Portland '23, Race 2 45
Brad McAllister (center), Tim Lynn (left) and Troy Ermish rounded out the Trans Am TA2 class podium in Portland. (Trans Am photo)

McAllister Rebounds During Attrition-Filled Race In Portland

PORTLAND, Ore. — Portland-area native Brad McAllister drove from last to first in a wild, attrition-filled race two at Portland International Raceway.

After several competitors experienced issues early in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli Western Championship’s second event of a doubleheader weekend, McAllister rebounded from a last-place starting spot to win his first Big Machine Vodka SPIKED Coolers TA2 Series race of the year.

Notes of Interest

  • Brad McAllister is a native of Sherwood, Oregon, just 35 minutes away from the track. This was McAllister’s first win of 2023.
  • McAllister’s last win came at Circuit of The Americas in 2019, the year he won the Western Championship TA2 title on the strength of four victories, including one in Portland.
  • McAllister started last today after an ignition switch failure resulted in a DNS in yesterday’s Race 1.
  • Both races in this weekend’s doubleheader were won overall by a competitor starting in last place.
  • David Hampton swept the Portland doubleheader, winning both events in the GT class.

TA2 Series Race Recap

In the Big Machine Vodka SPIKED Coolers TA2 Series, several championship contenders who were expected to perform well today faced adversity that prematurely ended their runs. Second-place TA2 starter Ken Sutherland was caught up in a multi-car crash just after the initial green flag and was forced to retire before completing the first lap.

Yesterday’s race winner Brody Goble got off to a strong start to Sunday’s event after taking the green flag first in his class and overtaking first-place overall starter Michelle Nagai in XGT, but a flagging miscue ended the day for both Goble and Nagai, as well as another front-running competitor.

On the lap-seven restart, a local flagger mistakenly threw the green flag outside of the expected restart zone where Goble, as the leader, would control the start. With some cars accelerating and others not, the chaotic start led to Goble, Nagai and Michael Fine getting hit by those around them, putting an end to their day.

Adversity for some led to opportunities for others, leading to an exceptional comeback by the eventual race winner.

Following a disappointing DNS in yesterday’s Race 1, McAllister was relegated to a last-place starting position in his Nitro Motorsports-prepared No. 24 Straumann and Zimbis Ford Mustang. After the green flag waved, it only took McAllister eight laps to work his way up to sixth in class, and by lap 10, he had taken over the fourth position.

On lap 23, McAllister took over first in class following a hard battle with points leader Greg Tolson in the No. 70 GT Auto Lounge Ford Mustang. Once McAllister had taken the class lead, there was no turning back.

He captured the overall race lead on lap 28 and was followed by Tolson until the Californian experienced a suspension problem that took him out of contention for the win. After that, McAllister was able to cruise to victory, besting Tim Lynn and Troy Ermish, who rounded out the podium.

“Winning at home is fantastic, it’s really special to get the victory here,” McAllister said in victory lane. “We won here in 2019, but I’ve really struggled here ever since. I got the pole the year after that, but got a DNF, and then the year after that, we were running strong in practice, then we crashed and didn’t start the race. Same thing yesterday; we didn’t get to start the race.

“It seems like we either win or DNF. The car was strong right until the very end. I just maintained the gap. Greg [Tolson] was closing a little bit, so I started picking up the pace. If anybody else would have closed in on us, we could have increased the pace again. I think we had it under control; the car was so strong.”