BARRE, Vt. — Local racer Cody Blake combined a little speed with a lot of luck to score the Maplewood/Irving Oil Late Model victory at Thunder Road Int’l Speedbowl on Thursday.
Blake took the lead for the first time from Christopher Pelkey on a restart following a massive crash with 10 laps to go and pulled away to win the 50-lap feature on WDEV Radio/Calkins Portable Toilets Night.
The second-generation racer spent much of the race in the back half of the top-10 while rookie Matthew Smith tried to pull the upset. Smith grabbed the point from polesitter Kyle Pembroke when the green flag waved and eventually pulled out to a straightaway lead.
Just when it seemed Smith had the race in hand, Matt White and Chris Roberts spun on the front chute to bring out the first caution on lap-30. Although Smith easily held off Jim Morris on the restart, Scott Dragon went for a front stretch spin eight laps later to trigger another yellow.
This time on the restart, it was Morris who got the upper hand, leading laps 39 and 40. Going into turn one on the 41st circuit, though, the two duo made contact and Morris went around in front of the field. With nowhere to go, many of the top-10 drivers piled in, drawing a red flag. Tyler Cahoon, Stephen Donahue, Nick Sweet and Tom Sheehan were all unable to continue following the wreck while Morris, point leader Marcel J. Gravel, Bobby Therrien, Trampas Demers and Brendan Moodie were among those who sustained damage.
When the dust finally settled, it was Pelkey and Blake who found themselves on the new front row. Blake, who got off to a late start this season, made up for lost time by leaping out in front of Pelkey and cruising into the night for his seventh career win.
Pelkey earned his best result of the year with a second-place finish. Defending King of the Road Jason Corliss made it an all–Central Vermont podium by dodging the big accident and making a late charge for third. Pembroke, Dragon, Therrien, Smith, Gravel, Darrell Morin, and Chris Roberts rounded out the top-10.
Third-generation racer Bryan P. Wall became a first-time winner in the Lenny’s Shoe & Apparel Flying Tiger 40-lap feature. The 17-year-old rookie was running second to Bunker Hodgdon when the race’s second caution came out on lap 23 for an incident involving Jason Pelkey and Brett Wood.
On the restart, Hodgdon got dead sideways, and Wall darted into the lead. Hodgdon and Keegan Lamson then got into a lengthy battle for second that ended with Hodgdon getting shuffled three-wide to the back of the pack. The commotion allowed Wall to build a big lead.
Cooper Bouchard, Barre’s Cameron Ouellette, and Jason Woodard eventually broke through the logjam at the front. While Bouchard and Ouellette were able to reel in Wall as the laps wound down, the veterans ran out of time and the teenager carried the checkered flag.
Bouchard took second with Ouellette third. Point leader and defending champion Woodard came in fourth. Rich Lowrey, Mike Martin, Lamson, Tyler Austin, Chris LaForest, and Colin Cornell also earned top-10 finishes.
An even younger racer stood in Allen Lumber Street Stock Victory Lane as 13-year-old Kaiden Fisher grabbed his first Thunder Road win. Fisher, the son of 2003 track champion Jamie Fisher, followed in the footsteps of his dad by storming up the outside lane for the victory.
After starting fifth, the youngster took the long way around both two-time Street Stock champion Jamie Davis and polesitter J.T. Blanchard to get the lead just before halfway in the 25-lap feature. He went untouched from there to become the youngest feature winner in Thunder Road history.
Blanchard held off Davis and point leader Brandon Gray for second. Scott Weston, Tanner Woodard, Luke Peters, Tum Hunt, Kyler Davis, and James Dopp chased them across the finish line.
The Burnett Scrap Metals Road Warriors doubled up with a pair of 25-lap features. In the make-up of their Vermont Governor’s Cup feature, Trevor Jaques joined the first-time winner’s club. Jaques started pole based on the line-up set two weeks ago and ran away early. Brookfield’s Nate Brien got to his back bumper on multiple occasions, but Jaques found a little extra each time to win the caution-free event.
Brien finished second with Tyler Whittemore third. Brian Putney, Justin Prescott, Dan Garrett Jr., Frank Putney, Fred Fleury, Josh Vilbrin, and Sean McCarthy completed the top-10.
In a rough-and-tumble second feature, Luke Marcheski make the trek to central Vermont worth it by becoming the fourth first-time winner of the night. Marcheski started on the pole after mechanical problems in the first feature and was dominant for the first 24 laps through a series of crashes and spills behind him.
As he took the white flag, Marcheski slowed, possibly thinking it was the checkered flag. Justin Prescott swung to outside to take the lead as both approached a lapped car. Marcheski quickly recovered, though, and muscled his way back around Prescott in the final corner to edge him at the actual checkered.
Prescott ended up second with Josh Vilbrin third. Jaques, Dan Garrett Jr., Brian Putney, Paige Whittemore, Fred Fleury, Rodney Campbell, and Sean McCarthy finished fourth through 10th.