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Manteca's Strmiska Jr. wins his father's 1978 trophy

 

Clouds form and threaten rain during the Western Late Model race during Stockton 99 Speedway's opening day Sunday.
ADRIAN MENDOZA/THE BEE

 

 

 

 

 

 

Manteca residents Ron Strmiska Jr. (90) and Guy Guibor drive in the Western Late Model race at Stockton 99 Speedway on Sunday. Strmiska won the race.
ADRIAN MENDOZA/THE BEE

 

 

Guy Guibor (61), Scott Masellis (92) and Harry Belletto drive in the Western Late Model race Sunday.
ADRIAN MENDOZA/THE BEE

 

 

 


It's a family affair
By KELLY JONES
BEE STAFF WRITER

Last Updated: April 10, 2006, 05:33:06 AM PDT

STOCKTON — Up for grabs Sunday in Stockton 99 Speedway's opener was the championship trophy Manteca's Ron Strmiska Sr. won in 1978.

The hardware gets to stay in the family as Ron Strmiska Jr. led the final 22 laps to win the Western Late Model main — the first in the Hot Wood 1000 series — to kick-off the track's 60th and final season.

A past champion will donate and present one of his old trophies to the winner in each of 10 Hot Wood 100-lappers this year. Strmiska Sr. picked his first of two title trophies, thinking it sure would be something if his son won it back.

"I'll be darned if he did," Strmiska Sr. said. "He ran a smart race today."

The crowd of 1,981 who ventured out despite the threat of rain could see Strmiska's victory, too, after race leaders Guy Guibor and Dave Byrd took each other out in the 75th lap.

Guibor was holding his own in a race full of heavy hitters. He had taken the lead in Lap 48, getting by defending track champion Pete Anderson Jr. on the front stretch.

Guibor stayed ahead of two-time champion Byrd in two restarts and was door-to-door with him in Lap 75. But Guibor said the drivers got sideways and touched wheels, sending Byrd onto the infield grass and back up into Guibor's car on the track.

"Guy's car was fast," Byrd said. "He kept up with us on those restarts, but I thought I'd get it one of those times. His left front hit our right back. When I got on that grass, I was along for the ride."

The Western Late Model race was slowed by two red flags and six yellows.

Strmiska Jr. drove with a bent hood from the Lap 19 on. A handful of cars got banged up on a restart, including that of Strmiska, Harry Belletto and Peter Hernandez. Of the 22 cars that started the race, only 14 finished.

Eric Humphries finished second. Anderson Jr., who had led 39 laps, finished third after changing a flat right front tire in Lap 71. Guibor finished seventh.

Strmiska Jr. said he just tried to hold his line, staying out of trouble low on the track.

Twenty-eight years of dust had to be wiped off his dad's trophy. Strmiska Jr., who last won at Stockton 99 in 2003, said the family will find a more illustrious place than storage for it now.

"We get to take home that same old trophy," Strmiska Jr. said with a smile. "It's better to be lucky than good in racing sometimes. I had the fastest car a lot of times and didn't win."

Strmiska Jr. was twice as happy with the victory when he found out his nephew, Ian, was in the stands. The 6-year-old has been battling cancer and had come from a chemotherapy appointment at UC Davis Medical Center to catch the end of the race.

Each past winner's trophy will be outfitted with a second plaque to mark their victory, as well as a gold-plated chunk of the wall in Turn 3.

Strmiska Sr. had one of the track's more memorable wrecks at that spot in 1982.

It finished minutes before a light rain began to fall on the track. It let up enough for the West Car Series to celebrate its first winner of the season.

Defending champion Byron Gonzalez won the 100-lapper in his first time at Stockton 99. The Carmichael driver said he had been nervous about it, especially since the car didn't test well.

"It's supposed to be a premier track to do well at," Gonzalez said. "Honestly, I didn't think I would. We have a lot of new guys this year and a lot of Stockton regulars were in the race. The track's got a lot of character. I really like it."

Stockton's Joe Allen won the 30-lap American Limited Stock Car main.

Manteca's Bryan Hitchcock won the Pro-4 Truck 15-lap race.

Bee staff writer Kelly Jones can be reached at 578-2300 or at kjones@modbee.com.

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