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WoO Late Model "World 100" this weekend at Eldora


NickHolt

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He’s Ready: Richards Looks To Add World 100 Victory To Growing Resume This Weekend At Eldora Speedway

 

Rossburg, Ohio (September 9, 2010) - Josh Richards finally has a 100-lap win under his belt. Now he’d like to add a victory in dirt Late Model racing’s most prestigious 100-lapper to his ever-growing resume.

 

But even though Richards is just over one week removed from capturing his long-awaited first long-distance triumph, the pressure to break through in a crown-jewel event will remain when the 22-year-old sensation from Shinnston, W.Va., chases a $43,000 top prize this weekend (Sept. 10-11) in the 40th annual World 100 at Eldora Speedway.

 

“I don’t know if you can go into the World 100 with any less pressure on yourself just because you’ve won a 100-lapper,” said Richards, whose milestone century-grind win came in the World of Outlaws Late Model Series ‘Battle At Eastern Door’ on Sept. 1 at Mohawk International Raceway in Akwesasne, N.Y. “It’s the biggest race of the year and we haven’t won it yet, so you’re gonna have a lot of thoughts on your mind.

 

“There’s nothing like the World. The biggest thing is just getting in the (the A-Main). You need to start up front to put yourself in the best position possible, but as tough as qualifying and the heat races are, anything can happen. You need to have some luck on your side – and that’s what makes it so nerve-wracking.”

 

At least Richards, the defending WoO LMS champion and national tour’s current points leader, can enter the DIRTcar UMP-sanctioned World 100 activities for the first time with the confidence that yes, he can win a 100-lapper. After seven years and some frustrating near-misses – including one in the 2006 World 100, when Richards contended for victory in his second career start in the event – he got the job done.

 

“Everything fell into place at Mohawk,” said Richards, who arrived at Eldora on Thursday with his Mark Richards Racing Enterprises team for technical inspection. “The main thing in a 100-lap race is to get yourself in position where you can ride the laps down without killing your equipment, and that’s what we did. We were able to cruise around there at a fair pace, and then with 40 or 50 laps left we turned it up and the car really took off.”

 

Was Richards’s $20,000 Mohawk score a signal that he has uncovered the secret to long-distance success? He stopped short of making that type of outright declaration, but he conceded that finding the correct style and setup for 100-lappers has been an ongoing process for him and his crew.

 

“Everybody thinks that I drive too hard or whatever and that’s why we couldn’t win a 100-lapper,” said Richards, who launched his dirt Late Model driving career in 2004 and won the WoO LMS Rookie of the Year award in 2005. “Well, a lot of times I do drive hard – because running with the Outlaws, you have to. As a whole, I would say the Outlaw guys probably race harder than anybody in the country. It’s just the way it is – we run on open tires and we go to a lot of tracks that have a little bit of bite in them, and we just race hard for 50 laps.

 

“When we go to the big races, the 100-lappers,” he added, “we have to adjust a little bit differently.”

 

Mark Richards, Josh’s father and car owner, succinctly summed up the journey his son took to the big-race Promised Land: “With young guys, it takes them awhile to learn that in a 100-lap race you don’t have to be in a hurry. You have to take your time, and I think now that he’s won one he’s found that out.”

 

Josh actually learned one of his biggest lessons back in the 2006 World 100, when – just one year after he became the youngest driver ever to qualify for the event – he found himself in the middle of arguably the best multi-car duel for the lead in the history of the race. He briefly nosed into the lead late in the distance before settling for a fourth-place finish, which remains his career-best in four World 100 A-Main starts.

 

“He probably should’ve won it in ’06,” Mark Richards said of his son. “If he was where he is today, as far as knowing how to close the deal, he would’ve won it in ’06. But he was just a young kid then. He had only driven for two years, and he was running up front in the biggest race of the year.”

 

That was Josh’s best opportunity to win the World 100; his other appearances resulted in finishes of 25th (2005), 19th (2007), DNQ (2008) and sixth (2009). He feels he can recapture his ’06 magic and contend for victory again this weekend.

 

“I’m actually really looking forward to going back to Eldora,” said Richards, whose previous visit this season to the high-banked track resulted in a sixth-place finish in June’s 100-lap Dream XVI. “We took really good notes after the Dream, and I think if we can just get in the World (feature) we’ll be a lot better.”

 

A triumph in the World 100 would be an emotional moment for Richards as well as his father, who has attended the event every year since its second running in 1972.

 

“The World 100 is a whole different race of its own,” said Mark Richards, who nearly won the race as a car owner in 2000 when Davey Johnson finished third after losing a big lead to a late-race caution. “I’ve seen that race evolve since the second World 100 and grow into the marquee event of dirt Late Model racing. It’s not the biggest-paying, but it’s the benchmark for all the other crown jewels. It’s what set the standard.

 

“With the prestige of that race, the history that race has – it would mean a lot to us to win it, so we’re gonna try. If we can get in the race, maybe this will be Josh’s year.”

 

Josh sure hopes so. There’s no event that gets his blood flowing like the World 100.

 

“It’s just insane,” Josh said of the atmosphere surrounding the race. “I’ve been going to the World since 2002 when (Steve) Francis was driving for us, and still, to this day, when you go there you just get goose bumps because there’s so many cars and so many fans. It’s like, This is what dirt LM racing is all about.

 

“We’ve run well in the race, but to win that would definitely be a career-topper.”

 

Richards will be one of nine WoO LMS regulars in Eldora’s pit area for this weekend’s World 100, which begins with time trials on Friday night (Sept. 10) and continues with heat races, last-chance events and the A-Main on Saturday night (Sept. 11). The other Outlaws ready for battle include:

 

* Steve Francis of Ashland, Ky., who won the World 100 in 1999 and will be looking to make his 20th career start in the feature event. He’s currently tied with Billy Moyer and Freddy Smith for third on the alltime World 100 A-Main starts list, behind only Scott Bloomquist and Donnie Moran (20 starts apiece).

 

* Darrell Lanigan of Union, Ky. He’s made 16 World 100 A-Main starts since 1990 but is still searching for his first win. A second-place finish in 1999 is his best.

 

* Rick Eckert of York, Pa., has qualified for the World 100 a total of 11 times, with a fourth-place finish in 1999 his top outing.

 

* Chub Frank of Bear Lake, Pa., who won the World 100 in 2004, will bid for his seventh career A-Main appearance.

 

* Clint Smith of Senoia, Ga., has finished as high as fourth (2005) in his four career A-Main starts, but he’s failed to qualify for the last three years.

 

* Tim McCreadie of Watertown, N.Y., owns a top finish of fifth (2008) in his four previous A-Main runs.

 

* Shane Clanton of Fayetteville, Ga., has only made the World 100 starting field three times, but he owns a coveted globe trophy for his victory in 2008.

 

* WoO LMS rookie Austin Hubbard of Seaford, Del., became the second-youngest driver to qualify for the World 100 last year in his first stab at the event. He finished 19th driving his father Mike’s No. 11, but he returns this year behind the wheel of the No. 19 fielded by Maryland’s Dale Beitler, a former Dream winner with Steve Casebolt.

 

Ticket information on the World 100 is available by logging on to www.eldoraspeedway.com.

 

Fans unable to attend the World 100 on Saturday night can receive text-message updates directly to their phone throughout the night by joining the WoO LMS Twitter feed. To sign-up as a WoO LMS ‘follower’ on Twitter, visit http://twitter.com/WoOLateModels.

 

For more information on the WoO LMS, visit www.worldofoutlaws.com.

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