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2006
The Assault on The Vault
Dennis
Gada, Timmy Jordan, Dwayne Dorr & Mark Bakaj
all set new records
en route to Track Championships

NASCAR
Dodge Weekly Racing Series
Wild
N Wacky Wednesday Series
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Dennis
Gada captured his 6th SK Modified title at the Speedbowl - tying
him with Phil Rondeau (6 LM) for the most in
one division, and Bob Potter (3 Mod, 3
SK Mod) as well for the most overall track championships. Not the dominate
presence he was during his run of 5 straight SK titles from '99-'03, Gada
only won 1 point event in 2006 but he was consistently in the top 5
throughout the season. He capped the year by sweeping the non-point twin 25's in the Double Down Shootout, giving him 50 career SK Modified
feature wins - 17 more than all-time SK runner up Ted
Christopher (33). Rob Janovic Jr
clinched the wins title with his 4th victory during 100 lap Town Fair Tire
Finale. Jeff Pearl and Diego
Monahan tied for second in wins with Gada at 3 victories a piece.
Veteran Tom Fox won the 100 lap SK
portion of the Pepsi 300. Defending champion Robbie Summers Jr
and 2005 SK runner-up Ron Yuhas Jr
ran limited Speedbowl schedules
as they both ran full time on NASCAR's Whelen Modified Tour.
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13
years after his uncle Tom Fox did so in
1993, Timmy Jordan won the Late Model
track championship at the 'bowl in a black and red #47. Amazingly
Jordan, who took the 2005 season off after back-to-back runner-up title runs
in the Mini Stocks, won the championship in his first full season in the
division - becoming the first driver to win Rookie of the Year and Track
Championship in any of the track's 4 current NASCAR Weekly Racing Series
divisions. He was also the first driver to win a Speedbowl Late Model title in an
American-Canadian Tour legal car, capturing 7 victories along the way. In his last 2 full
seasons racing, Jordan won 12 feature events. Former Track Champions Allen
Coates and Corey Hutchings,
who both ran only a handful of races each at the track this season, won 3
feature events a piece. Corey's wins included the season opening Budweiser
Nationals 50 lapper and a sweep of the LM twin 25's during the Double Down
Shootout in November. Coates won both 100 lap Late Model events - the LM portion
of the Pepsi 300 and Town Fair Tire Finale.
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Dwayne
Dorr dominated victory lane in the Sportsmen division - winning
11 feature events - breaking the division record for most wins in one season
of 10 set by Corey Hutchings in
1999. Dorr began the season with 5 straight victories - the most in
any division to start a season - then won the Pepsi 300 Sportsman 50 lapper in July
after setting fast time with a new track record of 17.546 during time
trials. When he won the 50 lapper during the Town Fair Tire Finale, he
not only tied Hutching's record 10 wins, he became only the 3rd driver to
win all 3 extra distant events in their division during the same year -
joining Allen Coates ('98) and Jay
Stuart ('99) who both did it in the Late Models. He capped
his remarkable season by becoming the Overall Sportsman Winner during the
Double Down Shootout - including a victory in one of the twin 15 lap events
to set the new season win mark at 11 victories and giving him 15 for his
Sportsman career - which tied him with Ed Reed Jr for 5th all-time in the
division. Dorr's 2006 campaign was arguable the greatest single season in
the 8 cylinder stock division's history. Despite his dominance, he
battled Joe Curioso III and Richard
Staskowski all year in the point standings, clinching only after
the final points race was completed.
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Veteran
Danny Field became the second driver to
successfully defend his Saturday Mini Stock title (Jeff
Miller 1998-99) with a final point total over 100 points ahead of
teenage runner-up Joe
Godbout III. Field also led the division in wins with 4 -
which he won during a 6 race stretch early in the year. Godbout won
three times and set a new track record for the division when he posted a
17.417 lap time during the Pepsi 300 time trials - he also went on to win
the 50 lap event later that day. Ken Cassidy Jr
won the 50 lap Finale for the second consecutive year. One time Sunday Mini
Stock Champion and fan favorite Jeff
"Soup" Civardi won for the first time in over a decade
when he brought his #93 machine to victory lane on May 6th. Veterans Jeff
Miller, who won 3 times and Richard
Brooks, who won twice, both announced at
season's end that they had no plans to run in the division the following
year.
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The
Bakaj brothers dominated the Legend Car divisions on both the Wednesday and
Saturday series. Chris Bakaj won
the Wednesday title by two points over his brother Mark. While Mark
Bakaj won the Saturday title by 52 points over Chris. Chris won 3
features overall (2 Wednesday and 1 Saturday), while Mark won 11 times -
tying him with Dwayne Dorr for the most
overall at the track during the year - leading both Wednesday (4) and
Saturday (7) divisions in victories. On August 26th, Mark tied a 40 year
old record when he won his 6th consecutive division event - last
accomplished by George "Ed" Bunnell
in the 1966 Bomber division. (Ironically... and coincidentally,
Bunnell visited the 'bowl earlier in the season on the night Dwayne Dorr
unsuccessfully tried to tie the same record). For Mark, who at the
time had won the last 3 Wednesday Legend features as well, it was also his 5
overall feature win at the track. His biggest obstacle trying to reach
Bunnell's 40-year old mark was the weather - 6 Legend Car features were
rained out on it's Saturday schedule - and while the track rescheduled 2 of
them on subsequent off weeks, the Wednesday Legend series had to rainouts as
well. If that wasn't enough, he also won
the 50 lap INEX National Qualifier race in late July.
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The
July 8th Late Model race had one of the most violent accidents in the
track's history when Jay Lozyniak's #28
got airborne after contact with Allen Coates,
then barrel-rolled down the front stretch before finally coming to
a halt in turn 1. Lozyniak miraculously avoided serious injury.
The action began when one-time teammates/now-bitter rivals, Jay
Stuart and Bruce Thomas Jr
made contact while battling for the lead in turns 3 and 4. The
accident collected many cars behind them including Coates and
Lozyniak. Race officials, who deemed the initial contact by Stuart on
Thomas Jr as over-aggressive, suspended the 4-time former track champion for the
remainder of the season. He was also the point leader at the time.
It was the second time during the season that Race Director Steve
Harraka suspended a former champ. (Defending Late Model
Champion Mark St. Hiliare was suspended
for 4 weeks earlier in the year for driving into Lozyniak's car under caution).
Glenn
Colvin, who was the highest scored car not involved in the wreck,
was declared the winner when the event was red-checkered after only 18 laps
were completed. The
early July event was the low point in the season for the Late Models - the Speedbowl's longest
current running weekly division.
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When
Diego Monahan won the April 15th SK
Modified feature, he became the first driver in the tracks history to
capture a feature win in all four of the current Weekly Racing Series
divisions. Diego won three times in his Mahoney Family Racing #81
during the year, including the North-South Shootout SK qualifier in
August. His brother/teammate Shawn
Monahan drove his MFR #31 to victory lane during the True Value
Series qualifier earlier in June. TVMS and
Speedbowl officials reached an agreement which allowed SK competitors an attempt to qualify for
the TVMS event at the
track. The agreement also granted the top two finishers in the
previous week's SK feature a guaranteed starting spot in the True Value 100
lap event. Since the SK qualifier event runner-up was Robbie
Summers Jr, who competed on NASCAR's Whelen Modified tour and would not
attend the TVMS event, the guaranteed spot went to 3rd place finisher Diego -
giving MFR a clean sweep of the SK "qualifier" events during the
year.
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Veteran
Sportsman competitor John Puglisi had
his Consecutive Seasons With a Win streak snapped at 8 when he
failed to capture a checkered flag for the first time since 1997. His
absence from victory lane left him in a tie for the record he
continues to hold with Ken Cassidy Sr
who did it from 1988-1995. The current streak now stands at 5
consecutive seasons - set by Jim Proccaccini
when he won the June 17th event.
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Curt
D'Addario Sr (X-cars) both won 10 features and Greg
Moran Sr (Super X-cars) won 9 features in their respective Wild N Wacky Wednesday divisions, yet neither won the track championship. D'Addario
finished 48 points behind John Kelly III
who added his name to the list of Track Champions who did not win a feature
event during the season. Moran finished second to one-time winner Greg
Correia, who like Timmy Jordan
- and actually before him although not in a NASCAR Weekly Racing division -
also won Rookie of the Year and the Track Championship in the same
season. By virtue of Wednesday's weekly point series ending first,
Correia became the first driver ever in any of the track's divisions with
such a distinction. Lisa Vogelsong
won the W.O.W. Super X-car title after winning the W.O.W. X-car title in
2005. Kathy Civardi won the 4
cylinder W.O.W. division this year and bested her hubby "Soup" by
winning twice to his once. John Kurtzman
won the X-Modified Track Championship and led the division in wins with 7
giving him 13 for his career - the most all-time in the division's short
history.
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NASCAR's
Touring divisions both saw a repeat winner at the track with Donny
Lia winning his second career Speedbowl WMT event - taking the
checkereds at the Whelen Volunteer Firemen's 150 during the Town Fair Tire
Finale, while local product Matt
Kobyluck won his second consecutive NASCAR Busch East race at his
hometrack. Both series saw track records fall as Jerry
Marquis (WMT) and Sean Caisse
(NBE) both set new track times during qualifying for their respective
events.
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Open
wheel touring events were frequent this season. In addition to Lia's
WMT victory, other open-wheel winners included Justin
Belfiore in ISMA Super Modified 50 lapper in May and Bobby
Gringas III in the True Value Modified Series 100 lapper in
June. Joey Payne Jr won the season
opening NEMA Midget 25 lapper at the Budweiser Nationals and the season
ending 25 lapper at the Double Down Shootout, while Mike
Keeler won the NEMA 25 during Nostalgia Weekend in August. Jason
Heroux and Andy Major won the
Pro 4 Modified 25 lappers and Nick Wean won
the USAC Ford Focus Midgets' inaugural feature event at the track in late
April.
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Tayla
Orleans won 2 of the 3 Allison Legacy Series events with Anthony
Frissora winning the other. Waterford resident Chris
Correll won his 4th consecutive All Star Race Truck Northeast Regional
title - including victories in the ARTS' last two visits to his home track along the way. Seth
Duvall won the season's first ARTS event during the Budweiser Nationals.
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At
season's end, longtime racing journalist and Speedbowl Director of Public
Relations Pete Zanardi announced his
retirement from full-time responsibilities at the shoreline oval. Over
the last 2 decades, Zanardi was instrumental in getting the
Speedbowl exposure through
various publications and websites. In November, the track also
announced that General Manager Bill Roth
and Legend Car President Jerry Robinson
would lease the track from owner and longtime promoter Terry Eames
during the upcoming seasons. Roth and Robinson would assume
full control of the track's
day-to-day operations as The New Waterford Speedbowl, LLC.
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