroes of open wheel racing today that not only knows how to drive, but builds his own cars, maintains them and is an encyclopedia of how to make things work. He has recommended quite a few changes for the indoor car, some expensive and I've listened and made them. He turned the third quickest lap in TT's Saturday night which is a testament about taking a mediocre car a few years ago and bringing it to what is now.
The surprise of the weekend was 14 YO Adam Wilsdon. For those that were not there, he almost won the Sunday midget feature... in an older narrow body Stealth 34 inch dirt car with Chevy power. Yes... you are reading this correctly... a Stealth dirt car. If fact, he was so fast he made the Munchkins and VW's look silly by putting almost a 3/4 lap on the field. So for all you potential midget racers at FW, no need to go out and buy something special. All you need is some good setups and a driver that knows how to get it done. This kid was amazing to say the least!!!!
And finally a thank you to Tony Barhorst for keeping indoor pavement racing alive. For the record, Barhorst has been studying some rule changes over the past year. He's talked and listened to a lot of people and made some bold decisions to even the competition and it worked. The 14 YO kid driving a narrow body Stealth dirt car is certainly the proof. Hats off to Tony for stepping out of the box ( one of the few in the country, maybe the only one at this point) and standing firm on some rule changes that needed to be made.
apexonephoto (Offline)
#2
12/29/09 8:49 PM
Don, glad to see you have Geoff in the car. The fact that he normally runs a winged car and is from Fort Wayne is pretty cool. I didn't know Adam Wilsdon was only 14 years old. That kid did a great job staying in the lead. With Wease, Fedorcak, Darland and Stanbrough behind him. Being that Sunday wasn't the wreck fest we had on Saturday he also made it through lapped traffic quite well. I would have to say he was the most impressive of the weekend.
If the weather hadn't sucked and I didn't smoke a curb on the way home I would say the weekend was great. I also liked the day and a half format better then the whole 2 day long show.
James
Eric C (Offline)
#7
12/29/09 10:51 PM
The surprise of the weekend was 14 YO Adam Wilsdon. For those that were not there, he almost won the Sunday midget feature... in an older narrow body Stealth 34 inch dirt car with Chevy power. Yes... you are reading this correctly... a Stealth dirt car. If fact, he was so fast he made the Munchkins and VW's look silly by putting almost a 3/4 lap on the field. So for all you potential midget racers at FW, no need to go out and buy something special. All you need is some good setups and a driver that knows how to get it done. This kid was amazing to say the least!!!!
Don,
I have to agree with you on Adam Wilsdon, He was still racing quartermidgets last year and only recently moved to the Kenyon cars and then the Focus car in the middle of this season.
I also have to give a Congrats to Joe Liguori who once again showed that with the right driver you can take a underpowered Kenyon Midget and compete with the big boys.
6th quick Sat. 5th. in feature
I think 9th quick Sun. Night won heat race and 4 th in feature.
Not bad for a Kenyon Midget with an FJ 1200 Yamaha Motorcycle engine.
Eric Cottongim
QMFamily (Offline)
#9
12/29/09 11:38 PM
Don, Thanks for the mention of Adam. Our expectations for the weekend were to get him comfortable with a high horse power midget. He had never been in one before the first practice when it would not fire and we missed it. He won two races, and almost the feature on sunday. He took to it like I thought he might. I never thought he would be able to hold the lead like he did until I saw him pull away from the drop of the green. I made the mistake of telling him if he got the lead to not look back because these guys will be coming. He did exactly as I told him. He was quoted as saying "I did not know how far back they were". Oh well he made a couple of mistakes like hitting the tire the first time between 1 and 2. I'm biased, he is the best driver I have ever worked with.
We would like to try the chili bowl next but don't know if it will happen.
Mark Wilsdon.