DEFENDING WHELEN MODIFIED TOUR CHAMPION RONNIE SILK LOOKING FOR GOOD FINISH IN STAFFORD 150 “That’s just the way it works,” said Silk. “It’s not easy, if it was the whole field would be in the points battle. Doug and his guys have been doing a great job. They’ve had a really good car at every race and Doug has done a great job driving. We can’t control anything that Doug and his guys do, so we just have to try our best to win as many of these races as we can or come away with a top-5 finish. If you can do that, things normally work out. You have to take it one race at a time. If you want to be there at the end of the year for the points, you have to finish up front every race. Doug has been doing really well but we’ve put pressure on ourselves to go out and have a shot at winning every race. Our strategy isn’t going to change much, we’re going to try to be fast and win races. We haven’t quite got our cars where we want them, there’s quite a bit of room for improvement on our end as a team. We’re going to keep working on it and keep on trying the best we can.” “I feel good about our chances,” said Silk. “Fourth and third are pretty good finishes and we haven’t had the car the way we needed to have it at Stafford. To come out of there with a fourth and a third were pretty good days for us. We’re trying a little bit of different stuff, which hopefully will work for us. I’m pretty confident we’ll go there and have a good shot at winning.” One of the different things that Silk and his team will try at Stafford will be under the hood of his #6 machine. Silk and his team used the Whelen Modified Tour Spec Engine for the first time this season two weeks ago at Loudon and they qualified on the pole and finished .003 seconds behind Mike Stefanik in a photo finish for the win. Corey LaJoie had a spec engine in his car for the CARQUEST Tech-Net Spring Sizzler in April at Stafford and LaJoie qualified second and ran with the leaders before suspension problems sidelined him halfway through the race.
With one pole position already under his belt with the spec engine under his hood, Silk will be looking to put his car up front again during qualifying for the Stafford 150. “Qualifying will be important, but not quite as important as the 125 in years past where nobody pits and everyone was on the same strategy,” said Silk. “In the 150, if you have a bad qualifying run but you have a good car, you can do some different things to get around it. You can short pit and then wait for everyone else to pit and then be ahead of them, but I still think it’s a lot easier to have a good day if you start up front.” “The championship is our goal, but it’s still way too early,” said Silk. “We’re not chasing points right now, you can really drive yourself crazy thinking about nothing but points. We’re trying to win, to run up front, and with a couple of races to go we’ll start worrying about points. We obviously don’t want to do anything stupid and knock ourselves out of the points chase, right now we’re worried about winning.” Tickets for the 22nd Annual Stafford 150 are available and on sale now at the Speedway Box Office. Tickets are priced at $33.00 for adult general admission tickets, $5.00 for children ages 6-14, and children ages 5 and under are admitted free of charge when accompanied by an adult. Reserved seating will be priced at $35.00 for all ages. All ticket prices include 10% CT Admission Tax. As always, Stafford Motor Speedway offers free parking with overnight parking available. For more information, contact the Stafford Motor Speedway track office at 860-684-2783 or visit us on the web at www.staffordspeedway.com. ### |